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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To investigate the development of diabetes mellitus in patients with thalassemia major, plasma glucose and immunoreactive insulin (IRI) levels following oral glucose and intravenous tolbutamide and glucose disappearance rates following intravenous insulin were measured in 10 patients before and during five years on a high transfusion program (HTP). Plasma immunoreactive glucagon (IRG) levels following oral glucose, intravenous insulin, and arginine were measured during the sixth year. Serial percutaneous liver biopsies were performed on seven patients. The oral glucose tolerance tests (OGAT) and mean peak IRI levels were normal in nine of 10 patients before HTP. After HTP was begun a progressive deterioration of OGTT occurred despite normal IRI levels. Following tolbutamide, the mean per cent fall in plasma glucose in the patients before HTP was significantly less than in controls (p less than 0.01) and similar to that of controls during five years of HTP in spite of higher than normal peak IRI levels. Of seven survivors after six years of HTP, three had normal OGTT and four had chemical diabetes; mean peak IRI levels were normal, but fasting IRG levels were significantly higher than in controls (p less than 0.05). In all seven patients, plasma IRG failed to increase following insulin-induced hypoglycemia and was significantly higher than in controls after arginine (p less than 0.01); after oral glucose, plasma IRG fell significantly below that of fasting only in the patients with chemical diabetes (p less than 0.03). Following intravenous insulin, the mean per cent fall in glucose before and during HTP was significantly less than in controls (p less than 0.01). Hemosiderosis and
cirrhosis
were present in all biopsied patients. Four patients died; two had chemical and two had nonketotic insulin-dependent diabetes. These data suggest that diabetes mellitus occurs frequently in patients with
thalassemia
on HTP and that insulin resistance and hyperglucagonemia, possibly due to
cirrhosis
, are important etiologic factors.
...
PMID:Carbohydrate metabolism and pancreatic islet-cell function in thalassemia major. 32 76
In order to evaluate the interrelations of splenectomy, iron overload and
cirrhosis
, histologic specimens of liver and spleen were examined and correlated in 12 children with beta-thalassemia major. All patients had received blood transfusions since infancy. Correlations seemed to exist between splenic hemosiderosis and splenic weight, and between the latter and the age at time of splenectomy. All liver samples showed varying hemosiderosis, not correlated with the number of transfusions or the children's age. Irregular
liver cirrhosis
existed in three children, 7, 8, and 14 years after splenectomy. No
cirrhosis
existed in any of the children where the spleen was in situ. Splenectomy in children with
thalassemia
may carry the long-term risk of
liver cirrhosis
.
...
PMID:Splenectomy, iron overload and liver cirrhosis in beta-thalassemia major. 82 69
During a study of pathogenetic mechanisms in the
hepatic cirrhosis
of
thalassaemia
major, 16 liver biopsies were examined by electron microscopy. Previous ultrastructural studies of liver cells during iron overload have shown electron-dense iron as lysosomal haemosiderin, and as lysosomal and cell-sap ferritin. In this study, all biopsies, regardless of the patient's age, showed ferritin molecules within lysosomes in a specific pattern in relationship with regularly arranged lamellae. This membrane-associated lysosomal ferritin is considered to be a stage in the segregation of iron seen in iron overload. The dimensions and electron density of individual ferritin molecules indicate differences between cell sap and lysosomal ferritin. Intracellular ferritin transport and iron-seclusion mechanisms are reconsidered in view of these findings. The liver biopsies of thalassaemic infants also provide information about the causal relationship between iron overload and collagen deposition. Since the collagen deposition precedes any morphological evidence of cellular injury (other than the increased iron content), the primary cirrhotogenic factor in
thalassaemia
is apparently not cell necrosis but possibly excessive collagen deposition induced by iron.
...
PMID:The liver in thalassaemia major: ultrastructural observations. 105 35
The interrelationships between liver iron concentration, the duration of iron-loading, and hepatic fibrosis, assessed morphometrically, have been studied in 32 specimens of liver obtained from 19 heavily transfused patients with
thalassaemia
major whose age ranged from 4 to 19 yr. Similar observations were made in a matched group of thalassaemic patients treated with long-term chelation therapy. The degree of liver damage ranged from very slight increase in fibrous tissue to severe fibrosis and
cirrhosis
. The severity of the fibrosis was closely correlated both with liver iron concentration and with age. While the relationship between fibrosis and age was linear, both the severity and the rate of fibrosis were exponentially related to liver iron concentration, damage accelerating as liver iron concentration exceeded 3 per cent, dry weight. By producing a modest but significant reduction in liver iron concentration chelation therapy resulted in a disproportionate but predictable retardation in the progression of the fibrosis. The factors affecting the distribution of iron between parenchymal and reticuloendothelial cells were also examined. In general stainable iron was uniformly distributed between parenchymal and reticuloendothelial cells from the early stages of iron-loading. Parenchymal siderosis was relatively heavier in splenectomised patients and in patients with liver iron concentrations above 3 per cent, dry weight than in non-splenectomised patients or patients with liver iron levels of less than 3 per cent, dry weight, but this did not affect the severity of the fibrosis. The relevance of these findings to the traditional concepts of the pathology of transfusional siderosis is discussed.
...
PMID:Transfusional iron overload: the relationship between tissue iron concentration and hepatic fibrosis in thalassaemia. 115 28
Ophthalmologic examination and morphologic investigations of the spleen were conducted in 10 patients with beta-
thalassemia
. Pathologic changes of vascular and dystrophic character were detected in the organ of vision, symptoms of angiopathy, hemosiderosis and spleno-
cirrhosis
were recorded in the spleen tissue. Clinical changes in the organ of vision were correlated with morphological shifts in the spleen tissue. A conclusion has been made that ophthalmologic examination of
thalassemia
patients could be useful for evaluation of severity of the main disease and effectiveness of the treatment conducted.
...
PMID:[Changes in the organ of vision in beta-thalassemia: clinical and morphologic parallels]. 151 95
Non-A, non-B hepatitis, recently renamed as hepatitis C virus (HCV), accounts for over 90% of hepatitis cases worldwide associated with blood transfusions. Application of a recombinant-based enzyme immunoassay for the detection of antibodies to HCV to a sample of 500 male Saudi blood donors and 260 healthy Saudi pregnant women indicated that HVC is endemic in the Saudi population. Anti-HCV was detected in 28 (5.6%) of the blood donors and 12 (4.6%) of the pregnant women, for an overall frequency of 5.3% in healthy Saudi adults who had never received blood transfusions. This rate is at least 5 times higher than that reported for the US and Western Europe. Also assessed was the HCV rate in subsamples of Saudis considered at risk of this infection. Here, anti-HCV was detected in 22 (78.6%) hemophiliacs, 26 (33.3%) patients with
thalassemia
and sickle cell disease, 17 (26.1%) hemodialysis patients with renal failure, and 35 (15.9%) individuals with a sexually transmitted disease. The prevalence of anti-HBc ranged from 28% in blood donors to 46% in hemophiliacs. The significantly higher prevalence of HCV in patients with sexually transmitted diseases than in blood donors suggests that this disease is transmitted through heterosexual contact as well as blood transfusions. Given the high baseline level of HCV infection in the Saudi population and the possibility of serious sequelae (e.g., chronic active hepatitis,
cirrhosis
, and hepatocellular carcinoma), routine anti-HCV screening of blood donations is urged.
...
PMID:Hepatitis C virus antibodies in high-risk Saudi groups. 177 46
Seventeen of 73 (23.3%) multiply transfused patients with
thalassaemia
major (age range, 1-39 years) tested positive for antibody to hepatitis C virus (anti-HCV). Eleven of the 24 patients regularly transfused in countries outside Britain were anti-HCV seropositive; only six of the 49 regularly transfused in Britain were seropositive. The incidence of anti-HBs and anti-HBc was similar to that of anti-HCV in both the British and foreign patients. The anti-HCV seropositive patients showed significantly higher plasma aspartate aminotransferase activities (AST), mean (SD) 10.2 (70.3) U/l, and serum ferritin concentrations, 4067 (2708) micrograms/l, than the anti-HCV seronegative patients (AST, 33.9 (15.6) U/l; serum ferritin 2051 (2092) U/l), respectively. Among the 36 patients who had earlier undergone liver biopsy 10 of 21 with histological features of chronic active hepatitis or
cirrhosis
, or both, were seropositive for anti-HCV whereas only one of 15 without histological evidence of chronic viral hepatitis was seropositive for anti-HCV. It is concluded that HCV is a major cause of chronic hepatitis in patients with
thalassaemia
major and is associated with raised AST activity and serum ferritin concentration compared with patients seronegative for anti-HCV.
...
PMID:Antibody to hepatitis C virus in multiply transfused patients with thalassaemia major. 211 95
Splenectomy for massive splenomegaly and hypersplenism carries a significant morbidity and mortality. We have used partial splenic embolization (PSE) as an effective alternative to splenectomy. Ten PSE procedures were performed on nine patients without mortality and with minimal morbidity. The age of the patients ranged from 8 months to 32 years (mean 14 years). The causes of splenomegaly and hypersplenism included cystic fibrosis with
cirrhosis
(2), tyrosinemia and
cirrhosis
(1);
thalassemia
(1), hemophilia with Human Immune Deficiency Virus infection (2), chronic hepatitis with portal hypertension (1), malignant histiocytosis (1), and Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome (1). All procedures were performed under local anesthesia with sedation. A percutaneous femoral artery approach to the splenic artery was used to deliver Ivalon sponge particles (280-800 microns) into the spleen. Splenic infarction was assessed by postembolization angiograms. All of the patients except one demonstrated improvement of hematologic parameters. In one patient, however, cytopenia improved only after a second embolization. In the total series, there was an early mean rise of 8,600/mm3 in the leukocyte count (range 2,900-14,900) and 212,000/mm3 in the platelet count (range 30,000-718,000). Follow-up ranged from 4 months to 7 years. Improvement of the blood picture has been persistent in seven of the eight patients who showed initial improvement. Transient procedural complications included fever (5), pleural effusion (2), pneumonia (1), and splenic abscess (1). One patient had paralytic ileus lasting for 10 days and one patient developed a streptococcal peritonitis 3 weeks after embolization. No patient developed pancreatitis or vascular compromise of other abdominal viscera.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Partial splenic embolization. An effective alternative to splenectomy for hypersplenism. 226 5
Forty women with a major sickle hemoglobinopathy (hemoglobin SS, SC, or S-beta-
thalassemia
) were given red blood cell transfusions prophylactically during pregnancy. A mean of 13.6 units of erythrocytes per woman was given and none received more than 28 units. Direct-vision needle biopsy of the liver was performed in conjunction with cesarean section or puerperal sterilization. Although iron deposition in hepatocytes and Kupffer cells was identified commonly, neither
cirrhosis
nor widespread hepatocellular necrosis was found. We conclude that the risk of irreversible hepatic damage is negligible in women with sickle hemoglobinopathies who are given erythrocytes prophylactically during one pregnancy.
...
PMID:Liver histopathologic findings in women with sickle cell disease given prophylactic transfusion during pregnancy. 240 75
Iron-chelating treatment is indicated in all children on prolonged transfusion therapy (i.e., chiefly patients with
thalassemia
and Blackfan-Diamond anemia). The purpose of iron-chelating treatment is to prevent the development of manifestations of iron overload including cardiac hemosiderosis and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (which are two potentially fatal complications),
hepatic cirrhosis
, hypoparathyroidism, hypothyroidism, and delayed puberty. Deferoxamine is the only effective iron-chelating agent and should be given in a daily dose of 40 mg/kg at initiation of the transfusion program. Administration is by subcutaneous infusions from 8 to 10 hours per day. The goal of iron-chelating treatment is to maintain serum ferritin levels between 500 and 1,000 ng/ml. This long-term treatment is a significant burden for patients and it can be hoped that non-toxic iron-chelating agents, active by mouth, will become available.
...
PMID:[Iron chelation in children]. 268 51
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