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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The major clinical problem in patients with thalassemia is iron overloading usually resulting from increased exogenous iron absorption from transfusions. Diseases of various organ systems result, including cirrhosis, cardiomyopathy, diabetes, and other less well appreciated endocrinopathies. Since 1976, we have routinely studied these patients with abdominal computed tomography (CT) and also have scanned other areas of clinical interest. It is the purpose of this report to examine the findings in 35 patients with severe beta-thalassemia and associated hemochromatosis in whom we have tabulated the pertinent CT, clinical and laboratory data.
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PMID:Computed tomographic analysis of beta-thalassemic syndromes with hemochromatosis: pathologic findings with clinical and laboratory correlations. 736 13

In clinical studies, frequent hepatic dysfunction associated with crises in sickle cell disease has been noted, but whether irreversible morphologic changes arise from these transient episodes is uncertain. We studied 70 patients with sickle cell disease (57 SS, 12 SC and one S-thalassemia (S-thal) hemoglobin) autopsied at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. They ranged in age from five months to 75 years (average 21 years) and 35 (50 percent) were female, In 64 patients (91 percent), livers were enlarged and had distention of Kupffer cells with phagocytized sickled red cells; this was massive in 10. In 19 patients (27 percent) the sinusoids were markedly distended with sickled red cells and appeared obstructed. Focal parenchymal necroses were present in 24 patients (34 percent) and were explained in 12, eight by cardiac dysfunction and four by sepsis. Reparative changes, portal fibrosis and regenerative nodules were each found in 14 patients (20 percent), only one of whom had a known history of viral hepatitis despite the frequency of transfusions. Cirrhosis of unknown cause was present in seven patients and cardiac cirrhosis in one. Cirrhosis with hemochromatosis was present in three patients and 30 others had parenchymal iron accumulation. Thus, unexplained hepatic necroses, portal fibrosis, regenerative nodules and cirrhosis were frequently encountered in these patients. This spectrum of liver disease appears to be best understood as a consequence of recurrent vascular obstruction, necrosis and repair arising as a component of sickle cell disease.
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PMID:The liver in sickle cell disease. A clinicopathologic study of 70 patients. 744 49

Although full blood counts (FBC) are among the most commonly performed laboratory tests, the contribution of routine FBCs to the diagnosis of new problems is controversial. This study represents a unique linkage of a consultant haematology team, reviewing all abnormal blood counts, to an organization providing ambulatory health care to 350,000 patients. The objective was to establish the underlying clinical disorders responsible for all abnormal FBCs during a 2-month period, and to estimate the impact of the haematology team on the diagnostic work-up and management of newly identified problems. 572 (2.55%) of the 22,454 FBCs were abnormal. Of these, 357 showed microcytosis, caused by iron deficiency (58%), thalassaemia minor (35%), inflammation (6%) or chronic renal failure (1%). The most common causes of normocytic anaemia (25 patients) were disseminated malignancy and acute blood loss; of macrocytosis (27 patients), chronic liver disease and cancer; of erythrocytosis (16 patients), chronic hypoxia; of thrombocytopaenia (48 patients), chronic liver disease and ITP; of thrombocytosis (47 patients), iron deficiency and inflammation; of leukopaenia or pancytopaenia (20 patients), cirrhosis and disseminated malignancy; and of leukocytosis (26 patients), chronic leukaemias in the elderly and infection in children. Major new haematological abnormalities were encountered in 0.24% of all blood counts, representing about one new diagnosis per day. Routine blood counts do contribute to the health care of a population. Screening for haematological disease through a central clinical laboratory covering a large high-risk ambulatory population offers a cost-effective way of searching for serious clinical problems, alerting the primary physicians of their existence, and offering advice in continued evaluation and problem management.
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PMID:The haematologist as watchdog of community health by full blood count. 779 88

Vibrio vulnificus infection, which is a rare and fatal disease, can be categorized clinically as either primary septicemia or wound infection. The clinical presentation of patients with primary septicemia can vary from fever alone to a more severe illness including high-grade bullous lesions, hypotension, and shock. Wound infection typically results from either injury to the skin in a marine environment or contact of a preexisting wound with sea water. We reported eight cases with Vibrio vulnificus infection in Chang gung Memorial Hospital and reviewed ten other cases previously reported with details in Taiwan. Fourteen patients presented with primary septicemia, and four with wound infection. Thirteen patients had alcoholism or chronic liver disease, two had peptic ulcer disease, one was steroids abuser, and one patient had thalassemia and chronic liver disease. Overall mortality was 55.6% (ten patients). Patients with hypotension within 48 hours of admission had higher mortality than normotensive patients (77% vs. 0%, P = 0.007). Patients with chronic liver disease or liver cirrhosis also had tendency to a higher mortality than not (64% vs. 25%, P = 0.274). Chronic liver diseases and liver cirrhosis are common disease in Taiwan. They take a high risk for Vibrio vulnificus infection. Clinician should keep in mind of this potentially fatal infection in these patients reporting a history of recent raw oyster consumption and presented with sepsis and characterized skin lesions. Prompt empirical antibiotics treatment and aggressive surgical treatment may be lifesaving for this acute and fatal disease.
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PMID:Vibrio vulnificus infection--report of 8 cases and review of cases in Taiwan. 785 Jun 49

A specific enzyme immunoassay (EIA) for the diagnosis of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection was developed by recombinant DNA technology. Abbott HCV EIA was used to detect antibody to HCV (anti-HCV) in non-transfused and multiply-transfused thalassemia patients. None of 11 non-transfused patients had anti-HCV but 3 of 52 (5.8%) multiply-transfused patients had anti-HCV. This study showed that the prevalence rate of HCV infection is low in thalassemia patients. However, it is still important to identify hepatitis C virus infected patients in high risk groups because hepatitis C is associated with chronic hepatitis, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma.
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PMID:Antibody to hepatitis C virus in thalassemia patients. 827 96

We describe herein the case of a 57-year-old man with thalassemia who developed acute liver failure after undergoing endoscopic injection sclerotherapy (EIS) to control hemorrhage from a ruptured esophageal varix. The patient, who had been confirmed as having liver cirrhosis due to chronic hepatitis C with thalassemia in 1989, was admitted to our department to undergo EIS for esophageal varices, at which time his serum total bilirubin level was 5.5 mg/dl. As a small amount of hematemesis occurred just after a percutaneous transhepatic portography was performed, emergency EIS was carried out, following which the serum total bilirubin level markedly increased, mainly with a direct fraction, until it reached 70 mg/dl. The patient eventually died from acute liver failure with extreme hyperbilirubinemia on the 27th day after experiencing hematemesis despite all treatment. This unfortunate case demonstrates that sclerotherapy could be an inappropriate method of treatment for patients with hemolytic disease.
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PMID:Extreme hyperbilirubinemia induced by endoscopic injection sclerotherapy in a patient with esophageal varices and thalassemia: report of a case. 868 Jan 23

Iron deposition occurs in parenchymal cells of the liver in two major defects in human subjects (i) in primary iron overload (genetic haemochromatosis) and (ii) secondary to anaemias in which erythropolesis is increased (thalassaemia). Transfusional iron overload results in excessive storage primarily in cells of the reticule endothelial system. The storage patterns in these situations are quite characteristic. Excessive iron storage, particularly in parenchymal cells eventually results in fibrosis and cirrhosis. There is no animal model or iron overload which completely mimics genetics haemochromatosis but dietary iron loading with carbonyl iron or ferrocene does produce excessive parenchymal iron stores in the rat. Such models have been used to study iron toxicity and the action of iron chelators in the effective removal of excessive iron stores.
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PMID:Hepatic iron deposition in human disease and animal models. 874 2

The study group screened for anti-HCV comprised 789 subjects of hepatitis, renal failure, thalassaemia and healthy voluntary blood donors coming from Central India during July 1992 to November 1995. The prevalence of HCV was low (4.85%) among 103 patients of acute viral hepatitis (AVH) while it was higher (25.64%) among 117 patients of chronic liver disease (CLD) with the highest rate of 31.57 percent in 57 patients of cirrhosis. The anti-HCV positivity among 101 patients with hepatic failure was around 10 percent. High risk groups such as chronic renal failure (CRF) patients mainly on haemodialysis and thalassaemics receiving multiple blood transfusions showed the prevalence of anti-HCV in 41.9 and 25.45 percent respectively. Only 1.78 percent of the 280 voluntary blood donors showed positivity for anti-HCV. Comparison of the data on HCV in the present study with data from other parts of India showed a wide variation in the different centers. The higher prevalence of HCV among CRF patients and thalassaemics indicates the need for screening of the blood units for anti-HCV before transfusion to these high risk patients.
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PMID:Prevalence of anti-HCV antibodies in central India. 884 Jun 56

We analyzed risk factors in 724 patients evaluable for acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and in 614 patients evaluable for chronic GVHD who had received bone marrow transplantation (BMT) from HLA-identical siblings and/or parents for thalassemia and/or microdrepanocytosis, in a single institution. The overall incidence of grade II-IV and III-IV acute GVHD (aGVHD) was 26.9% and 13.5%, respectively. The cumulative incidence of grade II-IV aGVHD in patients treated with cyclosporine (CsA)/methylprednisolone (MP) or CsA/methotrexate (MTX)/MP was 32% and 17%, respectively (P=0.001). In logistic regression analysis, the risk factors associated with the onset of grade II-IV aGVHD in the entire group of patients were: patient age < or = 4 years (P=0.009), male patient sex (P=0.023), GVHD prophylaxis with CsA/MP or MTX/MP (P=0.000), more than twofold elevated alanine aminotransferase (P=0.001), and patient seropositivity for two to three herpes viruses (P=0.007). In patients treated with CsA/MP, splenomegaly > 2 cm (P=0.042) and donor age > or = 17 years (P=0.034) predicted aGVHD. Risk factors for grade III-IV aGVHD were similar to the risk factors identified for grade II-IV aGVHD. Moreover, moderate and severe liver fibrosis or cirrhosis predicted grade III-IV aGVHD (P=0.018). The incidence of chronic GVHD (cGVHD) was 27.3%. The probability of cGVHD at 2 years after BMT in patients with grade 0, I, II, and III-IV aGVHD was 15%, 32%, 53%, and 54%, respectively. Among patients with absent or grade I-IV aGVHD, prior aGVHD (P=0.000), female donor sex (P=0.000), use of alloimmune female donors for male patients (0.009), and GVHD prophylaxis with CsA/MP or MTX/MP (P=0.003) predicted cGVHD. This data should be considered in clinical management and in future investigations for improvement of immunosuppressive prophylaxis in BMT patients with thalassemia.
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PMID:Graft-versus-host disease after bone marrow transplantation for thalassemia: an analysis of incidence and risk factors. 908 26

Patients with homozygous beta-thalassemia show an abnormal lipoprotein profile. In asymptomatic heterozygotes the lipid pattern is less markedly affected but interestingly related to a diminished cardiovascular risk. The extent and significance of these findings are still a matter of debate and no data are available on lipoprotein(a) plasma levels. Seventy patients with homozygous beta-thalassemia (HT-P), 70 beta-thalassemia trait carriers (TT-C) and 70 sex and age-matched controls were investigated and their plasma lipoprotein profile and apo(a) phenotypes determined. In a subgroup of these same subjects (12 HT-P, 12 TT-C and 24 controls) and in 12 bone marrow-transplanted homozygous beta-thalassemic patients (BMT-P) plasma lipoprotein composition was assessed. HT-P disclosed significantly lower total-cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol, apo A-I, apo B plasma levels and higher triglyceride concentration than TT-C (-7, -11, -8, -8, -13 and +11%, respectively) or controls (-39, -50, -46, -32, -30 and + 35%, respectively). All lipoprotein subclasses were triglyceride-enriched, while LDLs were also protein-enriched and HDLs protein-depleted. TT-C disclosed a small but significant reduction in apo A-I and apo B plasma levels but only minor lipoprotein abnormalities with respect to the controls. BMT-P lipoprotein composition was intermediate between HT-P and normal subjects. Apo(a) plasma levels did not differ among the groups. A higher prevalence of 'small' apo(a) isoforms was present in HT-P. Within the same 'isoform group', apo(a) plasma levels were significantly lower in HT-P than in TT-C or controls. Since liver cirrhosis is almost always present in HT-P, it is conceivable that an altered hepatic apo(a) synthesis or catabolism due perhaps to diminished apolipoprotein glycation may be involved. In TT-C a partially improved cardiovascular risk profile was apparent (low hematocrit, low LDL-cholesterol and apo B), thus justifying the claim for a low prevalence of ischemic heart disease, but no Lp(a) plasma level modification could be detected.
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PMID:Plasma lipoprotein composition, apolipoprotein(a) concentration and isoforms in beta-thalassemia. 918 Feb 53


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