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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the 46-year period from September 1, 1932 to September 1, 1978, 11,808 patients were operated on for nonmalignant biliary tract disease. In 80.1% of these patients, the disease was considered chronic, and in 19.9%, acute inflammation was superimposed on the existing condition. There were 207 postoperative deaths, a mortality rate of 1.7%. Advanced age,
acute cholecystitis
and common duct stones were the principal determinants of operative mortality. Cholecystectomy for chronic cholecystitis was performed in 7,413 patients with an operative mortality of 0.5%. Choledochotomy in search of residual or recurrent common duct calculi was performed in 341 patients with a mortality of 2.1%. Detailed analysis of the causes of death in 105 patients who died during the years 1962 through 1978 revealed that cardiovascular disease, especially myocardial infarction, was the most frequent cause of death. Liver disease, most commonly
cirrhosis
, was also a major factor in operative mortality.
...
PMID:The incidence and causes of death following surgery for nonmalignant biliary tract disease. 736 93
Cholecystolithotomy and cholecystojejunostomy has been carried out on 11 patients with severe hypertension from
cirrhosis
. The indications were frequently recurring attacks of biliary cholic or
acute cholecystitis
at onset. There was 1 postoperative death from cardiac infarction and only minor in-hospital morbidity. None of the remaining patients has to date developed post-cholecystojejunostomy sequelae. Except the case of extensive inflammation on gangrena, this procedure appears to be a safe and definitive operation, alternative to subtotal cholecystectomy.
...
PMID:[Cholecystolithotomy with cholecystojejunostomy as surgical solution for cholelithiasis in portal hypertension caused by hepatic cirrhosis]. 765 60
March 1991 through October 1992, in the Clinica Chirurgica II of the Bologna University, 59 patients were submitted to laparoscopic cholecystectomy; the age range was 25 to 76 years and the mean 50 years. In no patient stones bigger than 35 mm were observed and 31% of the subjects were treated with litholysis before surgery. Fifty-eight patients were affected with single or multiple cholelithiasis, 1 had adenomyomatosis and 4 patients had associated choledocholithiasis treated with preoperative ERCP. Both US and cholangiography were performed to detect absolute contraindications--e.g.,
acute cholecystitis
, cholangitis, peritonitis and
cirrhosis
--or relative contraindications--e.g., choledocholithiasis, > 5 mm stones and short cystic duct. US proved to be more sensitive than cholangiography to assess the number of stones and gallbladder wall thickness and to diagnose
acute cholecystitis
or scleroatrophic gallbladder, but it appeared to be less reliable in case of choledocholithiasis, where cholangiography was the technique of choice, and in possible anatomical variations--e.g., short cystic duct--which must be detected before laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Cholangiography appeared to be rather inadequate to study cholelithiasis when associated with functional gallbladder exclusion (as it happened in 17% of our patients). Intraoperative cholangiography was performed on 2 patients only, because their obesity hindered the preoperative study. In conclusion, the need is stressed of combining US and cholangiography for the accurate preoperative evaluation of gallbladder stones patients.
...
PMID:[Imaging technics in the indications for laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Echotomography and cholangiography compared]. 812 10
Transient heterogeneous enhancement was seen on the arterial phase of dual phase helical CT of the liver. The shape of the enhancement was appeared wedged or patchy. These phenomena without liver tumor were observed in 23 (2.3%) of 1012 patients with suspected hepatobiliary disease. Plain CT showed no attenuation difference in the liver. Twenty-two of these 23 cases were diagnosed as scarred liver, A-P shunt caused by liver biopsy,
acute cholecystitis
, liver abscess,
liver cirrhosis
, or advanced pancreas head cancer. The diagnosis of one case was uncertain. These phenomena were thought to be caused by 1) a regional direct increase in hepatic arterial flow due to arterial-portal (A-P) shunt, or hypervascular tumor ; or 2) a compensatory increase in hepatic arterial flow as a result of decreased portal venous flow caused by tumor invasion or severe
liver cirrhosis
.
...
PMID:[Transient heterogeneous enhancement on dual-phase helical CT of liver]. 883 Dec 18
The most frequent hepatobiliary diseases in Vietnam are chronic hepatitis and
cirrhosis
, liver abscess, hepatobiliary ascaridiasis, angiocholitis, biliary lithiasis and primary liver cancer. The principal causes of chronic hepatitis and
cirrhosis
are HBV and HCV infections. Alcohol and chemicals (drugs, agricultural, industrial, war herbicides) also play an important role. Malaria causes hepatitis and fibrosis lesions, however no cirrhotic lesions were observed. There are two categories of liver abscess, amoebic and cholangitic, often caused by ascaridiasis. Treatment of amoebic abscesses is, at first, non-surgical for small abscesses, often combined with ultrasound guided abscess puncture. Cholangitis abscesses are more serious and often require surgical intervention. Among the gallstones, only 15% are of the gall-bladder, the majority are choledocho- and intrahepatic-lithiasis, composed largely of calcium bilirubinate and are frequently caused by Ascaris-related cholangitis and the nucleation of Ascaris eggs. Forty-seven per cent of
acute cholecystitis
are acalculous, showing a higher frequency than in Western countries. Primary liver cancer is one of the most frequent malignancies in Vietnam. More than 90% of liver cancers are hepatocellular carcinomas. The principal causes are HBV infection, followed by HCV infection, aflatoxin, alcohol and chemicals. Recent efforts aiming at earlier diagnosis, by selective screening in high-risk groups, have used clinical surveillance, abdominal sonography and AFP level determination. Promising results were obtained in prevention trials by reducing the high AFP level of cirrhotic patients using a vegetal drug, Gacavit, and by treatment with percutaneous ethanol injection therapy, as an alternative therapeutic measure for liver tumour resection.
...
PMID:Some peculiarities of hepatobiliary diseases in Vietnam. 919 96
Surgical literature around 1980 has emphasized the technical challenge and the risks of cholecystectomy in cirrhotic patients reporting discouraging results. The aim of this study is the retrospective analysis of laparoscopic cholecystectomy in cirrhotics. The collected laparoscopic experience of 3 surgical groups for the last 5 years is reported. Cirrhotics were classified according to Child-Pugh criteria. Postoperative complications were classified using Clavien's rules. Forty patients were recruited; 31 received successful laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
Liver cirrhosis
was preoperatively diagnosed in all Child-Pugh B (n = 11) and in 11/20 Child-Pugh A patients. Compared with 989 noncirrhotics undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy, cirrhotics were similar in terms of age (59.9+/-10.3 vs. 58.1+/-10.9) and sex (male: 51.6% vs. 50.1%).
Acute cholecystitis
has a similar frequence in cirrhotics and noncirrhotics (3.2% vs. 4.1%, respectively). Bile duct stones and acute pancreatitis were significantly more frequent in cirrhotic patients (6.4% vs. 3.7%, p < 0.001; and 6.4% vs. 0.3%, p < 0.001, respectively). Endoscopic papillotomy and stone extraction combined with laparoscopic cholecystectomy was performed in 2 patients. Intraoperatively, technical problems occurred in 5 (16.1%) patients: liver bed bleeding (n = 4) was significatively more frequent in cirrhotics vs. noncirrhotics (p < 0.001). Mean operative time was 90 min, range 50-180, and it was not significantly longer than in noncirrhotics (85 min, range 30-200). Conversion rate was also similar (3%). Seven patients presented 8 postoperative complications (Class II): right side lung effusion (n = 2), ascites (n = 2), temporary worsening of Child-Pugh status (n = 2), hyperosmotic coma (n = 1), and umbilical hernia (n = 1). Mean hospital stay in noncomplicated cases was the same for noncirrhotics (3+/-1). The authors suggest a more liberal use of laparoscopic cholecystectomy for symptomatic gallstones in selected Child-Pugh A and B patients.
...
PMID:Gallstones in cirrhotics revisited by a laparoscopic view. 944 15
Acute cholecystitis
is a common disease which may carry the risk of complications, including empyema, perforation, abscess, peritonitis and sepsis. Percutaneous transhepatic drainage of the gallbladder (PTGBD) with antibiotics can provide prompt decompression of gallbladder in
acute cholecystitis
and interrupt the natural history of the disease effectively. From July 1986 to June 1996, 154 patients with
acute cholecystitis
were reviewed retrospectively in Kaohsiung Medical College Hospital. The chief symptoms and signs were pain (98.1%), fever (57.1%) and jaundice (37.7%). WBC count more than 10,000 was noted in 116 (75.3%) patients. Associated diseases included empyema: 42 (27.3%), septic shock: 14 (9.1%), diabetes mellitus: 13 (8.4%), pancreatitis: 10 (6.5%), perforation: 7 (4.5%),
liver cirrhosis
: 6 (3.9%) and respiratory failure: 1 (0.6%). All of them underwent ultrasound-guided PTGBD immediately after the diagnosis was established. The symptoms and signs disappeared soon after this procedure. Bacterial culture was found positive in 104 (67.5%) of 154 patients in which Escherichia coli (51.9%) was the most common organism, followed by Klebsiella pneumonia (20.2%). After acute stage, 138 patients obtained the cholangiography via PTGBD tube. Gallbladder stones were only noted in 56 (40.6%) patients, gallbladder stone concomitant with common bile duct stone in 26 (18.8%), cystic duct obstruction in 25 (18.1%), acalculous cholecystitis in 21 (15.2%), gallbladder perforation in 1 (0.7%), choledochocyst in 1 (0.7%), and cholecystocolonic fistula in 1 (0.7%). There were 135 patients to undergo surgery after the clinical condition was stable. The operative findings included gallbladder stones only in 88 (65.2%), gallbladder stone concomitant with common bile duct stone in 34 (25.2%), acalculous cholecystitis in 13 (9.6%), choledochocyst in 1 (0.7%), and cholecysto-colonic fistula in 1 (0.7%). The postoperative complications included wound infection 8 (5.9%), UGI bleeding 3 (2.2%), acute renal failure 1 (0.7%) and acute respiratory failure 1 (0.7%). The postoperative mortality rate was 0.7% (1/135), which was much lower than those of previous reports, which not undergoing PTGBD initially. It led us to conclude that PTGBD, as an initial preoperative modality to treat
acute cholecystitis
, is effective in decreasing postoperative morbidity and mortality.
...
PMID:Ultrasound-guided percutaneous transhepatic drainage of gallbladder followed by cholecystectomy for acute cholecystitis--10 years' experience. 951 85
At present laparoscopic cholecystectomy represents the treatment of choice for symptomatic cholelithiasis. Authors performed a retrospective case-control study to evaluate whether
cirrhosis
associated with cholelithiasis increases the risk for morbidity of laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Twenty-one patients with cholelithiasis and
cirrhosis
(Child-Pugh class A or B) (group A) and 21 controls with cholelithiasis without
cirrhosis
(group B) entered the study. Controls were paired with cases for age, sex, and indication for cholecystectomy (simple cholelithiasis,
acute cholecystitis
). The two groups were compared for rate of conversion to open cholecystectomy (19% group A vs 9.5% group B; p = 0.31), morbidity (29.5% group A vs 5.3% group B; p = 0.17), median length of surgery (80 m in the two groups), and median time of postoperative hospitalization (5 days group A vs 3 days group B; p = 0.21). No difference among variables resulted to be statistically significant. Besides, neither common bile duct injuries nor intra or postoperative hemorrhages occurred in patients with
cirrhosis
. Authors conclude that the laparoscopic cholecystectomy can be considered a safe and effective surgical procedure also for patients with cholelithiasis associated with
cirrhosis
with a good residual hepatic function.
...
PMID:[Morbidity after video-laparoscopic cholecystectomy in cholelithiasis associated with liver cirrhosis. A case-control study]. 964 46
Disadvantages related to CO2 pneumoperitoneum in high risk patients (anesthesiologic classification in III and IV ASA), have led to the development of the abdominal wall retractor, a device designed to facilitate laparoscopic surgery without conventional pneumoperitoneum. A case of a patient with
acute cholecystitis
, well-compensated
liver cirrhosis
, and high respiratory and cardiologic risk (ASA III class), submitted to laparoscopic cholecystectomy with gasless technique is reported.
...
PMID:[Gasless laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Selective intervention in a high surgical risk patient]. 1083 83
Over a 6-year period, 42 patients with different underlying diseases developed Aeromonas bacteremia in our hospital. The male to female ratio was 2:1. The vast majority of these patients had underlying diseases, including various types of neoplasm (n = 14),
liver cirrhosis
(n = 11), biliary tract disorder (n = 10) and other illnesses (n = 7). Community-acquired bacteremia was predominant (33 cases, 79%). Aeromonas hydrophila was the most common species isolated (88%). Monomicrobial bacteremia was more common than polymicrobial bacteremia (64% vs 36%). Monomicrobial bacteremia was associated with neoplasm or
liver cirrhosis
in 80% of patients. Polymicrobial bacteremia was more common in patients with biliary tract disorder than in patients from other groups (60% vs 40%). Escherichia coli (60%) was the predominant concomitant organism isolated. The major clinical manifestations were fever (74%), jaundice (57%), and abdominal pain (45%). Recognized infection sites included biliary tract, soft tissue involvement, peritoneal involvement, while 50% of patients had no recognized infection site. Eight patients (80%) received cholecystectomy due to gall stone with
acute cholecystitis
. However, none of the cirrhotic patients with necrotizing fasciitis received surgical treatment. The mortality attributed to Aeromonas bacteremia was 70%. Patients with
liver cirrhosis
or malignancy had a higher acute mortality (death within 7 days after admission) than the other patients (89% vs 11%). We conclude that Aeromonas bacteremia can cause a rapidly fatal outcome and should be considered an important pathogen for septicemia in patients with
liver cirrhosis
or neoplasm.
...
PMID:Outcomes of Aeromonas bacteremia in patients with different types of underlying disease. 1126 69
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