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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The various factors are reviewed which may contribute to the appearance of jaundice in patients with
cirrhosis
. During the prehepatic phase, hemolysis, spenomegaly and a drop in coagulation factors constitute the main physiopathological mechanisms, whereas intrahepatic cholestasis, alcoholic hepatitis, hepatoma and terminal hepatic insufficiency are the principal mechanisms cited for the hepatic stage. In the posthepatic stage, attention is drawn to the increased frequency of lithiasis in cirrhotic patients and the choledochal lesions seen in
chronic pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:[Icterus and cirrhosis: physiopathology]. 22 39
N-benzoyl-L-tyrosyl-p-aminobenzoic acid (Bz-ty-PABA) was orally administered to 11 controls, 10 patients with
chronic pancreatitis
, 7 patients with diabetes mellitus and 6 patients with
liver cirrhosis
. The cumulative 6 h recovery rate of PABA in the urine was significantly lower (P less than 0.005) in patients with
chronic pancreatitis
(49.1 + or - 10.1 percent), diabetes mellitus (50.4 + or - 20.4 percent) and
liver cirrhosis
(52.5 + or - 13.0 percent) than in the control group (79.5 + or - 12.0 percent) (mean + or -S.D.). This test is considered to be useful in the diagnosis of pancreatic exocrine insufficiency, especially in
chronic pancreatitis
. Patients with diabetes mellitus frequently has demonstrable abnormality of pancreatic exocrine function.
Liver cirrhosis
causing severe impairment of liver functions seemed to interfer with the elimination of PABA.
...
PMID:Study on the exocrine pancreatic function by the oral administration of N-benzoyl-L-tyrosyl-para-aminobenzoic acid. 30 23
Exocrine pancreatic function was determined by oral administration of N-benzoyl-L-tyrosyl-p-aminobenzoic acid (peptic-PABA-test) in 120 controls, 74 patients with
chronic pancreatitis
, 35 patients with acute pancreatitis 2--6 weeks after recovery, 201 patients with a variety of gastro-intestinal diseases and in 10 patients with anorexia nervosa. In the control group, 70% +/- 18% of the oral administered dose of PABA was found within 6 hours in the urine. In contrast the group of chronic pancreatic patients excreted only 40% +/- 13% over the same period. "False negative" PABA excretion was found in 11 (9%) of the 120 persons with no pancreas disease. "False positive" PABA excretion was found in 13 (17,5%) of the 74 patients with
chronic pancreatitis
. The test was not influenced by age or sex. After stomach resection or cholecystectomy and in patients with ulcus duodeni, chronic hepatitis, functional diarrhea, Crohn's disease, colitis ulcerosa and acute pancreatitis 2--6 weeks after recovery the peptide-PABA-test was not distored. Diminished PABA excretion was encountered in some patients with toxic liver disease, inflammatory disease of the small intensine like M. Whipple, celiac disease and unspecific enteritis and in a few patients with cholelithiasis. Low PABA excretion was found in early all patients with partial small intestinal resection, terminal
liver cirrhosis
or liver metastasis with ascites and in all patients with anorexia nervosa.
...
PMID:[The specificity of peptide-PABA-test (author's transl)]. 31 33
The
chronic pancreatitis
population of Wadsworth VA Hospital over the past five years was screened for two-fold or greater alkaline phosphatase elevation at any time during their course, as a marker for either distal common bile duct stenosis or other hepatobiliary disease. Forty-seven of 207 patients screened met this criterion and are reviewed in detail. Of the 16 patients with persistent alkaline phosphatase elevation (group B), 15 had proven common bile duct stenosis, demonstrating a clear pathophysiologic role of partial bile duct obstruction in their liver disease. Three had developed secondary biliary
cirrhosis
, marking this entity the commonest cause of secondary biliary
cirrhosis
at our hospital. Of the remaining 31 patients with transient alkaline phosphatase elevation (group A), only 4 had proven duct abnormalities which may resolve during recovery. Alcoholic liver disease was demonstrated with normal extrahepatic ducts in the remainder in group A adequately studies. Persistent greater than two-fold alkaline phosphatase elevation in pancreatitis thus represents a reliable marker of distal common bile duct stenosis, whose sequelae may include cholangitis and secondary biliary
cirrhosis
and which requires operative intervention in these cases. When a persistent alkaline phosphatase elevation greater than two-fold is encountered in a
chronic pancreatitis
patient, adequate cholangiography and liver histology are both necessary to confirm and grade this frequent and treatable complication.
...
PMID:Common bile duct stenosis from chronic pancreatitis: a clinical and pathologic spectrum. 51 65
Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) is essential in the diagnosis of pancreatic disease, jaundice and in post-cholecystectomy syndromes, as well as in cases where cholecystography and i.v. cholangiography fail to explain disturbances that strongly suggest bile duct involvement. Its confirmation of clinically established pancreatic disease is much more positive than that given by scintiscanning and multiple superselective arteriography. Unlike the latter, it also permits the differential diagnosis of
chronic pancreatitis
, cancer of the pancreas, pseudocysts, etc. and distinguishes medical and surgical pancreatitis (stenosis, proteinaceous calculi, and obstructing pseudocysts). Differential diagnosis of progressive jaundice on clinical grounds or with the aid of ordinary means of examination is sometimes unsatisfactory. ERCP clearly distinguishes medical and surgical forms, so that exploratory laparotomy is not needed in subjects with liver-cell forms. It also shows the nature, site and extent of extrahepatic obstruction, and points to the organic cause in 79% of cases of postcholecystectomy syndrome. Right hypochondrial pain or intermittent jaundice and negative cholecystography and i.v. cholangiography is a further indication, since ERCP will reveal disease of the pancreas or bile ducts (cholelithiasis, choledocholithiasis, sclerosing cholangitis, etc). It is also useful in the diagnosis of
cirrhosis
, abscess, echinococcus cyst and primary or secondary cancer in cases where needle biopsy and-or arteriography are either contra-indicated or inconclusive.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic value of retrograde cholangiopancreatography by transendoscopic route]. 66 74
An analysis of 89 cases with
chronic pancreatitis
revealed 56% of chronic alcoholic pancreatitis (AP). The sex ratio was 47 males to 3 females and the mean age at onset was 42.4 years in AP and 49.3 years in chronic non-alcoholic pancreatitis (NAP). The 'total amount' of alcohol consumption was correlated to the onset. In AP, the abdominal pain was apt to relapse and severe in nature, furthermore painless pancreatitis was seen in 6%. The association with diabetes or calcification (38%) were more frequently seen in AP. The calcifications in AP appeared to be smaller in size and distributed diffusely or localized in cephalic portion. A striking frequency of liver dysfunctions (39 cases) were demonstrated, however,
cirrhosis
was rare in AP. The P-S test dysunctions in NAP were frequently reversible in the follow up study, while even some of chronic asymptomatic alcoholics developed clinical signs of pancreatitis during the observed period and proceeded to definite AP, of whom pancreatic dysfunctions showed fluctuation and eventual progression. In other words, even pain free intervals the pancreatic inflammation in susceptible persons may proceed to ultimated destruction of the pancreas. The fatality from
chronic pancreatitis
was rare (12.3%), which was related diabetes mellitus.
...
PMID:A clinical investigation of chronic pancreatitis--comparative study between alcoholic pancreatitis and non-alcoholic pancreatitis--. 66 97
Two studies investigating the association of liver disease with acute and
chronic pancreatitis
in alcoholics are presented. In a retrospective study of 50 patients, no clinical liver disease was found in 9 patients with acute pancreatitis, while 23 (56%) of 41 patients with
chronic pancreatitis
had liver disease by clinical criteria. Of this latter group, 8 were confirmed histologically; thus 19% of patients with
chronic pancreatitis
had biopsy-proven
cirrhosis
. Fifty alcoholic patients with pancreatitis were prospectively evaluated. All who had clinical evidence of liver disease were biopsied. No cases of liver disease were encountered in the 4 patients with acute pancreatitis. Although 28 (60%) cases of clinically diagnosed liver disease were present in 46 patients with
chronic pancreatitis
, only 20 of these seemed significant (
cirrhosis
, alcoholic hepatitis, severe fatty liver), for an incidence of 43%. Thus, clinically significant alcoholic liver disease occurs quite frequently in association with alcoholic pancreatitis. This association is meaningful in more effective management of these patients in general and in preoperative assessment of the risk of surgery in particular.
...
PMID:Associated liver disease in alcoholic pancreatitis. 68 26
Various parameters of the insulin secretion in man may be appreciated and calculated by studying the insulin response to an intravenous pulse of glucose followed 120 minutes later by one of tolbutamide. The relative insensitivity of the B cell to glucose, probable marker of a constitutional pancreatic predisposition to diabetes may be assessed in a given individual whatever his age and body weight. The glucose intolerance per se is due to, or accompagnied by various B cell dysfunctions according to its etiology. This is illustrated by the results observed in
chronic pancreatitis
,
liver cirrhosis
, aged or obese subjects.
...
PMID:[A method of studying insulin secretion in humans: the glucose stimulation test, followed by tolbutamide]. 79 23
The influence of alimentation on the digestive pathology is very important. In this report the authors review the principal results of epidemiologic studies and animals experimentations. According to this survey of the literature it can be stated that some presumptions exist for: -- the responsibility of diet without vegetal fibers in the frequency of constipation, colonic divercitular disease, piles and hiatal hernia. The comparison of the alimentary habits in the western Europe with rural Africa is very instructive on that matter; -- the responsibility of alcohol consumption, use of hypercaloric regimen and hyperlipidic ingestats as causative factors for
chronic pancreatitis
; -- the importance of an hypercaloric, hyperlipidic and low residue regimen as etiologic factors in biliary gallstones; -- the role of denutrition and alcoholism in liver steatosis and
cirrhosis
in developed country; -- more important, perhaps, is the suspicion of the role of nutrition in the development of digestive cancer: alcohol will facilitate oesophageal cancer, alimentary nitrites gastric cancer meanwhile fiberless regimen and biles salts will promote colonic cancer. Impairments of nutrition observed after digestive resections in case of inappropriate alimentation are also analyzed as well as the principal alimentary disturbances related to allergy or enzymatic deficiency.
...
PMID:[Dietary behavior and digestive diseases]. 82
Long strictures of the intrapancreatic portion of the common bile duct were found in 6 patients with
chronic pancreatitis
. These strictures were responsible for painless obstructive jaundice, recurrent cholangitis, secondary biliary
cirrhosis
, and chronic abdominal pain difficult to distinguish from that caused by pancreatitis. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography and intraoperative cholangiography were invaluable in making the diagnosis and in planning surgical correction. Decompression of the biliary tree by anastomosis of the gallbladder or common duct to the small intestine completely relieved symptoms and allowed liver function to improve significantly. Common duct stricture as a complication of
chronic pancreatitis
should be considered in the differential diagnosis of extrahepatic biliary obstruction and whenever surgical treatment of
chronic pancreatitis
is contemplated.
...
PMID:Persistent obstructive jaundice, cholangitis, and biliary cirrhosis due to common bile duct stenosis in chronic pancreatitis. 94 56
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