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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 66-year-old female had
ischemic heart disease
due to left main lesion complicated with calcified ascending aorta, right pelvic carcinoma and
liver cirrhosis
. The combined operations with coronary artery bypass by left internal thoracic artery under the hypothermic ventricular fibrillation with cardiopulmonary bypass and right nephrectomy were performed successfully. Postoperatively Treadmill exercise test and scintigram revealed no ischemihc change. She is doing well. The aortocoronary bypass to left anterior descending artery using a left internal thoracic artery under hypothermic ventricular fibrillation with cardiopulmonary bypass might be one of surgical options for high risk patient.
...
PMID:[Combined coronary artery bypass with right nephrectomy in a patient with left main lesion, calcified ascending aorta, pelvic carcinoma and liver cirrhosis]. 966 61
Many epidemiological studies have shown that moderate alcohol intake, from 10 to 30 g of ethanol a day, decreases cardiovascular mortality from atherosclerotic
ischaemic heart disease
and ischaemic stroke as compared to non-drinkers. This beneficial effect outweighs the risks of alcohol consumption in subgroups of people with a higher risk of atherosclerosis: the elderly, people with coronary risk factors and patients with previous coronary events. It has not been demonstrated that alcohol intake, even in moderate amounts, is beneficial for the general population, in particular, men under the age of 40 and women under 50, because it raises mortality due to other causes, especially injury,
cirrhosis of the liver
and some types of cancer, thereby outweighing the benefits for coronary artery disease. Thus, alcohol consumption should not be recommended as a prophylaxis for the general population. Guidelines on alcohol drinking habits--whether to continue, to start, to modify or to stop--must be given on an individual basis, taking into account the relative risks and benefits for each patient. The benefits of moderate alcohol consumption on the cardiovascular system seem to be exerted fundamentally through its effects on plasma lipoproteins, principally by raising high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol and to a lesser degree, by decreasing low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol. It appears to exert additional beneficial effects on the heart by decreasing platelet aggregability and by bringing about changes in the clotting-fibrinolysis system. Although there has been some debate about the relative superiority of different types of alcoholic beverages (wine, beer or hard liquor), and to a greater extent, about different types of wine, there is no current evidence of any kind of beneficial effect from other components of the beverage besides ethanol. Thus, it does not seem appropriate to recommend any particular type of alcoholic drink, except for sociocultural reasons. The added benefits from some components of different types of wine with a high antioxidant activity on plasma lipoproteins remain only an interesting hypothesis. Meanwhile, encouraging a healthy diet, flavonoid rich and with a predominance of natural ingredients (fruit, legumes, cereals and seeds), in the general population should stop the current tendency of Southern European countries from abandoning the Mediterranean diet. Because of the multifactorial nature of coronary heart disease, it is necessary to remember that atherosclerotic risk reduction is achieved by behavior modification of multiple risk factors present in individual patients and in the general population. Therefore, guidelines regarding alcohol intake should always be linked to pertinent recommendations about other atherosclerotic risk factors.
...
PMID:[Wine and heart]. 1021 74
Immediate and long-term results of prostate adenomectomy were studied in 1549 patients, 322 of whom being of old age. In 1499 (96.8%) patients concomitant diseases were revealed:
ischemic heart disease
(934 patients), cardiosclerosis after 1-3 myocardial infarction (185), hemiparesis after acute cerebrovascular disturbances (74), diabetes mellitus (88), chronic lymphoid leukemia (5),
cirrhosis of the liver
(15), cancer (22) and true diverticula (15) of the urine bladder, drug-related polyallergy (16). 628 patients were radically operated in conditions of circulatory insufficiency of stage I-II. In 631 (40.7%) patients surgical intervention was carried out as urgent because of acute dysuria (hampering of urination) or to bleeding from tumor. Transvesical adenomectomy was carried out with hemostasis by 2 semipouch string removable sutures. In 89.5% of patients uncomplicated course of postoperative period was observed. Postoperative lethality in patients with concomitant diseases made up 3.2%. Causes of death were postinfarction cardiosclerosis (6.5%), after-effect of cerebrovascular stroke (5.4%), diabetes mellitus (5.7%),
cirrhosis of the liver
(6.7%). 6 months to 11 years after the operation 91.2% of the patients achieved good follow-up functional results of surgical treatment, in majority of the patients medical and social rehabilitation was observed.
...
PMID:[The results of prostatic adenomectomy in patients with severe concomitant diseases]. 975 37
Peritonitis due to viscus perforation in peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients can be catastrophic. We describe the first reported case of perforated peptic ulcer (PPU) in a PD patient. This 78-year-old man presented with a 1-day history of mild abdominal pain. He had been receiving nocturnal intermittent PD for 2 years and had
ischemic heart disease
and
cirrhosis of the liver
. Pneumoperitoneum and peritonitis were documented, but the symptoms were mild. The "board-like abdomen" sign was not noted. Air inflation and contrast radiography indicated a perforation in the upper gastrointestinal tract, and laparotomy disclosed a perforation in the prepyloric great curvature. Unfortunately, the patient died during surgery. This case illustrates that the "board-like abdomen" sign may be absent in PD patients with PPU because of dilution of gastric acid by the dialysate. Free air in the abdomen, although suggestive of PPU, is also not uncommon in PD patients without viscus perforation. Because PD has to be discontinued after laparotomy and exploratory laparotomy may be fatal in high-risk patients, other diagnostic methods should be used to confirm viscus perforation before surgery. PPU, which can be proved by air inflation and contrast radiography, should be suspected in PD patients with pneumoperitoneum and peritonitis.
...
PMID:Pneumoperitoneum caused by a perforated peptic ulcer in a peritoneal dialysis patient: difficulty in diagnosis. 1019 37
The prognostic significance of elevated cardiac troponin levels (CTL) in hospitalized patients with no other evidence of
myocardial ischemia
or injury is largely unknown. Fifty patients (mean age 61 +/- 15 years, 15 women) out of 580 consecutive hospitalized patients were selected based on normal CK-MB and at least 3-fold increase of CTL. The medical charts of these patients were reviewed and a 1-year follow-up was performed. The most frequent admission diagnoses were exacerbation of congestive heart failure (22%), stroke (20%) followed by respiratory failure (6%),
cirrhosis
(6%), gastrointestinal bleeding (6%), end-stage renal disease (4%), atrial fibrillation (4%) and metastatic malignancies (4%). Abnormal CTL prompted a cardiology consult in 48% of patients, an echocardiogram in 44%, myocardial perfusion study in 10% and coronary angiography in 1 patient. Of 21 deaths, only 1 was related to an acute coronary event. The measurement of CTL in patients without definite clinical or electrocardiographic evidence of
myocardial ischemia
and with a wide spectrum of clinical diagnoses does not predict in-hospital and at 1 year cardiovascular complications and/or cardiac death.
...
PMID:Elevated cardiac troponin levels do not predict adverse outcomes in hospitalized patients without clinical manifestations of acute coronary syndromes. 1089 99
A 67-year-old man, complicated with
liver cirrhosis
, diabetes mellitus, and
ischemic heart disease
, was scheduled for gastrectomy. He had been taking an over-the-counter (OTC) analgesic containing acetaminophen, ethenzamid and caffeine for 20 years, and refused to stop taking it preoperatively. He received general anesthesia with isoflurane, supplemented with fentanyl and midazolam. Muscle relaxation was obtained with vecuronium. Isosorbide was infused continuously to prevent
myocardial ischemia
. The anesthetic course was uneventful. Postoperatively, the patient experienced no difficulty in abstaining from taking the OTC analgesic. The patient's perioperative course indicates that he was not dependent on this OTC drug, but he needed this medication only to ameliorate his preoperative anxiety or depressive mood.
...
PMID:[Perioperative management of a patient with a history of over-the-counter analgesic abuse for 20 years]. 1099 90
We prospectively analyzed the mortality and prognostic factors in 231 patients with community-acquired pneumonia. The patients were enrolled between May 1996 and April 1998. The average patient age was 67.6 +/- 17.5 years, and 68% were male. The mean hospital length of stay was 21.9 +/- 21.7 days. The mortality was 6.5% at the 30th day, 13.9% at hospital discharge, and 19.9% at 1 year later. Stepwise logistic regression analysis showed that
liver cirrhosis
, diastolic hypotension (< 60 mmHg), hypoxemia (< 50 Torr) were significantly correlated with death at the 30th day, and that alcoholism, malignancy, diastolic hypotension, hypoxemia, hypoalbuminemia (< 3.0 g/dl), and increased creatinine (> 1.2 mg/dl) were significantly correlated with discharge mortality. Furthermore, the prognostic factors at 1 year later were the same as those at hospital discharge, with the exception of alcoholism, which was replaced by
ischemic heart disease
in the 1-year mortality. We conclude that
liver cirrhosis
, diastolic hypotension, and hypoxemia are very important prognostic factors during the acute stage of pneumonia, and that alcoholism, malignancy, hypoalbuminemia and renal complications are significantly correlated with hospital death and 1-year mortality.
...
PMID:[Mortality and prognostic factors in patients with community-acquired pneumonia: an analysis of 231 cases]. 1101 64
This supplement includes a collection of papers that aim at estimating the relationship between per capita alcohol consumption and various forms of mortality, including mortality from
liver cirrhosis
, accidents, suicide, homicide,
ischaemic heart disease
, and total mortality. The papers apply a uniform methodological protocol, and they are all based on time series data covering the post-war period in the present EU countries and Norway. In this paper we discuss various methodological and analytical issues that are common to these papers. We argue that analysis of time series data is the most feasible approach for assessing the aggregate health consequences of changes in population drinking. We further discuss how aggregate data may also be useful for judging the plausibility of individual-level relationships, particularly those prone to be confounded by selection effects. The aggregation of linear and curvilinear risk curves is treated as well as various methods for dealing with the time-lag problem. With regard to estimation techniques we find country specific analyses preferable to pooled cross-sectional/time series models since the latter incorporate the dubious element of geographical co-variation, and conceal potentially interesting variations in alcohol effects. The approach taken in the papers at hand is instead to pool the country specific results into three groups of countries that represent different drinking cultures; traditional wine countries of southern Europe, beer countries of central Europe and the British Isles and spirits countries of northern Europe. The findings of the papers reinforce the central tenet of the public health perspective that overall consumption is an important determinant of alcohol-related harm rates. However, there is a variation across country groups in alcohol effects, particularly those on violent deaths, that indicates the potential importance of drinking patterns. There is no support for the notion that increases in per capita consumption have any cardioprotective effects at the population level.
...
PMID:Alcohol and mortality: methodological and analytical issues in aggregate analyses. 1122 78
The present investigation represents an update of a previous cohort mortality study of 7543 workers who were employed at a petroleum refinery in Beaumont, Texas, for at least 1 year between 1945 and 1996. The updated study covered an observation period of 51 years, from 1946 to 1996, with a total of 208,627 person-years of observation. A total of 3020 (40.0%) cohort members were known to have died. The mortality data were analyzed in terms of cause-specific standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs). The overall mortality of the cohort was significantly lower than expected when compared with that of the general US population (SMR, 95.7; 95% CI, 92.3 to 99.2). Overall cancer mortality was also lower than expected (SMR, 85.8; 95% CI, 79.4 to 92.5). For specific cancer sites, significant mortality deficits were observed for the following: buccal cavity and pharynx, esophagus, large intestine, rectum, larynx, lung, and bladder and other urinary organs. No significant increase was reported for any site-specific cancer. A non-significant increase in acute myeloid leukemia was observed among male employees (SMR, 147.2; 95% CI, 76.1 to 257.2). Detailed analyses indicated that the excess was restricted to workers hired before 1950. No increase was detected for other leukemia cell-types, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, or multiple myeloma. For non-malignant diseases, the majority of SMRs were below 100, and no significant increase was observed for any cause. In particular, significant mortality deficits were reported for
ischemic heart disease
(SMR, 91.0; 95% CI, 85.4 to 96.9), non-malignant respiratory disease (SMR, 61.5; 95% CI, 52.2 to 72.0), pulmonary fibrosis (SMR, 51.0; 95% CI, 22.0 to 100.4),
cirrhosis of the liver
(SMR, 47.2; 95% CI, 30.6 to 69.7), and accidents (SMR, 81.7; 95% CI, 66.3 to 99.6). Separate analyses of male workers by job classification (process and maintenance) were conducted. Mortality from acute myeloid leukemia was elevated among employees in maintenance jobs (8 observed deaths vs 4.31 expected; SMR, 185.5; 95% CI, 80.1 to 365.6). However, no upward trend by length of service was found. A detailed analysis indicated that the acute myeloid leukemia mortality excess was limited to maintenance workers who were hired before 1950. No other significant excess was detected for any cause among maintenance or process workers. These findings from the present study were discussed in conjunction with results from previous investigations of employees at the Beaumont refinery and with results from other refinery studies. Potential limitations of the study were also discussed.
...
PMID:An updated mortality study of workers at a petroleum refinery in Beaumont, Texas, 1945 to 1996. 1132
A case of lipid-rich clear-cell hepatocellular carcinoma arising in non-alcoholic steatohepatitis is described in a patient with diabetes mellitus. The patient was a 67 year-old Japanese female with a history of tuberculosis, appendicitis,
ischaemic heart disease
, and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. The patient denied alcohol consumption. A liver mass was diagnosed as hepatocellular carcinoma of clear-cell type with early
cirrhosis
of the peri-tumoral liver tissue. Tumour cells had clear cytoplasm containing lipid droplets, and Mallory bodies. Surrounding non-tumoral liver tissue also showed lipid, and fibrosis in peri-portal areas with moderate bridging fibrosis. The features were consistent with clear-cell hepatocellular carcinoma arising in the fibrosis of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis. By electron microscopy, tumour cells had lipid droplets, glycogen, swollen mitochondria, rough endoplasmic reticulum, Mallory bodies, small bile canaliculi, desmosomes and gap junctions. Surrounding non-tumoral hepatocytes had a largely normal ultrastructure with prominent glycogen and lipid droplets. Clear-cell hepatocellular carcinoma within non-alcoholic steatohepatitis associated with diabetes mellitus is an extremely rare condition, and this report provides a detailed histopathological description with both immunohistochemical and ultrastructural data.
...
PMID:Lipid-rich clear-cell hepatocellular carcinoma arising in non-alcoholic steatohepatitis in a patient with diabetes mellitus. 1168 2
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