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

Proline metabolism was prospectively evaluated in patients with surgical sepsis, cirrhosis, and elective surgical procedures. Significant correlations were found in the septic patients. Proline levels were an excellent indicator of mortality and correlated positively with lactate levels. Lactate and proline were inversely related to total peripheral resistance and oxygen consumption. In septic patients who expired: the metabolites involved in the hepatic pathways of proline degradation were elevated in proportion to proline; lactate, glutamate and proline were directly related to pyruvate; lactate/pyruvate ratios were constant; proline, glutamate, ammonia, ornithine, lactate and pyruvate levels were inversely proportional to oxygen consumption and total peripheral resistance. The primary defects in sepsis seem to be metabolic; there are very strong correlations in time between physiology and metabolism; the metabolic abnormality seems to be a progressive energy-fuel deficit, possibly from a progressive inhibition of substrate entry into the Krebs cycle.
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PMID:Proline metabolism in sepsis, cirrhosis and general surgery. The peripheral energy deficit. 11 5

In patients who have impaired hepatic reserve, the Warren shunt has been proposed as an effective operation because it decompresses the esophageal varices without disturbing portal perfusion of the liver. However, early reports of high operative mortality and technical difficulties have impeded acceptance of the procedure. The operation was done in a series of 17 patients. All patients in whom elective variceal decompression with a patent splenic vein was required and without clinical ascites were candidates for this operation. Follow-up ranged from 2 to 48 months. Six patients had alcoholic cirrhosis, two had primary biliary cirrhosis and seven had postnecrotic cirrhosis; in two the cause of the liver disease was unknown. Five patients were categorized as Child's class A, nine as class B and three as class C. No intraoperative or early postoperative deaths owing to hemorrhage occurred. However, there was one death two weeks postoperatively from pulmonary sepsis and one death five weeks postoperatively due to antigen-positive hepatitis. Two patients died from hepatic failure six weeks and five months after operation, respectively; in the first of these, chronic active hepatitis was diagnosed at the time of operation. In one patient hemorrhage recurred and transfusion was required. Although ascites, which eventually resolved, developed in eight patients after operation, the results in 76 percent of patients have been good without new episodes of hemorrhage or encephalopathy. We conclude that the Warren shunt is a safe and effective elective operation for the treatment of patients in whom hemorrhage from esophageal varices has occurred.
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PMID:The Warren shunt in treating bleeding esophageal varices. 31 64

Our patient, with cirrhosis and chronic renal failure, represents an example of the susceptibility of a compromised host to Aeromonas infections. This patient, however, differs from previously reported cases in at least two important aspects. First, it is possible that her portal of entry was a fresh A-V fistula puncture site rather than an intestinal site. The temporal relationship of exposure to flood water prior to the onset of sepsis lends support to this possibility. Epidemiologic investigation of the dialysis center failed to reveal Aeromonas isolates from cultures of the water supply, machinery, or other patients. Second, this case is unique in that our patient developed a destructive aortic valve endocarditis resulting in valvular perforations and acute aortic insufficiency. Furthermore, this infection was initiated on what appears to have been a previously normal valve. Based on a review of the literature and the virulence demonstrated by A. hydrophila in our patient, we conclude that organisms of the genus Aeromonas are capable of inducing serious human infection. Such infections are more likely to occur in compromised hosts. A. hydrophila has accounted for the majority of reported infections.
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PMID:Human aeromonas infections: a review of the literature and a case report of endocarditis. 34 23

Patients with refractory ascites and HRS should be considered to present an urgent indication for peritoneovenous shunting. The shunt offers a method of continuous reinfusion of ascitic fluid which corrects avid sodium retention, oliguria and azotemia. Severe encephalopathy, jaundice or peritoneal sepsis--common complications of cirrhosis--contraindicate installation of the shunt before improvement occurs. Associated cardiac disease does not contraindicate the use of the shunt provided that ascitic fluid is removed at the time of operation and large amounts of diuretics are used. This operation has also proved useful in ascites attributed to causes other than cirrhosis. The main complications include disseminated intravascular coagulopathy, hepatic coma and sepsis in a few patients. Results of a randomized prospective study indicate that the shunt should probably be considered in patients with diet-resistant massive ascites even before they prove to be refractory to diuretic therapy.
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PMID:Ascites: its correction by peritoneovenous shunting. 37 15

In the years 1963--1977, the pathology department of the University of Colorado Medical School did 93 autopsies of patients with liver transplants. Fifteen of these patients had received a second graft. Sepsis was the greatest single cause of death or failure, and fungi and other organisms often considered opportunistic were frequent pathogens. Problems relating to removal of the liver from the donor, emplacement of the graft in the new host, and maintenance of the graft during the prolonged procedures together offer a monstrous challenge to the transplantation surgeon. All of these problems, classed as technical, include as complications infarction of the graft as the result of prolonged ischemia and blood loss or shock due to various causes, and all may produce alteration in structure of the liver; such changes may be misinterpreted as rejection. Rejection was a major cause of failure in only 5 patients, although the immunosuppression employed to control it contributed to the sepsis that so often was lethal. Hyperacute rejection was not observed in any of these transplanted livers, although 15 of these patients received a second transplant. Two of the patients whose grafts failed due to rejection had changes that indicated progression to an early stage of cirrhosis. We conclude that despite the persistent problems the liver is an organ peculiarly favorable for transplantation.
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PMID:Liver transplantation: the pathologist's perspective. 39 27

The spectrum and incidence of liver disease is described among a large series of patients with inflammatory bowel disease. The incidence of significant liver disease identified by the presence of serial biochemical abnormalities of liver function was 8.2 per cent. Transient peri-operative changes in liver function tests are common and usually relate to underlying intra-abdominal sepsis. Percholangitis, sometimes termed portal triaditis, is one of the commoner lesions, and is usually associated with extensive colitis and improves with resection of the underlying bowel disease. Cirrhosis of the liver is an important but uncommon complication and is usually associated with extensive long-standing disease. Stenosing cholangitis and biliary tract carcinoma are both important though rare associations. They are both associated with extensive disease of long-standing, but resection of the underlying inflammatory bowel disease does not necessarily protect the individual from these complications. Although stenosing cholangitis is a diffuse lesion of the biliary tree it is important to exclude strictures of the extra-hepatic biliary tree which may be amenable to surgical correction. Hepatic dysfunction is rarely the sole indication for advising surgery for the underlying bowel disease but the identification of the nature of the hepati- dysfunction provides a rational basis for such a decision and opportunities for the surgical correction of the hepatic lesion itself.
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PMID:The spectrum of hepatic dysfunction in inflammatory bowel disease. 48 86

Twelve patients with otherwise uncomplicated acute viral hepatitis (two were HBsAg-positive) developed renal failure. Apart from dehydration due to repeated vomiting in one patient, no factor responsible for precipitating renal failure could be identified. The clinical course was characterised by renal failure with plasma urea concentrations reaching maximum values of 26-69 mmol/l (175-416 mg/100 ml). Ten patients needed dialysis for up to two weeks. Seven patients recovered completely, while the other five died from sepsis. The types of renal failure were similar to those described in fulminant hepatic failure and cirrhosis--namely, functional renal failure in five patients and acute tubular necrosis in seven. Two of the patients with functional renal failure later developed tubular necrosis. The mechanism responsible for renal failure in acute viral hepatitis is uncertain, though endotoxaemia may contribute.
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PMID:Renal failure in otherwise uncomplicated acute viral hepatitis. 68 5

Liver biopsy was done at the time of operation in 125 consecutive upper abdominal procedures to assess the incidence of unsuspected or undiagnosed hepatic abnormalities. Specifically excluded were hepatic lesions unexpectedly identified at laparotomy. Sixty-seven percent of the liver biopsy specimens were abnormal, the most frequent findings being fatty metamorphosis, cholestasis, triaditis, fibrosis, inflammatory infiltrate, cholangitis, cirrhosis, and hepatitis. The most frequent operation performed was cholecystectomy. In 63 patients with chronic cholecystitis, there was a 51% incidence of abnormal liver histology, while in nine patients with acute cholecystitis, the incidence was 78%. In 83% of all other operations, abnormal liver biopsy specimens were identified. Bile leakage, hemorrhage, and infection did not occur in this series, despite inclusion of patients with severe biliary obstruction, abnormal clotting factors, and intra-abdominal sepsis. New techniques of histochemical enzyme analysis and electron microscopy are expected to enhance the clinical correlation of occult hepatic lesions. We conclude that liver biopsy in a safe, informative adjunct to all upper abdominal procedures.
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PMID:'Routine' liver biopsy in upper abdominal surgery. 88 45

The value and effects of treating renal failure by dialysis are analyzed in a series of 84 patients with various types of liver disease. Although none of the 25 patients with cirrhosis survived, six of 50 with fulminant hepatic failure recovered completely as did seven of nine patients with renal failure secondary to extrahepatic biliary tract obstruction or with liver and renal damage following episodes of severe hypotension. Dialysis was required for seven weeks before diuresis occurred in one patient in the latter group. Both peritoneal and hemodialysis satisfactorily controlled plasma urea and creatinine levels, except in patients with fulminant hepatic failure in whom this was only achieved by hemodialysis. Complications of dialysis were most common in patients with cirrhosis and fulminant hepatic failure and included hypotension, gastrointestinal bleeding, and intraperitoneal sepsis. Overall, the results show that dialysis is only worth attempting in those patients in whom recovery of the underlying liver lesion is possible, and even then treatment for prolonged periods may be necessary.
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PMID:Dialysis in the treatment of renal failure in patients with liver disease. 88 9

Within 5 to 14 days of onset of grade 3 or 4 coma, liver biopsies were obtained in 14 of 15 consecutive patients who recovered from fulminant hepatitis. In 9 patients, follow-up biopsy was obtained 6 to 60 months after acute hepatitis and autopsy was performed in 2 patients who died in 4 months from complications of hepatitis (aplastic anemia) or of corticosteroid therapy (sepsis). During fulminant illness the biopsy findings were: multilobular necrosis in 4 patients, confluent (bridging) necrosis in 9, and only portal inflammation in 1. The duration or the grade of coma did not correlate with the severity of necrosis on the biopsy. Follow-up biopsy showed development of chronic (active) hepatitis in 3 of 9 patients (with cirrhosis in one of these). Chronic liver disease was not found in the two autopsies. If fulminant hepatitis is the result of vigorous cell-mediated immune attack on hepatocytes, then this process cannot always eradicate chronic hepatitis B surface antigenemia, nor can it always prevent the development of chronic (active) hepatitis or cirrhosis.
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PMID:The liver during and after fulminant hepatitis. 89 67


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