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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Major hepatic resections have been associated with significant morbidity and mortality. In the past decade or so this has changed and such procedures are now done in increasing numbers. In the past 5 years we operated on 129 patients with benign or malignant hepatic lesions (75 females, 54 males; age-range 14-84). The reason for surgery was malignancy in 94 (72.9%) and benign lesions in 35 (27.1%). The most common indication for surgery was
liver metastases
secondary to colorectal cancer in 45% of all patients or 61.7% of those operated for malignancy. Primary liver cancer was the cause for liver resection in 13.2% of all patients or 18.1% for those with malignancy. Of the 35 patients with benign lesions the leading causes for surgery included: giant cavernous hemangioma, simple liver cysts, echinococcus cysts and focal nodular hyperplasia (11%, 22.8%, 20% and 14.3%, respectively). 76 patients underwent anatomical resection and 63 had either a nonanatomical resection or a different operation. Among the former the most common procedure was right hepatectomy (36) and among the later a nonanatomical resection equal to 1-3 Couinod segments (44). Operating time ranged from 55 min. to 8:41 hours with a mean of 3:31 +/- 1:37. Mean hospital stay was 8.7 +/- 5.8 days and 86.8% received between 0-2 units of blood. Overall mortality was 6.2% and 31.2% of the fatalities had
cirrhosis
. Overall mortality in noncirrhotic patients was 2.6%. The complication rate was 16.3% and only 7 patients (4.4%) were hospitalized in the intensive care unit. This indicates that major liver resections can be done safely, with morbidity and mortality similar to that of other major abdominal operations.
...
PMID:[129 liver surgeries--five years of experience in a surgery department]. 1091 54
Ultrasound microbubble contrast agents are effective and safe echo enhancers. An ingenious array of methods are employed to achieve stability and provide a clinically useful enhancement period. Microbubbles enhance ultrasound signals by up to 25 dB (greater than 300-fold increase) due to resonant behaviour. This is used to rescue failed Doppler studies and may be extended to image the microcirculation of tumours and the myocardium using non-linear modes. Functional studies open up a whole range of applications by using a variety of active and passive quantitation techniques to derive indices from the transit of contrast through a tissue of interest. This has been especially successful in the detection of
liver metastases
and
cirrhosis
and shows great promise as a clinical tool. It also has great potential in measuring microcirculatory flow velocity. The demonstration that some microbubbles are not just pure blood pool agents but have a hepatosplenic specific phase has extended the versatility of ultrasound. Imaging of this stationary phase with non-linear modes such as phase inversion and stimulated acoustic emission, has improved the sensitivity and specificity of ultrasound in the detection and characterisation of focal liver lesions to rival that of CT and MR.
...
PMID:Developments in ultrasound contrast media. 1135 67
A 38-year-old woman had a mastectomy for infiltrating ductal carcinoma of the breast 3 years before her last admission and had received chemotherapy for known
liver metastases
. She developed the rapid onset of liver failure with portal hypertension and died in a hospice. Autopsy revealed macronodular
cirrhosis of the liver
secondary to metastatic carcinoma of the breast with associated florid fibrosis. This rare lesion, previously called metastatic carcinomatous
cirrhosis
, was also found, in this case, to have marked hepatic hemosiderosis, and analysis of the patient's DNA showed heterozygosity for the H63D genotype. The possibility of
cirrhosis
-associated hemosiderosis secondary to an iron metabolism abnormality associated with the H63D mutation of the HFE gene is proposed. Computed tomographic scans showed the development of
cirrhosis
during the 3-month period before the patient's last admission and suggested the possibility of a postnecrotic type origin.
...
PMID:Metastatic carcinomatous cirrhosis and hepatic hemosiderosis in a patient heterozygous for the H63D genotype. 1182 5
Bid, a member of the Bcl-2 family, mediates apoptosis by inducing the release of proapoptotic factors. The expression of Bid in liver diseases has not been investigated. This study evaluated Bid level in various liver diseases including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC),
liver metastases
from colorectal cancer, chronic hepatitis and
liver cirrhosis
. The expression of Bid in tumorous tissues of HCC was lower than that in their corresponding non-tumorous tissues from the same patient. Heavy staining with Bid antibody was found in some localized tumorous liver tissues from patients with poorly differentiated tumors. In patients with chronic hepatitis and
liver cirrhosis
, there were gradient tumor-development centers, a gradient increase in reaction with Bid antibody from the middle of the center to its edge. The gradient tumor-development center was also found in non-tumorous tissues of HCC, suggesting that occurrence of this center in chronic hepatitis might be an early pathologic sign of HCC development. Bid was also expressed in the epithelial cells in tissues from
liver metastases
and their expression was often stronger than in the non-tumorous liver tissues. Heavy nuclear staining of Bid was not uncommon in these metastatic cells. The different patterns of staining between primary and secondary liver tumors may reflect a difference in tumor origin and in cell type. Nuclei of metastatic cells, though positive for Bid, still showed a considerable mitotic activity, indicating that they were in active proliferation rather than on a pathway deemed to be apoptotic. In conclusion, this study shows that the Bid level is decreased in HCC except in poorly differentiated HCC in which cells may undergo a process of apoptosis or necrosis. The existence of gradient tumor-development center in chronic hepatitis,
liver cirrhosis
and non-tumorous tissues from HCC may serve as a pathologic marker of a carcinogenic change of cell phenotypes.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical analysis of pro-apoptotic Bid level in chronic hepatitis, hepatocellular carcinoma and liver metastases. 1159 32
Lymphatic vessel endothelial hyaluronan receptor (LYVE)-1 is thought to be restricted to lymph vessels and has been used as such to show that tumor lymphangiogenesis occurs on overexpression of lymphangiogenic factors in mouse tumor models. However, these studies have not yet been corroborated in human tumors. Here we show, first, that LYVE-1 is not exclusive to the lymph vessels. Indeed, LYVE-1 is also present in normal hepatic blood sinusoidal endothelial cells in mice and humans. Surprisingly, LYVE-1 is absent from the angiogenic blood vessels of human liver tumors and only weakly present in the microcirculation of regenerative hepatic nodules in
cirrhosis
, though both vessels are largely derived from the liver sinusoids. Second, we propose a novel approach to identify lymphatics in human and murine liver. By combining LYVE-1 and Prox 1 (a transcription factor) immunohistochemistry, we demonstrate that lymphatics are abundant in
cirrhosis
. In contrast, in human hepatocellular carcinoma and
liver metastases
, they are restricted to the tumor margin and surrounding liver. The absence of intratumor lymphatics in hepatocellular carcinomas and
liver metastases
may impair molecular and cellular transport in these tumors. Finally, the presence of LYVE-1 in liver sinusoidal endothelia suggests that LYVE-1 has functions beyond the lymph vascular system.
...
PMID:LYVE-1 is not restricted to the lymph vessels: expression in normal liver blood sinusoids and down-regulation in human liver cancer and cirrhosis. 1171 31
S-100 serum concentrations were analyzed in 39 healthy people, 130 patients with benign diseases and 304 patients with malignancies, including 49 patients with locoregional diseases and 255 with advanced diseases. S-100 was determined by a commercial immunoluminometric assay, and 0.20 ng/ml was considered to be the upper limit of normality. In none of the healthy people was S-100 higher than 0.2 ng/ml. Slightly high S-100 concentrations were found in 33 out of 130 patients (25%) with benign diseases (mean 0.21 +/- 0.45 ng/ml). Significantly higher S-100 serum levels were found in patients with
liver cirrhosis
(63%, 10/16) (p = 0.024) or renal failure (45%, 8/18) (p = 0.03) than in patients with other benign diseases or in healthy people. Abnormal S-100 serum levels were found in 68 of the patients (22.5%) with malignancy (mean 1.01 +/- 5.9 ng/ml). The highest S-100 concentrations were found in patients with malignant melanomas (p = 0.001). Excluding melanoma patients, the S-100 serum levels in patients with malignancies were not related to tumor origin or stage but were clearly related to the site of metastasis, with patients with
liver metastases
showing higher values than patients with metastases without liver involvement (p = 0.02). No statistical differences were found among patients with
liver cirrhosis
, primary liver cancer or
liver metastases
. In conclusion, S-100 is a useful marker for melanoma, but abnormal levels of this tumor marker may be found in benign and malignant diseases associated with liver or renal injury.
...
PMID:S-100 protein serum levels in patients with benign and malignant diseases: false-positive results related to liver and renal function. 1189 5
We describe the case of an 87-year-old woman who presented to Tokyo Kousei Nenkin Hospital because of appetite loss and general fatigue. Multiple liver masses and Borrmann type 2 gastric tumor were detected. A clinical diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma and gastric cancer was made based on the patient's high levels of serum alpha-fetoprotein (AFP; 490 200 ng/mL) and protein induced by vitamin K absence or antagonist-II (PIVKA-II, 2284 mAU/mL). The patient's general condition worsened gradually and she died 42 days after admission. Autopsy revealed that the predominant histological structure of the gastric tumor was trabecular or sheet-like, although a tubular structure was also found. Venous invasion was prominent. Immunohistochemically, the tumor tissue was positive for AFP and a few tumor cells were positive for PIVKA-II. The histological appearance and immunohistochemical features of the hepatic tumors resembled that of the gastric tumor. This case was pathologically diagnosed as AFP- and PIVKA-II-producing gastric carcinoma with multiple
liver metastases
. When tumors are found in the stomach and liver and serum PIVKA-II level is abnormally high, the possibility of PIVKA-II-producing gastric cancer with liver metastasis should be considered, especially when hepatitis virus markers are negative and
liver cirrhosis
is not present.
...
PMID:Des-gamma carboxy prothrombin (PIVKA-II) and alpha-fetoprotein producing gastric cancer with multiple liver metastases. 1267 68
"A disintegrin and metalloproteinases" (ADAMs) form a family of cell-surface glycoproteins with potential protease and cell-adhesion activities. We have investigated ADAM expression in human liver cancers and their regulation by several cytokines involved in liver injury. Using degenerative RT-PCR, cDNA encoding sequences for ADAM9 and ADAM12 were identified in human activated hepatic stellate cells (HSCs). Northern blot analyses showed that HSCs, but not hepatocytes, expressed transcripts for ADAM9 messenger RNA (mRNA) and both the long and short forms of ADAM12. This expression was associated with the transition from quiescent to activated state of rat HSCs and markedly increased in human livers with
cirrhosis
. ADAM12 but not ADAM9 expression was up-regulated by transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) in human activated HSCs. The PI3K inhibitor LY294002 and the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MEK) inhibitor UO126 prevented ADAM12 induction by TGF-beta, suggesting the involvement of PI3K and MEK activities. In vivo, the steady-state of both ADAM9 and ADAM12 mRNA levels was nearly undetectable in both normal livers and benign tumors and increased in hepatocellular carcinomas (up to 3- and 6-fold, respectively) and
liver metastases
from colonic carcinomas (up to 40- and 60-fold, respectively). The up-regulation of both ADAM9 and ADAM12 was correlated with an increase in matrix metalloproteinase 2 expression and activity. In conclusion, in liver cancers ADAM9 and ADAM12 expression is associated with tumor aggressiveness and progression.
...
PMID:ADAM12 in human liver cancers: TGF-beta-regulated expression in stellate cells is associated with matrix remodeling. 1271 86
This report assesses the value of cholinesterase (ChE) activity as an indicator of liver function and analyses its usefulness in the diagnosis of jaundice. A rapid method of determination has been used, and alterations in ChE activity in conditions other than liver disease have been studied to permit a fuller and more accurate survey of its value as a liver function test. The level of serum cholinesterase activity remains constant under normal circumstances, and follows the pattern of protein metabolism, falling in catabolism and rising in anabolism.In hepatocellular disease cholinesterase activity is lowered. Very low levels in
cirrhosis
with jaundice indicate a grave prognosis. Normal levels are usual in post-hepatic jaundice unless complicating factors are present, such as cholangitis or
liver metastases
. Serum cholinesterase is useful both as a liver function test and in the diagnosis of jaundice provided consideration is given to the other factors which affect the level of activity of the enzyme.
...
PMID:An assessment of the value of serum cholinesterase as a liver function test and in the diagnosis of jaundice. 1368 70
The aim of this study was to establish whether enhancement of the liver by the MRI contrast agent ferumoxides could be effectively achieved at a reduced dose of 7.5 micromol/kg in patients with advanced
liver cirrhosis
. Forty-two liver transplant candidates with end-stage
cirrhosis
underwent SPIO-enhanced MRI at 1.5T, using either 15 micromol/kg or 7.5 micromol/kg ferumoxides. The lower dose of ferumoxides was also used in 21 non-cirrhotic patients with colorectal
liver metastases
who acted as a control group. The percentage signal intensity loss (PSIL) after SPIO was measured in all patients, and in those patients with tumors the post-SPIO contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) was measured. The median PSIL after SPIO in the high dose cirrhotic (HDLC), low dose non-cirrhotic (LDNC) and low dose cirrhotic (LDLC) patients was 86.3%, 74.6%, and 64.2% respectively. These differences were significant using the Mann-Whitney U test. Tumors were found in 8 patients in the high dose cirrhotic group, 9 in the low dose cirrhotic group, and all 21 of the control group. No significant differences were found between the CNR values after SPIO in the 3 groups (median values HDLC 15.1, LDNC 23.7, LDLC 19.5). In patients with late-stage
cirrhosis
the PSIL after SPIO was significantly less at 7.5 micromol/kg than at 15 micromol/kg, but both doses produced a substantial loss of signal. Lesion to liver CNR was not adversely affected by using the lower dose, so when imaging at 1.5T the authors would recommend using 7.5 micromol/kg in patients with
liver cirrhosis
.
...
PMID:Superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) enhancement in the cirrhotic liver: a comparison of two doses of ferumoxides in patients with advanced disease. 1455 32
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