Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. The systemic and splanchnic haemodynamic effects of pentifylline (40 mg/kg body weight intravenously) were assessed in rats with portal hypertension associated either with CCl4-induced cirrhosis (n = 13) or portal vein ligation (n = 13). 2. Heparinized catheters were placed into the portal vein, inferior vena cava, aorta and left ventricle with exits from the neck. Haemodynamic studies were performed 4 h after consciousness was regained. Cardiac output and regional blood flows were measured using radiolabelled microspheres and the reference sample method in seven rats in each group; portal-systemic shunting was measured using microsphere injection in the ileo-colic vein in six rats in each group. 3. Forty-five minutes after injection, pentifylline had no effect on mean arterial pressure, cardiac output, peripheral resistance, portal venous flow, hepatic artery flow or portal-systemic shunting in either group of rats with portal hypertension. The drug lowered portal pressure (-18%) in cirrhotic rats, but not in portal-vein-ligated rats. 4. These data demonstrate that pentifylline lowers portal pressure in cirrhotic rats without affecting portal venous flow and portal-systemic shunting; this effect is possibly mediated by changes in intrahepatic resistance related to the effects of pentifylline on blood viscosity and/or on intrahepatic vasomotor tone.
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PMID:Systemic and splanchnic haemodynamic effects of pentifylline in rats with portal hypertension. 132 20

Varices of the colostomy are a rare complication of colostomy performed in patients with portal hypertension. This work is based on 14 cases. The colic stomy is the terminal operation in surgery for cancer in twelve cases, and a bypass stomy in two cases. Portal hypertension is due to cirrhosis in 10 cases and to metastases to the liver in 4 cases. All 14 colostomy varices were expressed by bleeding. In 7 cases, oesophageal varices were detected with fiberendoscopy. Only one of these patients had an upper digestive hemorrhage. Colostomy hemorrhages are the revealing complication and the main sign of the disease. The emergent treatment of bleeding of the colostomy must combine several methods, most often consecutively: local compression, ligation, sclerotherapy. Once bleeding is controlled, the radical treatment must be primarily medical (hygienic and dietary habits, beta-adrenergic blocking agents), but complementary surgery may prove to be necessary, most often to redo the colostomy with additional deconnection. The prognosis mainly depends on the function of the liver, the deterioration of which is accelerated by the successive hemorrhagic accidents. Hepatorenal failure is the main cause of death.
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PMID:[Colostomy-induced varices in portal hypertension]. 133 37

16 patients (14 males, 2 females, mean age: 59.2 years) underwent sonographic-guided ethanol injections as treatment for 23 hepatocellular carcinomas (HCC) complicating cirrhosis. All lesions were pathologically proven by sonographic-guided cytology. Tumor sizes ranged from 9 to 66 mm. Sterile 96% alcohol was injected with a 17.7 cm-long 22 gauge spinal needle at one week intervals. At each session, 8-50 ml was injected depending on the diameter of the tumor. We regarded as a "success" the negativation of the cytologies one, two and three months after the end of the treatment associated with normalization of alpha-fetoprotein levels and typical echographic and tomodensitometric changes. No serious complication was associated with the procedure. In the "Child A" group1, 6 of 7 tumors have been successfully treated, the largest measuring 66 mm. The seventh lesion is currently being treated. In the "Child B" group1 3 of 6 lesions have been successfully treated. No success has been obtained in the "Child C" group. Volumes of alcohol greater than previously reported may be useful for lesions larger than 40 mm. Percutaneous alcohol injections can be considered as an alternative to surgery even for lesions larger than 50 mm. Among 4 patients presenting with 11 liver metastases of colic and gastric adenocarcinoma and 1 patient with a small bowel carcinoid tumor, one remission with a follow-up of 5 months was observed.
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PMID:[Percutaneous ethanol injection of malignant liver tumors under ultrasonographic guidance]. 165 40

During a period of 13 weeks, 45 patients with symptom-producing gall bladder stones (attacks of gall stone colic n = 39 (87%); acute cholecystitis n = 6 (13%)), corresponding to approximately 85% of the total number of gall bladder stone patients during the period were selected for laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Two patients had previously undergone upper abdominal operations and had adhesions and one patient suffered from cirrhosis of the liver with portal hypertension. It proved necessary to convert five of the laparoscopic cholecystectomies to open cholecystectomies (11%) on account of technical difficulties (severe acute changes due to cholecystitis (n = 3), indeterminable anatomical conditions (n = 1) and one case of liver metastases (n = 1)). The median duration of operation was 90 minutes with a range from 30 to 360 minutes. Peroperative cholangiography was not undertaken routinely. No cases of forgotten stones in the common bile duct occurred. No deaths occurred and, in all, three slight complications occurred (7%): two patients had haematoma in the abdominal wall and one patient minimal leakage of bile from the stump of the gall bladder on account of insufficient ligation of the cystic duct. This patient was treated with an endoscopically placed drain in the common bile duct for two weeks, after which she was well. No lesions of the common bile duct occurred. None of the complications required laparotomy. The median duration of hospitalization was 24 hours with a range from one to 14 days. All of the patients were at work or could manage their usual activities after 14 days. The median duration of sick leave was seven days.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Laparoscopic cholecystectomy. The first 45 operations]. 183 52

Congenital cystic dilatation of the intrahepatic biliary ducts, known as Caroli's disease, is rarely recognized in general surgical practice and often overlooked. Until now little more than a hundred cases have been described although modern diagnostic procedures disclose more frequently new ones. Three patients with this anomaly have been treated by the authors during the past years and the different aspects concerning diagnosis and treatment are discussed and compared with existing information. In all three patients colic pain in the upper abdomen was the first symptom reported in the first years of life. In one patient jaundice and fever were associated with the abdominal pain and cholangitis developed a secondary biliary cirrhosis. Somatic underdevelopment, consequence of the cirrhosis in this child was observed. In two patients an intrahepatic hepaticojejunostomy was performed and a left hepatectomy in the third. In the two older children intrahepatic gallstones were found; in the younger one no stones were found inside the dilated ducts.
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PMID:[Cystic dilatation of the intrahepatic bile ducts (Caroli's disease)]. 356 75

Major arterial hemorrhage associated with pancreatic pseudocysts represents a formidable complication with high mortality rates. This study was undertaken to analyze presentation and outcome and to assess the role of angiography in diagnosis and management of this complication. A retrospective review of 180 patients referred for surgical management of pancreatic pseudocysts from 1964 to 1991 identified 13 patients (7.2%) with arterial hemorrhage. Eight patients presented with intracystic hemorrhage, 4 with upper gastrointestinal bleeding, and 1 with intra-abdominal bleeding. Six patients had gastroduodenal artery bleeding, 4 splenic, and 1 each left gastric, right colic, and left gastroepiploic. The site of bleeding was identified with selective visceral angiography in 9 patients; evidence of pseudocyst bleeding was seen in 5 of 7 patients who had contrast-enhanced computerized tomography (CT) scans. Angiographic embolization for control of hemorrhage was used in 6 patients and operative control in 7. Over the past decade, bleeding has been controlled with angiographic embolization in all patients except 1 with massive bleeding due to splenic artery erosion. Average blood loss was less in patients treated with angiographic embolization (6.8 vs 17.5 units, packed red cells, P < .05, Wilcoxon rank sum test). The sole mortality was a patient with cirrhosis treated in 1969. Clinical presentation of pseudocyst bleeding is variable; the underlying cause is usually related to chronic pancreatitis due to alcohol abuse. The dynamic contrast-enhanced CT scan is valuable in demonstrating evidence of pseudocyst bleeding. Accurate diagnosis with dynamic CT scan and angiography and control of bleeding with angiographic embolization has improved the outcome in patients with this complication.
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PMID:Arterial hemorrhage complicating pancreatic pseudocysts: role of angiography. 847 74

The aim of this study is to define outcome predictors that might influence the prognosis and the mortality rate either of percutaneous drainage (DP) or open surgical drainage (DC) for abdominal abscesses. Seventy-one patients with 81 intra-abdominal abscesses were prospectively studied. They were 40 males and 31 females. Mean age was 47 +/- 15 years. Thirty-six (50.7%) patients had a simple abscess, while 35 (49.2%) had a complex abscess. Abscesses occurred most commonly in the sub-hepatic area, pelvic and para-colic space. Thirty-two (45%) patients had a percutaneous drainage, while 39 (54.9%) underwent an operative drainage management. Criteria for treatment selection were not randomized. However the two groups were statistically similar in respect to clinical features, cirrhosis, nutritional status, APACHE II scores), genesis and characteristics (simple, complex) of the abscesses. The treatment was considered successful when not requiring further drainage and the patient survived. Abdominal abscesses were cured in 53 (74.6) patients. In 13 cases (18.3%) a further drainage was necessary to obtain a complex resolution. Post drainage complications were significantly higher in the surgical drainage group (38.4% vs 12%, p < 0.05) because of the high incidence of wound infections. The overall mortality rate was 7%. Using an univariate analysis model, the only significant variable related to unsuccessful outcome in both the percutaneous and surgical group was abscess complexity (p < 0.005). Elderly (p < 0.005), malnutrition (p < 0.03), presence of cancer (p < 0.05), a high APACHE II score (p < 0.005) and the presence of a complex abscess (p < 0.02) were significantly identified as determinants of death.
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PMID:[Abdominal abscesses: their treatment and the study of prognostic factors]. 926 19

The authors present a case of tyrosinemia type 1, 3 years old girl at the time of diagnosis. The presenting symptoms were 3 times colic, obstipation, acute encephalopathy, hypertension, hyponatremia, according to the porphyric crisis. Her kidney function tests gave normal results during illness, only once an increased calcium turnover was observed. She has no singe of rachitis. Cirrhosis of the liver was proved by biopsy because of progressively rising gammaGT and alfa-fetoprotein levels. A new ensime-blocker (NTBC) treatment was started in an international collaboration. The authors compare the history of this case to that of others published in the literature. They summarize the pathomechanism of the disease.
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PMID:[Late onset type I tyrosinemia]. 928 Aug 76

Copper can induce acute and chronic intoxications in humans. Copper in tap water has caused a series of severe systemic diseases in Germany in recent years (copper induced liver cirrhosis). Besides cirrhosis, another type of disease with predominantly gastrointestinal symptoms has occurred which likewise appeared to be induced by copper in tap water. - In a retrospective investigation we looked for additional indications and proof that chronic copper poisoning has been the cause of the observed gastrointestinal diseases. All patients suffering from this type of disease had copper plumbing in their houses. - The patients (children and adults) suffered from nausea, vomiting, colic, and diarrhoea. In the group of infants, one refused formula milk (prepared with tap water) and the others suffered from persistent restlessness, unexplainable screaming (especially at night) and/or long lasting diaper rash. - We accept the diagnosis of chronic copper intoxication as the cause of the gastrointestinal symptoms when at least one of the following criteria were fulfilled: 1. first manifestation, remission and relapse of the disease depend on intake and a non-intake of water containing copper, respectively. 2. hypercupric state of the patients (i.e. pathological high concentrations of the non-ceruloplasmin-bound copper in serum and/or elevated copper levels in urine) 3. signs of systemic copper intoxication in the same patient 4. signs of systemic copper intoxication or hypercupric states in members of the patient s family or in his neighbourhood (non-relatives) - We found that the disease can even be caused by copper concentrations below the allowed concentration given by the German Guidelines for Drinking Water (Trinkwasserverordnung). - The data prove that copper in drinking water can cause gastrointestinal diseases and not only the better known systemic diseases (i.e. copper induced liver cirrhosis). Copper poisoning must be considered as a possible cause of chronic gastrointestinal diseases in those countries in which copper plumbing is common.
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PMID:Chronic poisoning by copper in tap water: I. Copper intoxications with predominantly gastointestinal symptoms. 1057 26

Pneumatosis cystoides intestinalis (PCI) is a rare disease characterized by the presence of multiple gas-filled cysts within the submucosa or subserosa of the intestinal wall. We report a case of PCI in a 54-yearold man 4 weeks after liver transplantation due to hepatitis B virus (HBV)-associated liver cirrhosis presenting with illness, diarrhea and abdominal pain. CT scans revealed normal shape of the abdominal parenchymal organs and no intra-hepatic complication due to liver transplantation. Main abdominal venous and arterial vessels resulted patent. Colic loops appeared diffusely thickened for the presence of variable diameter air-filled cysts located within the bowel wall. The patient underwent conservative treatment and the CT control after 4 weeks showed a complete PCI resolution. PCI after adult liver transplantation is probably due to the pre-transplantation chemotherapy, immunosuppressive therapy and opportunistic enteric infections. Abdominal CT represents the gold standard technique for diagnosing PCI and for evaluating its extension and complications providing data on other abdominal pathologies. It appears as variable diameter gas-filled cysts located within the bowel wall and it is often associated with pneumo-peritoneum probably due to the rupture of subserosal cysts. PCI has a favorable outcome and requires conservative treatment. Major differential diagnosis includes intestinal pneumatosis due to bowel ischemia. PCI after liver transplantation represents an uncommon bowel disease with a favorable prognosis. CT represents the reference imaging technique for diagnosing the disease and evaluating the response to therapy which is usually conservative rather than surgical.
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PMID:Reversible pneumatosis cystoides intestinalis after liver transplantation. 2928 Jul 4


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