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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pulmonary function and oxygen transfer was studied in five patients with
cirrhosis of the liver
and different degrees of portasystemic encephalopathy. Four patients were restudied after a change in CNS function. The contribution of various parameters of pulmonary gas exchange to the unsaturation found was evaluated employing the graphic analysis described by King and Briscoe. The following results were obtained: (1) there was no inequality of ventilation as judged by a
nitrogen
washout study; (2) a large true venous admixture was found in all patients; (3) in four patients studied twice venous admixture was larger when mean EEG frequency was lower; (4) besides the true venous admixture a low overall D/Q ratio was an important factor contributing to unsaturation in most cases; (5) in some cases a decreased overall V/Q ratio contributed to the unsaturation. This decreased V/Q ratio appeared to be due to an increase in pulmonary perfusion without a concomitant rise in ventilation. Changes in pulmonary perfusion pathways are suggested as the most likely cause of the defect in oxygen transfer found in patients with
cirrhosis
.
...
PMID:Pulmonary function studies and oxygen transfer in patients with liver cirrhosis and different degree of portasystemic encephalopathy. 23 51
According to the present studies it is shown that arginine ketoglutarate in sufficiently high dosage (3x3 g daily by mouth) produces a significant lowering of plasma ammonia and free serum phenols with a high-protein diet in patients with
liver cirrhosis
, compared to a previous day without this substance. The ammonia reduction can be explained by a significant increase in urea synthesis, measured by the urea
nitrogen
content of the 24-hour urine. The simultaneous lowering of pathologically raised serum levels of free phenols can be explained by an improved oxidative decomposition of these substances. No stimulation of insulin secretion worthy of note occurred after oral administration of 9 g arginine ketoglutarate.
...
PMID:[Effect of arginine ketoglutarate on the detoxifying capacity of the liver in cirrhosis of the liver (author's transl)]. 40 72
Three patients with
cirrhosis
, ascites, and dilutional hyponatremia were treated with demeclocycline in an attempt to correct the abnormal water retention. Demeclocycline administration (600 to 900 mg/day for 8 to 9 days) resulted in [a] increased blood urea
nitrogen
and plasma creatinine concentrations; [b] reduction of the inulin clearance by between 63% to 78% and of paraaminophippurate clearance by 36% to 77%; and [c] an impairment of the renal concentrating ability. Urine osmolality decreased to hypotonic levels, but polyuria did not appear, probably because it was prevented by the reduction of the glomerular filtration rate. Renal failure was reversible on withdrawal of demeclocycline. No other causes than demeclocycline administration could be found to explain the reduction of the glomerular filtration rate and the estimated renal plasma flow.
...
PMID:Renal failure associated with demeclocycline in cirrhosis. 40 25
The tracing of ammonium
nitrogen
is important in hepatic diseases, especially in
liver cirrhosis
with hyperammonemia. In this paper, a new convenient method is described for determining stable isotope 15N-labeled ammonia using the Conway apparatus and chemical ionization mass spectrometry. The minimum quantity of ammonia necessary for reliable measure of 15N content was 0.1 muMol. The average error was 5.3%. In clinical application, 4 ml of blood after oral administration of 1 g of 15NH4Cl was sufficient for measurement.
...
PMID:Determination of 15N-ammonia by chemical ionization mass spectrometry. 44 91
3 patients with
hepatic cirrhosis
and ascites underwent increased diuresis on six occasions, closely related to episodes of gastrointestinal bleeding. In each instance the increased urine volume was preceded by a sharp increase in blood urea
nitrogen
, presumably due to absorption of nitrogenous compounds from the gastrointestinal tract, suggesting a mechanism of osmotic diuresis. In each case there was a signigicant increase in serum sodium and osmolality, related to the greater-water-than-sodium diuresis induced by urea, which was promptly reversed by the administration of water or isotonic solution. Clinically this syndrome may be defined as the association of hypernatremia and hyperosmolality due to osmotic diuresis from urea appearing in a cirrhotic patient with ascites and gastrointestinal bleeding.
...
PMID:Hypernatremia following gastrointestinal bleeding in cirrhosis with ascites. 107 10
From november 1973 to June 1991, cryosurgery with liquid
nitrogen
was performed on 87 patients with primary liver cancer (PLC). Of these, 27 patients was of stage I (31.0%), 52 in stage II (59.8%), and 8 stage III (9.2%). There were 30 patients with PLC of < or = 5 cm (34.5%).
Liver cirrhosis
was found in 73 patients (83.9%). In the beginning, plate-like cryoprobes and thermocouples were used to monitor the frozen area. Later on we designed single- and multiple-needle cryoprobes for freezing tumors deeply into the hepatic parenchyma and intraoperative ultrasound was used to monitor hepatic cryolesions. The 1-year, 3-year, and 5-year survival rates were 60.5%, 32.0%, and 20.2%, respectively. Among the 30 patients with PLC of < or = 5 cm, the 1-year, 3-year, and 5-year survival rates were 92.6%, 66.6%, and 50.8%, respectively. There were no operative mortality and complications such as rupture of the tumor, delayed bleeding, and bile leakage. These results indicate that cryosurgery is a safe and effective local treatment for unresectable PLC.
...
PMID:[Cryosurgery for primary hepatic cancer of 87 patients]. 133 12
A block in the transsulfuration pathway has previously been suggested in
cirrhosis
on the basis of increased fasting methionine concentrations, decreased methionine elimination and low levels of methionine end products. To date, methionine elimination has never been studied under controlled steady-state conditions, and the relation of the severity of liver disease to impaired methionine metabolism has not been clarified. We measured methionine plasma clearance in 6 control subjects and in 12 patients with
cirrhosis
during steady-state conditions obtained by a primed, continuous methionine infusion. In the presence of high-normal fasting methionine concentrations (range = 14 to 69 mumol.L-1 in controls and 26 to 151 mumol.L-1 in cirrhotic patients), methionine plasma clearance was reduced in cirrhotic patients (2.25 +/- S.D. 0.43 ml.sec-1 vs. 2.86 +/- S.D. 0.43 ml.sec-1 in controls; p less than 0.05), whereas methionine half-life was increased (282 +/- 90 min vs. 187 +/- 25 min in controls; p less than 0.05). Fasting methionine significantly correlated with methionine clearance. The infused methionine was not degraded to urea to any significant extent in cirrhotic patients, whereas a threefold increase in urinary urea
nitrogen
excretion rate was observed in controls. Similarly, taurine concentrations significantly increased both in plasma and in the urine in controls but not in cirrhotic patients. In cirrhotic patients methionine plasma clearance significantly correlated with galactose elimination capacity (r = 0.818) and with the Child-Pugh score (rs = -0.795). The study supports a major role of impaired liver cell function in the reduced metabolism of methionine and decreased formation of methionine end products that occur in
cirrhosis
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Defective methionine metabolism in cirrhosis: relation to severity of liver disease. 137 58
In patients with
liver cirrhosis
the fasting plasma alpha-amino
nitrogen
concentration is high as the rule, due to reduced clearance of total alpha-amino
nitrogen
. The urea cycle is diminished of its capacity in cirrhotic patients than in the control subject, and to compensate for this, the extrahepatic glutamine cycle capacity is enlarged in the patients. The following important topics were taken up in this mini review: some problems concerning Fischer ratio, amino acids metabolism and pH regulation in the liver, and the supplementation therapy with branched chain amino acids under the condition of organ relationship.
...
PMID:[Amino acid metabolism in liver cirrhosis]. 140 91
A 62-year-old woman presented with uveitis and abnormal chest X-ray (bilateral hilar adenopathy). Skin biopsy in 1983 had revealed non-caseating epithelioid cell granuloma consistent with sarcoidosis. Her serum biochemical investigations and exploratory laparoscopy suggested nodular
liver cirrhosis
, but biopsy was not performed. Both blood urea
nitrogen
(BUN) and serum creatinine values were within normal limits. She received prednisolone therapy of 15 mg daily initially, and later a maintenance dose of 5 mg daily. In 1985, she complained of skin itching and her laboratory data revealed severe renal insufficiency (BUN 97 mg/dl, serum creatinine 12.2 mg/dl) and hypercalcemia (corrected serum calcium level: 11.5 mg/dl). Prednisolone treatment (40 mg daily) resulted in a dramatic improvement of renal function as well as other clinical abnormalities due to sarcoidosis, without any significant changes in liver function. She died of cerebral infarction in 1989. Autopsy showed interstitial nephritis with tubular calcinosis and hyalinized glomeruli. It is postulated that hypercalcemia due to sarcoidosis contributed to the renal failure in this patient. This case suggests that renal damage due to sarcoidosis may be reversible with appropriate corticosteroid therapy.
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of sarcoidosis associated with renal failure]. 140 82
Duodenal and jejunal absorption of a nutrient solution at two different caloric loads (1.32 and 3.96 kcal/min = 5.6 and 16.8 kJ/min) was compared in chronic alcoholics without malnutrition,
liver cirrhosis
, obvious small-bowel dysfunction, and exocrine pancreatic insufficiency and in an age-matched control group, by means of the intestinal perfusion technique. In chronic alcoholics duodenal net absorption of water (p < 0.025), sodium (p < 0.02), potassium (p < 0.005), total
nitrogen
(p < 0.02), carbohydrates (p < 0.05), and lipids (p < 0.05) was lower than in controls when both caloric loads were administered, but jejunal absorption rates were not decreased. Biliopancreatic secretion did not differ between alcoholics and controls. Higher serum protein leakage in alcoholics was indicated by an increased (p < 0.01) duodenal alpha 1-antitrypsin clearance under low caloric load infusion. It is concluded that the absorptive function of the duodenum is impaired in alcoholics, whereas the upper jejunum is not affected.
...
PMID:Absorption of a nutrient solution in chronic alcoholics without nutrient deficiencies and liver cirrhosis. 147 18
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