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Query: UMLS:C0033774 (
pruritus
)
14,546
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The study includes 108 patients with acute alcohol hepatitis, 45 patients with
cholestasis
and 124 healthy controls. In 14 patients (13%) cholestatic acute alcohol hepatitis was found. The patients with cholestatic acute alcohol hepatitis consumed considerably more alcohol than the other patients with acute alcohol hepatitis. The intensive jaundice led half of the patients with cholestatic acute alcohol hepatitis to the infectious diseases clinic and 32% of them to the surgical clinic. The course of the disease was heavy, with disturbed general condition, high temperature, pain in the right subcostal region but without
itching
. The patients showed higher levels of timol test, cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol, coefficient LDL/HDL-cholesterol, beta-lipoproteins, total lipids, gamma-GTP, ASAT and lower levels of leucocytes, bilirubin, SMC, alkaline phosphatase and LAP than the other patients with
cholestasis
. The patients with cholestatic acute alcohol hepatitis showed a higher level of total lipids and gamma-GTP than the other patients examined. The confirmation of the diagnosis implies the application of contemporary instrumental and invasive methods. The ultrasound examination is of special importance.
...
PMID:[The clinico-laboratory characteristics of the cholestatic form of acute alcoholic hepatitis]. 263 77
A large number of drugs may be associated with impaired bile flow. Drug-associated
cholestasis
presents like other forms of
cholestasis
with pale stools, dark urine,
pruritus
and jaundice. Abdominal pain may be present in some instances and can be so severe as to lead to a false diagnosis of acute cholecystitis. Biochemically, drug-associated
cholestasis
resembles other forms of
cholestasis
although the presence of eosinophilia may suggest drug involvement. Many types of drug-induced
cholestasis
run a benign course with resolution of signs and symptoms within 3 months but occasionally the jaundice can take a year or more to resolve. Progression to cirrhosis is uncommon. Some patients may develop a syndrome resembling primary biliary cirrhosis. The mechanisms of drug-associated
cholestasis
are uncertain but may arise from alteration of bile formation within the hepatocyte or bile excretion at the level of the canaliculus or the extrahepatic ducts. Histological examination of the liver may be helpful in classifying the types of jaundice but the diagnosis of drug-induced
cholestasis
is usually one of temporal association and exclusion of other causes.
...
PMID:Drug-induced jaundice. 265 64
The occurrence of hepatobiliary disease with or without jaundice during pregnancy provides both the hepatologist and obstetrician with an interesting and urgent diagnostic challenge. Advances in our understanding and management of liver disorders unique to pregnancy and hepatobiliary disease in general have resulted in a significant improvement in the outcome for both mother and fetus. Certain disorders such as acute fatty liver of pregnancy and hepatic haemorrhage associated with toxaemia should be considered medical emergencies and delay in diagnosis of these conditions will probably adversely affect maternal and fetal outcome. A careful clinical history, physical examination, appropriate laboratory tests and radiological investigations should allow a diagnosis within 24-48 hours of presentation. Liver biopsy is rarely required. A careful history may provide important information. Does the patient have pre-existent liver disease? Has there been contact with hepatitis, intravenous drug abuse or any other factor predisposing to acute viral hepatitis? Does the patient have a family history of
pruritus
and/or jaundice to suggest intrahepatic
cholestasis
of pregnancy? Is the patient's alcohol consumption excessive? Has the patient received any hepatotoxic medications? Has there been abdominal pain and/or fever to suggest gallstones, hepatic bleeding or acute fatty liver of pregnancy? Laboratory investigations may give valuable diagnostic clues. Marked aminotransferase elevation would suggest acute viral or 'ischaemic' hepatitis. Haematological features of microangiopathic haemolysis would point towards toxaemia or AFLP. Hepatitis A and B serological tests may be helpful in viral liver disease. Radiological investigations may be indicated depending on the clinical context. Abdominal ultrasonography may be useful in the diagnosis of gallstones, biliary obstruction, liver tumours or intrahepatic bleeding. Fatty infiltration of the liver may be diagnosed by ultrasonography but computed tomography (CT) of the abdomen is probably more reliable for a diagnosis of acute fatty liver of pregnancy as it allows measurement of liver density which is typically reduced by fatty infiltration. CT scanning is also probably more valuable than ultrasound in assessing the extent of capsular rupture and haemorrhage into the liver and peritoneal cavity.
...
PMID:Jaundice in pregnancy. 265 65
Primary biliary cirrhosis is a chronic liver disease of unknown etiology characterized by slowly progressive intrahepatic
cholestasis
due to an inflammatory destruction of small intrahepatic bile ducts. The clinical course of PBC is variable ranging from a few years in rapidly progressive cases to a normal life-expectancy in a proportion of asymptomatic cases. The typical patient is a middle-aged woman who may present with
pruritus
, increasing pigmentation of the skin, and eventually jaundice. The level of serum alkaline phosphatase is almost invariably elevated, serum mitochondrial antibodies are present in more than 90 per cent, and an elevated serum IgM is usually present. PBC is associated with many immunologic abnormalities and appears to be a classic autoimmune disease. Some of the immune defects may be epiphenomena; others such as a marked defect in suppressor T cell function seem to be related to the pathogenesis of the disease. All drug therapy that is aimed at slowing the disease process is experimental. A place for immunosuppressive drugs in the management of PBC would be anticipated. However, no drug has to date been definitively shown to have a beneficial effect on the disease. Currently, the main treatments used are aimed at preventing or correcting the complications of intractable
cholestasis
. Patients with PBC and evidence of hepatic decompensation and/or poor quality of life make good candidates for liver transplantation. The current aim of therapy is to find an effective regime of immunosuppression that will make hepatic transplantation redundant for this disease.
...
PMID:Primary biliary cirrhosis. 265 67
Benign recurrent intrahepatic cholestasis is characterized by attacks of
cholestasis
. The purpose of our study of 26 patients was to emphasize some features uncommonly or never reported in this disease: (a) in each patient, the attacks of
cholestasis
were stereotypic; (b) attacks of
cholestasis
were not associated with
pruritus
in 15% of our patients; (c) the occurrence of attacks of
cholestasis
during pregnancy or oral contraceptive use might be a fortuitous coincidence; (d) gallstones were found in several patients with benign recurrent intrahepatic cholestasis and might be present earlier than in the general population; (e) in some of our patients, during attacks of
cholestasis
, serum transaminases were very high, exceeding 15 times the upper limit of normal; (f) mild portal inflammatory infiltration was found in one third of our patients; (g) no treatment shortened the duration of
cholestasis
, and in a few patients, plasmapheresis seemed to diminish jaundice and improve biochemical disorders.
...
PMID:Benign recurrent intrahepatic cholestasis. A report of 26 cases. 279 32
Proposed mechanisms, clinical features, prevalence, and treatment of phenothiazine-induced cholestatic jaundice are reviewed, and interactions between phenothiazines and other drugs that could theoretically alter the risk of
cholestasis
are described. Phenothiazine-induced jaundice is classified as a form of cholestatic hepatocanalicular hepatotoxicity and as an acute liver disease. Occasionally cholestatic jaundice may progress to chronic liver disease. The mechanism of hepatotoxicity is not completely understood but may involve a combination of physiochemical, immune, and direct toxic effects. Based on proposed mechanisms, concomitant use of drugs that alter microsomal hepatic enzyme function or have metabolic pathways that interfere with or overlap with those of the phenothiazines could be expected to potentiate or reduce the risk of
cholestasis
. The estimated prevalence of jaundice with chlorpromazine is 1-2%. The prevalence of jaundice with other phenothiazines is probably similar. The onset of jaundice usually occurs during the first one to four weeks of therapy. In most cases, discontinuation of the offending drug is the only treatment required. Jaundice usually resolves without sequelae two to eight weeks later.
Pruritus
can be relieved by topical corticosteroid or analgesic therapies or by oral antihistamines or bile acid sequestrants if topical therapy is ineffective. Whenever possible, reinstitution of neuroleptic therapy should be delayed until the reaction has resolved. Selection of a nonphenothiazine neuroleptic agent may be preferred. Phenothiazine-induced cholestatic jaundice occurs relatively infrequently and is usually self-limited; topical agents and oral antihistamines can alleviate the discomfort associated with the reaction.
...
PMID:Phenothiazine-induced cholestatic jaundice. 290 41
A 39-yr-old female on high-dose Danazol presented with jaundice and
pruritus
. Danazol-induced
cholestasis
was suspected, and the drug was discontinued. A liver biopsy revealed panlobular
cholestasis
with portal and periportal inflammation. The
cholestasis
resolved completely in 8 wk. This is a rare case of Danazol-induced
cholestasis
and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of drug-induced liver injury.
...
PMID:Danazol-induced cholestasis. 292 66
The Watson-Alagille syndrome is a distinctive type of congenital
cholestasis
, in which hepatic ductular hypoplasia is associated with various ocular, bony, and cardiac anomalies, often with a characteristic facies. The prognosis is surprisingly good, and we present a 26-year-old woman with this syndrome in whom intense
pruritus
and xanthomatosis had been prominent during infancy but had subsequently cleared completely. The recognition of this syndrome in a young child with cholestatic jaundice may obviate the need for a diagnostic laparotomy.
...
PMID:Xanthomas in the Watson-Alagille syndrome. 310 38
A 56-year-old female patient on verapamil for hypertension experienced two episodes of jaundice,
pruritus
and upper abdominal pain with transaminase elevated up to six-fold and alkaline phosphatase up to four-fold when inadvertently re-challenged with the drug. Liver biopsy showed marked
cholestasis
. Verapamil can occasionally cause mixed cytotoxic-cholestatic liver injury.
...
PMID:Liver injury due to verapamil. 318 62
The cause of
pruritus
of
cholestasis
is unknown. We have hypothesized that
pruritus
may be caused by an indirect effect of high hepatic concentrations of toxic bile acids. To test this hypothesis, we have conducted a double-blind, controlled, crossover clinical trial of rifampin, an agent that inhibits hepatic bile acid uptake and may detoxify hepatic bile acids by stimulation of mixed-function oxidases. Nine patients with primary biliary cirrhosis received 300-450 mg/day of rifampin and placebo sequentially, in random order. Each treatment was administered for 14 days, with a 14-day washout between treatments. Endpoints included patient preference, changes in a daily visual analogue scale
pruritus
score, and amount of cholestyramine ingested. Antipyrine elimination rates and serum bile acids were tested at the end of each treatment period. All 9 patients completed the trial and 8 of them preferred rifampin to placebo (p = 0.03). There were no adverse reactions. Visual analogue scale
pruritus
scores showed no significant placebo response or any effect from the order of treatment, but did show a highly significant reduction in
pruritus
in response to rifampin (p less than 0.002). This effect was evident within the first week of rifampin treatment. Rifampin produced a 33% reduction in antipyrine plasma half-life, but no change in fasting total serum bile acids. Cholestyramine usage did not change significantly. We conclude that rifampin is useful for short-term relief of
pruritus
in primary biliary cirrhosis; however, the mechanism of this effect is unknown. Longer trials are needed, as are trials in other cholestatic disorders.
...
PMID:Treatment of pruritus in primary biliary cirrhosis with rifampin. Results of a double-blind, crossover, randomized trial. 327 68
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