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Query: UMLS:C0085584 (encephalopathy)
18,178 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In 75 cases of histologically verified liver cirrhosis the plasma amino acids were determined by ion exchange chromatography and the results were correlated with different liver function tests as prothrombin time, pseudocholinesterase, serum albumin, GOT, bilirubin and venous ammonia. Out of these parameters prothrombin time, pseudocholinesterase and serum albumin significantly correlated with the sum of branched-chain amino acids and with the Fischer's quotient (molar ratio of branched-chain and aromatic amino acids). Methionin and aromatic amino acids inversely correlated with these parameters, additionally methionin positively correlated with bilirubin and GOT. By comparing plasma amino acid levels in cirrhotics without and with hepatic encephalopathy (grade 3 or 4) no significant differences were found. "Fischer's quotient" showed an overlap in patients with and without encephalopathy. Therefore the precipitation of hepatic encephalopathy is not fully explained by the changes in plasma amino acids. Therapeutic administrations of specially mixtures of amino acids with a high content in branched-chain and a low content in aromatic amino acids correct the plasma amino inbalance for a short time and improves hepatic encephalopathy.
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PMID:Plasma amino acids in hepatic encephalopathy. 29 Jul 44

Protein binding of phenytoin was assesed in one patient with dialysis encephalopathy before and after haemodialysis. Phenytoin concentrations were measured by radioimmunoassay and continuous ultrafiltration was used to assess phenytoin binding. At a serum concentration of 60 micromol.1-1 the percentage of phenytoin bound to serum albumin was considerably lower in the patient serum (79.95% predialysis; 92.09% postdialysis) than that in three normal sera (97.90 +/- 0.17%). Analysis of Scatchard plots indicated two classes of binding sites. In class I both the affinity and capacity for binding phenytoin were reduced in the pre and post-dialysis serum, whereas in class II the capacity of the uraemic serum was increased although the intrinsic association constant was greatly reduced. It was concluded that in vivo haemodialysis is associated with large fluctuations in the protein binding of phenytoin, in which the concentration of endogenous dialysible metabolites are strongly implicated.
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PMID:Alterations of phenytoin protein binding with in vivo haemodialysis in dialysis encephalopathy. 42 30

The long-term prognosis in congenital hepatic fibrosis has been assessed in 30 patients, 13 treated at Newcastle and 17 from other British centres. Twenty-four patients had been followed-up for more than five years from diagnosis. Shunt operations, performed in 18 patients, were successful in controlling haemorrhage with a low mortality (1/18), low incidence of recurrent haemorrhage (3/18) and portal-systemic encephalopathy (3/18) but with a higher incidence of postoperative jaundice (7/18). About a third of the survivors had some evidence of hepatic dysfunction but none had chronic portal systemic encephalopathy. Intelligence quotient was close to normal but educational achievement and job status were low. Serum albumin fell after shunt surgery and a few patients developed ascites: anaemia and hypersplenism however, were corrected by surgery. Blood ammonia is raised in survivors with congenital hepatic fibrosis and rises further after a normal meal; further observations are needed on cerebral function after several decades of survival.
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PMID:Congenital hepatic fibrosis: the long-term prognosis. 68 May 86

The Child-Turcotte classification, as modified by Pugh et al., was recorded on diagnosis in 598 completely followed patients with cirrhosis of the liver. The variables that comprise the Pugh classification are ascites, encephalopathy, serum albumin, serum total bilirubin, and prothrombin time. The Pugh score categorized in three classes (class A = score 5 or 6, class B = score 7 to 11, class C = score 12 to 15) separates the series into three groups of approximately equal size with significant differences in median survivals (p less than 0.005) and in survival curves (p less than 0.0001). The characteristics of simplicity, availability, low cost and good discrimination power make the Pugh classification a very useful method to estimate prognosis in patients with cirrhosis of the liver.
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PMID:Prognostic value of Pugh's modification of Child-Turcotte classification in patients with cirrhosis of the liver. 140 30

To assess the prevalence of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP), ascitic fluid cell count, and ascitic fluid culture by conventional method and by bedside inoculation in blood culture bottles were performed in 31 consecutive patients of liver cirrhosis. Seven (22.58%) patients had ascitic fluid polymorphonuclear count (PMN) more than 500/mm. Ascitic fluid culture by conventional method was negative in all the patients, while in 4 patients culture was positive by bedside inoculation method. Six of 7 patients with SBP or its variant were in Child class C. Clinical features in these patients were abdominal pain (5 patients), fever (4) and encephalopathy (2); serum bilirubin level was 6.8 +/- 5.5 mg/dl, serum albumin 1.98 +/- 0.2 g/dl, prothrombin index 59.8 +/- 12.2%, ascitic fluid protein 0.78 +/- 0.24 g/dl. Three of 7 patients with SBP or its variant expired during hospital stay; the other 4 patients recovered after appropriate antibiotic therapy. We conclude that SBP is a serious complication in patients of liver cirrhosis with ascites. Ascitic fluid PMN count and bedside inoculation of blood culture bottles with ascitic fluid are sensitive indicators of SBP. Hence they should be performed routinely for early detection of SBP.
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PMID:Prevalence of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. 145 29

Seventeen preoperative variables were collected in order to assess their prognostic value on survival in 82 cirrhotic patients who underwent a portosystemic shunt for ruptured esophageal varices. Univariate analysis showed that the presence of encephalopathy, bad nutritional status, elevated serum bilirubin, low serum albumin, the presence of ascites and Child-Turcotte's or Child-Pugh's C class were significantly associated with a reduction of long-term survival. Multivariate analysis according to the Cox model showed that only encephalopathy and nutritional status were independently associated with survival. Six survival curves were proposed to estimate the survival probability with these 2 preoperative data; encephalopathy had a predominant effect on survival during the first 5 years after surgery.
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PMID:[Portacaval anastomosis in patients with liver cirrhosis. Study of prognostic factors of survival by multivariate analysis]. 152 96

The value of the aminoterminal procollagen-III-peptide (P-III-P) in predicting death or survival was evaluated in a group of 43 patients with proven postnecrotic or alcoholic cirrhosis. Patients were followed-up prospectively for 2 years. The prognostic value of P-III-P was compared with the Child classification, fasting and postprandial serum bile acids, and standard laboratory tests such as bilirubin, prothrombin index, pseudocholinesterase, albumin, GOT, GPT, gamma-GT, and clinical findings such as ascites, encephalopathy (assessed with the number connection test = NCT), and nutritional status. Between patients who died and those who survived the following 2 years, there were significant differences in the following parameters at the time of inclusion in the study: encephalopathy judged by NCT (p = 0.001), serum albumin (p = 0.0012), postprandial serum bile acids (p = 0.0024), fasting serum bile acids (p = 0.0025), pseudocholinesterase (p = 0.0044), GOT (p = 0.015), bilirubin (p = 0.016), and prothrombin index (p = 0.01). None of the other parameters investigated, including SP-III-P (p = 0.46), revealed any statistically significant differences between patients who died and survivors. The prognostic significance of laboratory tests and recorded clinical findings was evaluated, either alone or in combination with life-table analysis using the Cox model. SP-III-P, alone or in combination with other parameters, failed to improve prediction of mortality in patients with cirrhosis. In comparison to the Child classification (p = 0.0004) the combination of NCT and postprandial serum bile acids showed a similar ability (p = 0.0003) to predict patient survival.
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PMID:Predictive value of serum procollagen-III-peptide for the survival of patients with cirrhosis. 180 22

Seventy-eight patients with cirrhosis were prospectively followed for up to 20 months, on the average. At entry into the study, galactose elimination capacity, aminopyrine breath test, and ICG clearance were measured. At the end of the study, 27 patients had died. Univariate analysis using the Kaplan-Meier method showed that both quantitative liver function tests (galactose elimination capacity: P less than 0.025; aminopyrine breath test: P less than 0.001; ICG clearance: P less than 0.005) and common clinical and biochemical data (encephalopathy: P less than 0.001; ascites: P less than 0.001; serum bilirubin: P less than 0.005; serum albumin: P less than 0.001; prothrombin index: P less than 0.05) were significant predictors of survival. To investigate whether quantitative liver function tests could contribute to a better definition of the prognosis, once Pugh score had already been taken into account, a multiple regression analysis according to the Cox model was performed. Pugh score and galactose elimination capacity resulted in the only independent prognostic covariates. From them a prognostic index was calculated, and the model was validated in an additional sample of 70 patients investigated according to the same protocol. The contribution GEC gave to the assessment of overall prognosis over that obtained using the Pugh score was slight, as estimated by the statistical parameters of the Cox's model, but was significant as assessed by a ROC curve analysis (P = 0.05). These data show that all quantitative liver function tests were predictors of survival in cirrhosis, and that the galactose elimination capacity added some new prognostic information to those already available using the Child-Turcotte-Pugh classification.
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PMID:Prognostic value of galactose elimination capacity, aminopyrine breath test, and ICG clearance in patients with cirrhosis. Comparison with the Pugh score. 189 4

An encephalopathy developed in three infants in the intensive care unit after heavy sedation with midazolam and fentanyl for 4 to 11 days. The affected infants had poor social interaction, decreased visual attentiveness, dystonic postures, and choreoathetosis. Symptoms cleared completely in 5 days to 4 weeks. Retrospective review of records of all children treated in the intensive care unit with prolonged intravenous administration of midazolam revealed that 45 children could be assessed neurologically on withdrawal of sedation. Three children had definite and two had possible neurologic sequelae (5/45, 11.1%). All had received concomitant intravenous fentanyl therapy. Neurologic sequelae were significantly associated with young age, female gender, low serum albumin concentration, and concomitant administration of aminophylline. This encephalopathy may represent a benzodiazepine withdrawal syndrome, a prolonged agonist action on the benzodiazepine receptor, or the combined effects of multiple toxic, metabolic, and infectious insults to the central nervous system of infants in the intensive care unit. Prolonged use of intravenous midazolam sedation necessitates careful dosing, monitoring, and discontinuation, particularly in infants and young children.
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PMID:Reversible neurologic abnormalities associated with prolonged intravenous midazolam and fentanyl administration. 191 90

Physicians and surgeons have long recognized that septic illness may be accompanied by abnormal brain functions; however, no systematic, comprehensive study has been done to define the clinical and laboratory features of the syndrome of sepsis-associated encephalopathy. We undertook such a prospective study in a tertiary care hospital and found that of 69 patients with fever and microbial cultures, 32 had marked brain dysfunction, 17 showed mild encephalopathy, and 20 were clinically nonencephalopathic. Severe cases showed obtundation and paratonic rigidity while milder cases showed confusion, inappropriate behavior, inattention, disorientation, and writing errors. There were no focal neurological deficits. The following factors correlated with the severity of brain dysfunction: adult respiratory distress syndrome; fatal outcome; certain types of EEG abnormality; axonal peripheral neuropathy; elevated peripheral white blood cell count; elevated serum levels of alkaline phosphatase, bilirubin, creatinine, phosphate, potassium, and urea; reduced blood pressure and reduced serum albumin level. Our data suggest that brain functions fail with dysfunction of other organs in septic illness. Pathogenetic mechanisms are discussed. The brain dysfunction should be regarded as potentially reversible, even in severely encephalopathic cases. Prompt control of the infection is the most important measure in controlling the encephalopathy and in preventing the increased mortality found with severely encephalopathic patients.
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PMID:The encephalopathy associated with septic illness. 207 9


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