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

The authors report the clinical and biological features in 197 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma seen in two French hospitals. Mean age was 63 +/- 12 years. Eighty-nine per cent were men. Cirrhosis was present in 88 p. 100. Alcoholic liver disease was associated with hepatocellular carcinoma in 71.5 p. 100. At the time of diagnosis, ascites was present in 62 p. 100 of the patients, jaundice in 49 p. 100, encephalopathy in 20 p. 100 and gastrointestinal bleeding in 12.5 p. 100. Twenty patients (10 p. 100) did not have any of these complications. An increase in serum gammaglutamyl transpeptidase and ASAT was the most frequent biological abnormality observed in 96 and 94 p. 100 of patients respectively. Hypercalcemia and a high hematocrit were present in 5 and 6 p. 100 of patients respectively. Serum HBs Ag (RIA) was present in 17.5 p. 100 of patients, anti-HBc in 50 p. 100 and anti-HBs in 33.5 p. 100; 38.5 p. 100 of patients had no serum HBV marker. Serum alphafetoprotein levels were higher than 20 ng/ml, 250 ng/ml and 1,000 ng/ml in 76.5 p. 100, 43.5 p. 100 and 33 p. 100 of patients respectively. There were no relationships between the presence of serum markers of HBV or high alphafetoprotein levels and clinical and biological data. These results confirm that the clinical, biological and virological aspects of hepatocellular carcinoma in France are similar to those reported in other western countries.
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PMID:[Hepatocellular carcinoma in France. Clinical, biological and virological aspects in 197 patients]. 298 69

A prognostic study based on 127 untreated patients with hepatocellular carcinoma was undertaken to evaluate their survival time and to find clinical and biologic criteria which allow the selection of patients with a survival time longer than 60 days who could enter a therapeutic trial. Twenty-eight clinical and biologic variables were assessed using univariate and multivariate semiparametric regression (Cox's) models. Ten variables were isolated by univariate analysis. Multivariate analysis found a negative relationship between a survival time longer than 60 days and five of these variables; these variables were in decreasing order: encephalopathy, alcohol consumption, aspartate amino transferase (AST), blood urea nitrogen, and total bilirubin. Prevalence, positive, and negative predictive values of encephalopathy were 20%, 27.5%, and 97% respectively. When three other criteria: ASAT greater than four times the upper limit of the normal (N), blood urea nitrogen greater than N, and total bilirubin greater than 2N were added, their prevalence, positive, and negative predictive values were 72%, 89.7%, and 57.1% respectively. These results suggest that in countries where incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma is low and recruitment of patients difficult, absence of encephalopathy must be the only criterion for selection of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma in therapeutic trials; whereas, in countries with a high incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma the other criteria may be added.
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PMID:Prognostic factors in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. Attempts for the selection of patients with prolonged survival. 303 3

In 117 patients affected by chronic alcoholic liver disease, we have histomorphometrically determined hepatocyte and nuclear areas, total amount of fat and total amount of fibrosis, comparing them with the following clinical and biochemical parameters: ascites, encephalopathy, jaundice, spiders, collateral circulation, splenomegaly, prothrombin activity, serum albumin, gammaglobulin, bilirubin, ASAT, ALAT, GGT, leukocyte and platelet count, and daily consumption of ethanol. Both hepatocyte and nuclear areas closely correlated with most of the parameters indicative of hepatic function derangement, whereas fat amount correlated with them inversely, but positively with the daily consumption of ethanol. The degree of fibrosis was greater in patients with a worse hepatic function, and there was a direct relationship between the degree of fibrosis and hepatocyte and nuclear areas, and an inverse one between the degree of fibrosis and the total amount of fat.
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PMID:Hepatocyte and nuclear areas and fatty infiltration of the liver in chronic alcoholic liver disease. 323 42

We report 20 cases of alcoholic cirrhosis with superimposed episodes of acute viral hepatitis. Four had acute type B hepatitis and 16, presumed non A non B hepatitis. Before hepatitis, 17 patients had stopped drinking and only four had a complicated cirrhosis. Eighteen patients had received a blood transfusion within the 6 months before the occurrence of hepatitis (mean: 52 days). All patients developed jaundice, 7 encephalopathy, and 5 ascites. The ASAT/ALAT ratio was greater than 1 in 18 patients. Two patients died of hepatic failure. Follow-up was known in 17 of the 18 surviving patients: in all patients jaundice disappeared and transaminases returned to values less than 3 times the upper limits of normal. In our experience, the prognosis is good when viral hepatitis occurs in patients with non complicated alcoholic cirrhosis.
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PMID:[Prognosis of acute viral hepatitis in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis]. 360 35

In a prospective study carried out on a group of 1210 patients with liver cirrhosis (LC), the diagnosis was based on clinical, biological and histological criteria, as well as on the prognostic significance of 20 clinical, biochemical and histological parameters. The group, including 830 males (68.59%) and 380 females (31.41%), with an average age of 49.27 +/- 13.18 years, was studied during periods of 6 to 16 months, the initial investigations being periodically repeated. The statistical significance of the prognosis factors was studied by uni- and multivariative methods, according to the model of Cox, with the help of an IMB computer. The survival rate for the group studied ranged from 6 to 204 months, with an average period of survival of 38.29 months. The multivariative analysis demonstrated that the prognosis factor with a best correlation with the death power is ascites, which has additional predictive significance in association with encephalopathy and/or jaundice. The multivariative analysis selects as clinical factors of unfavourable prognosis the cholestasis, the hepatocytolytic syndrome, the syndrome of liver deficiency and the age over 50. The limits of the biochemical parameters with unfavourable significance were: bilirubinemia level greater than 3 mg%, ASAT/ALAT = 50.24/70.33 u.i., prothrombinemic index less than 50% and albuminemia greater than 3 g%. The multivariative method proved also superior in appreciating the interrelations of the prognostic factors, emphasizing the significance of the clinical parameters (ascites, encephalopathy, jaundice), while the multivariative analysis differentiated the biochemical prognosis factors (bilirubinemia, ASAT/ALAT, prothrombinemic index, albuminemia) and their level of significance.
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PMID:Study of the prognosis factors in liver cirrhosis. 365 5

Alcoholic hepatitis (AH) seems to be less frequent and to play a lesser role in the death of cirrhotic patients than previously acknowledged. The purpose of this work was: 1) to study the cause of death of cirrhotic patients 2) to determine the prevalence of AH among these patients and 3) to describe the clinical and laboratory features of cirrhotic patients with AH. The data were collected from a series of 107 necropsies in cirrhotic patients without hepatocellular carcinoma. The statistical analyses were carried out with an IRIS 80 computer. Severe liver failure with jaundice and encephalopathy, hemorrhage and uncontrolled infection with septic shock represented 84 p. 100 of the causes of death in patients with cirrhosis. Seventy-nine out of 107 patients (74 p. 100) had no AH (group 1), and 28 (26 p. 100) had AH (group 2): AH was mild in 15 cases and severe in 13 cases. All patients with AH died from a complication directly related to their liver disease while 21.5 p. 100 of patients without AH died from a complication not related to cirrhosis. The clinical and laboratory features of the patients without AH and cirrhosis differed from those of patients without AH by: a more frequent presence of fever (p less than 0.01), the absence of important weight loss (p less than 0.001), the total absence of abstinence (p less than 0.05), a higher value of ASAT/ALAT ratio, of serum levels of total bilirubin (p less than 0.01) and conjugated bilirubin (p less than 0.05), gamma glutamyl transpeptidase (p less than 0.001) and total cholesterol (p less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Acute alcoholic hepatitis and death of cirrhotic patients]. 666 31

Just after Caesarean section for twin pregnancy and feto-pelvic dysproportion, a woman presented severe headaches and arterial hypertension, then blurred vision, then generalised seizures. There were no oedematous syndrome, proteinuria was negative, ASAT were 1.5 N and platelet count was 120,000/mm(3). Cerebral CT-scan was normal. Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) was diagnosed on MRI. A second MRI performed at day 9 showed complete regression of cerebral lesions, while patient was taking anti-hypertensive and antiepileptic drugs. PRES has to be evoked in post-partum central neurological symptoms, even in absence of classical sign of pre-eclampsia, like proteinuria. PRES and eclampsia share probably common physiopathological pathways. There management and prognosis seems identical.
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PMID:[Isolated severe neurologic disorders in post-partum: posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome]. 1757 73