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Query: UMLS:C0085584 (
encephalopathy
)
18,178
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cerebral infarcts in 3 patients revealed the presence of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIVC) of cancerous origin before any clinical manifestations of the neoplasm. Neurologic manifestations of these consumption coagulopathies almost constantly produce a picture of diffuse
encephalopathy
, expression of disseminated microinfarcts; however, transient or constituted focalized ischemic accidents by occlusion of a medium sized artery are also possible, and this in the absence of non-bacterial thrombotic endocarditis. Biologic diagnosis of DIVC is not always simple, and screening tests (platelet count,
prothrombin
and fibrinogen levels) can remain within normal limits during chronic forms, as a result of a subjacent inflammatory syndrome, frequently associated with cancer. Two other specific serum tests are therefore of fundamental interest: assay of fibrin degradation products and tests for soluble complexes.
...
PMID:[Cerebral ischemic accidents and chronic disseminated intravascular coagulation of cancerous origin]. 338 Oct 47
Despite the widespread application of endoscopy in acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding, there is little evidence of improved survival among those who undergo the procedure. To select high-risk patients who might benefit most from diagnostic and therapeutic endoscopy, the authors developed and validated a scoring system based on prognostic indicators of increased mortality. The scoring system was developed from the best clinical predictors of mortality, determined in a prospective study of consecutive bleeding patients. The model was then tested in a prospective validation phase at three hospitals. Three main factors in the model predict mortality: bleeding, including hematochezia, drop in hematocrit of 5%, short duration of bleeding, absence of melena, and hypotension; liver disease, manifested by prolonged
prothrombin
time and
encephalopathy
; and renal disease. Patients determined to be at high risk for death using the scoring system might be candidates for aggressive management and for therapeutic endoscopy.
...
PMID:Development of a scoring system to predict mortality from upper gastrointestinal bleeding. 349 91
Focusing on frequency and severity of alcoholic hepatitis (AH) in our country, data provided by 10 university and health care centers were analyzed, based on a form specially designed; 3428 autopsy protocols, 4315 laparoscopy and/or liver biopsy records, and 414 clinical histories from histopathologically proved AH patients, were selected as information source. Autopsy prevalence was 2.4%, corresponding to AH 7.7% of whole diagnostic liver biopsies, 24.6% of those taken from chronic alcoholics, and 32.2% of biopsied alcoholic liver diseases. Clinical severity was related to the kind of centre where data came from (hepatological, neuropsychiatric, etc.) but general sample showed 76.5% mild AH, 17.6% moderate, and 5.7% severe. Acute mortality attributable to AH was 5.5%, raising up 40.0% in severe type group; clinical severity seemed to be more related to mortality than co-existent cirrhosis. Spontaneous
encephalopathy
,
prothrombin
concentration under 50% without response to K vitamin supply, and hepato-renal syndrome, were the more significant bad prognosis factors (31.2%, 50.6% and 66.6% mortality respectively).
...
PMID:[Alcoholic hepatitis: epidemiologic nature and severity of the clinical course in Argentina]. 350 55
The objective of this study was to assess the prognostic validity of Child-Turcotte classification with regard to short-term (1-year) survival. The Child-Turcotte classification, as modified by Pugh et al., was recorded on admission in 177 cirrhotic patients. The variables that comprise the Pugh modification are ascites,
encephalopathy
, serum albumin, serum bilirubin and
prothrombin
time. Using multiple logistic regression, we evaluated the contribution of different models to the likelihood of survival, defining different ways to use the Pugh score. The Pugh score categorized in three strata (5 to 6, 7 to 9 and 10 to 15) captured less variance in the survival than the Pugh score counted from 5 to 15. This, in turn, captured less variance than a model in which the parameters of the Pugh score were analyzed according to their original units. The prediction rule based on the last model was tested in another sample of cirrhotics. The "original unit" model was studied in both training and testing samples, using receiver-operating characteristic curves to evaluate its clinical validity (sensitivity and specificity). The prediction rule based on the "original units" Pugh score allowed for a good discrimination of patients who lived and those who died. (At the point of maximum discrimination, sensitivity and specificity reached a mean of 80%). Validity of the prediction rule was confirmed by the testing sample. The qualities of simplicity, availability, low cost and good discriminating power for a life or death outcome make the Pugh score a very useful method to estimate prognosis in patients with cirrhosis.
...
PMID:Clinical and statistical validity of conventional prognostic factors in predicting short-term survival among cirrhotics. 361 46
Hepatic metabolism is the primary process of elimination of propafenone. It therefore is important to understand the effect of altered liver function on the disposition and elimination kinetics of this drug. Patients with abnormal liver function probably will require treatment with propafenone for cardiac arrhythmias; an understanding of the relationship between liver function and the pharmacokinetics of propafenone will provide a rational basis for optimal dosage adjustments in these individuals. Our results demonstrate that both systemic clearance and bioavailability of propafenone are sensitive to variability in liver function. The bioavailability of propafenone is inversely related to the clearance of indocyanine green (ICG), whereas a direct relationship exists between systemic clearance of propafenone and ICG clearance. Comparisons of clinical parameters with the propafenone data yielded interesting results. An overall clinical grading of severity of liver disease based on the presence or absence of portal hypertension (i.e., varices and/or splenomegaly), prior
encephalopathy
, and ascites did not correlate well with propafenone results. However, albumin, total bilirubin, serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT) concentrations and
prothrombin
time values correlated strongly with the overall results. No definite relationships with subjects' age; weight; and hemoglobin, alkaline phosphatase, lactic acid dehydrogenose, cholesterol, blood urea nitrogen, or creatinine levels were detected. These results demonstrate that moderate to severe liver disease significantly affects the absorption and disposition of propafenone. In patients with cirrhosis, and presumably other forms of hepatic dysfunction, careful adjustments of propafenone doses are needed to optimize therapy.
...
PMID:Influence of hepatic dysfunction on the pharmacokinetics of propafenone. 369 82
As part of a large multicenter Veterans Administration Cooperative Study of Alcoholic Hepatitis, 89 patients with clinically mild biopsy-proven disease were followed for at least 30 months. Although clinical and laboratory abnormalities were minimal, cirrhosis was present in 38%, and mortality was 22% at 30 months. Clinical features suggesting more advanced disease (i.e., ascites and
encephalopathy
) and laboratory parameters for the diagnosis of alcoholic hepatitis and/or cirrhosis were imprecise and frequently misleading. The histologic diagnosis of cirrhosis correlated best with changes in immunoglobulin A,
prothrombin
time, and SGOT/SGPT. However, by using logistic discriminant analysis on 26 commonly available laboratory tests to diagnose cirrhosis, only a 72% sensitivity and 88% specificity could be obtained. Mortality in the patients with cirrhosis (10/34) was significantly higher at 1 and 2 yr compared with patients without cirrhosis (10/55, p less than 0.01). The high mortality in noncirrhotics may have resulted from progression to cirrhosis subsequent to the initial evaluation. Thus, liver biopsy in this population with minimal disease seems necessary to establish both an accurate diagnosis and the reversibility of the disease.
...
PMID:VA Cooperative Study on Alcoholic Hepatitis. IV. The significance of clinically mild alcoholic hepatitis--describing the population with minimal hyperbilirubinemia. 377 48
Endotoxemia without sepsis was detected with a chromogenic Limulus assay in 36 of 39 (92.3%) cirrhotic patients and was absent in seven healthy volunteers. In 11 patients who underwent elective portasystemic shunt, portal vein endotoxemia was higher than inferior vena caval: p less than 0.05, systemic endotoxin levels did not change, compared to preoperative levels, on the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd postoperative days, attendant to an uneventful recovery. In 21 patients in hepatic encephalopathy after esophagogastric hemorrhage, systemic endotoxemia was higher than in well-compensated cirrhotics: p less than 0.001; it was higher in deep than in light coma: p less than 0.05; it was higher in those who died than in those who survived: p less than 0.001. Endotoxin levels showed a positive correlation with serum bilirubin: r = 0.59, p less than 0.001, and a negative correlation with
prothrombin
activity: r = -0.59, p less than 0.001. These data show endotoxemia without sepsis is a constant finding in cirrhosis and increasing levels of endotoxemia are associated with hepatic failure,
encephalopathy
, and death.
...
PMID:Endotoxemia, encephalopathy, and mortality in cirrhotic patients. 379 74
Reye's syndrome (RS) is generally considered a childhood disease. We report our experience with RS in adults in the metropolitan Milwaukee area. Reye's syndrome was diagnosed in seven 18- to 46-year-old adults. The diagnostic criteria were as follows: viral prodrome followed by vomiting and
encephalopathy
without focal neurological signs, normal cerebrospinal fluid values, increased levels of serum aminotransferases (transaminase), prolonged
prothrombin
time, elevated blood ammonia levels, and characteristic microvesicular fatty liver and mitochondrial changes. None of the patients was hypoglycemic. The diagnosis of RS was entertained in 22 but confirmed in only seven patients. In cases of non-Reye's encephalopathy, drug ingestion presented as one of the most difficult differential diagnostic problems, which also included alcohol abuse, collagen vascular disease, and hepatitis B surface antigenemia. Clinical jaundice, distinctly uncommon in RS, was present in only one patient who presented to us in stage V coma. In adults, RS is more difficult to diagnose and should be suspected more frequently in patients with unexplained altered behavior following a viral illness and vomiting. Liver biopsy can be performed safely and is usually mandatory in adults. Patients with RS diagnosed during stage I or II coma and treated experienced an uneventful recovery.
...
PMID:Reye's syndrome in adults. Diagnostic considerations. 380 May 31
To investigate the natural history of compensated cirrhosis, 293 consecutive patients without previous major complications (ascites, jaundice,
encephalopathy
or gastrointestinal hemorrhage) were studied in terms of morbidity (probability of developing decompensated cirrhosis during follow-up) and survival. Patients were diagnosed by liver histology between 1968 and 1980. Median follow-up was 63 months. Decompensation of cirrhosis was considered when a patient first developed one of the major complications of the disease. Ten years after diagnosis, the probability of developing decompensated cirrhosis and the survival probability rate were 58 and 47%, respectively. A multivariate survival analysis (Cox's regression model) using clinical, biochemical and histological data obtained at diagnosis disclosed seven factors that predicted prognosis: serum bilirubin; serum gamma-globulin concentration; hepatic stigmata;
prothrombin
time; sex; age, and alkaline phosphatase. According to the contribution of each one of these factors to the final model, a prognostic index was constructed that allows calculation of the estimated survival probability. The predicting value of this index was validated by a split sample testing technique.
...
PMID:Compensated cirrhosis: natural history and prognostic factors. 380 91
In order to identify factors predicting survival following acute variceal haemorrhage, data were collected prospectively from 100 admissions in 70 patients managed by a standard policy employing oesophageal tamponade, injection sclerotherapy and, if necessary, oesophageal transection. Of the ten predictive factors identified by univariate analysis, only
prothrombin
ratio, serum creatinine and the presence of
encephalopathy
on admission were shown by stepwise logistic regression to have independent significance. The derived regression equation allowed clearer identification than conventional scoring systems of high and low risk groups and successfully predicted outcome in 90 per cent of admissions.
...
PMID:Prediction of outcome following acute variceal haemorrhage. 387 50
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