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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (
colon cancer
)
28,837
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The statistics of clinical observation at Department of Internal Medicine, Nippon Dental University at Niigata from July 1981 to December 1987 (duration 6.5 years) were as follows: Total number of inpatients: 1,238, Total number of death cases: 106. Findings include: 1) Ratio of male patients to female patients 1.34:1.00. Male deceased patients to female deceased patients 1.52:1.00. 2) Average patients number hospitalized per year was 200. The high percentaged of certain advanced aged groups was reflected by the recent demographic changes in the society in general.; in their 60's 46.0%, in their 70's 24.3%, in their 80's 6.7%. In these age groups, female number is tendency to increase the number of male. 3) The diseases of inpatients were mostly due to the digestive tract, which accounted for 60.4% of the total. Of this percentage, 65% was due to hepato-biliary diseases. 4) The death statistics of malignant tumor was 68.9%; Benign diseases being 31.1%. Male patients died from hepatocellar carcinoma, lung cancer,
colon cancer
and stomach cancer, in descending order. Females died from cancer of the biliary tract, stomach cancer and hepatocellular carcinoma, again, in descending order. 5) 71.7% of all deaths were caused by the digestive tract, in particular, hepatocellular carcinoma, cancer of the biliary tract, liver cirrhosis and
primary biliary cirrhosis
, all belonging primarily to the hepato-biliary disease group. 6) As a result of 58 autopsies performed for 106 death cases, 32 cases had complete autopsies and 26 cases had partial organ punctures.
...
PMID:[Clinico-statistical study of inpatients and autopsied cases in our clinic]. 276 60
Liver transplantation is complicated by specific medical problems. Diabetes mellitus occurs in 4-20% of patients undergoing liver transplantation. Patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis and ulcerative colitis experience up to a 13% incidence of
colon cancer
after transplantation. Lymphomas occur in 1-3% of patients after transplantation and account for 57% of malignancies occurring in adult patients. Atraumatic bone fractures occur in 22-38% of patients and neurological complications, including seizures, headache, and neuropathy occur in 19-47% of patients following liver transplantation. Patients undergoing liver transplantation may experience recurrence of their primary liver disease: hepatitis B, hepatitis C,
primary biliary cirrhosis
, autoimmune hepatitis, or primary sclerosing cholangitis. In patients not receiving immunoprophylaxis after transplantation for chronic hepatitis B, recurrent hepatitis B is seen in up to 90% of patients. This can be markedly reduced with hyperimmune globulin immunoprophylaxis. Recurrent hepatitis C is seen in the majority of patients; current treatment modalities are inadequate. Recurrence of
primary biliary cirrhosis
or primary sclerosing cholangitis in the allograft is infrequent. Autoimmune hepatitis may recur in up to 26% of patients following liver transplantation. Primary disease recurrence in the allograft and preventive strategies are discussed.
...
PMID:Medical problems occurring after orthotopic liver transplantation. 928 32
Recently, several epidemiologic observations have suggested that obesity might be an independent risk factor for certain malignancies such as breast cancer,
colon cancer
, renal cell carcinoma, and esophageal adenocarcinoma. However, there are no studies examining the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in obesity. The aim of the present study was to determine whether obesity is an independent risk factor for HCC in patients with cirrhosis. Explanted liver specimens from a national database on patients undergoing liver transplantation were examined for HCC, and the incidence was compared among patients with varying body mass indices according to the etiology of cirrhosis. A multivariate analysis was used for controlling other potentially confounding variables such as age and sex. Among 19,271 evaluable patients, the overall incidence of HCC was 3.4% (n = 659) with a slightly higher prevalence among obese patients compared with lean patients. Obesity was an independent predictor for HCC in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis (odds ratio [OR], 3.2; 95% CI, 1.5-6.6; P =.002) and cryptogenic cirrhosis (OR, 11.1; 95% CI, 1.5-87.4; P =.02). Obesity was not an independent predictor in patients with hepatitis C, hepatitis B,
primary biliary cirrhosis
, and autoimmune hepatitis. The higher risk of HCC in obese patients is confined to alcoholic liver disease and cryptogenic cirrhosis. In conclusion, more frequent surveillance for HCC may be warranted in obese patients with alcoholic and cryptogenic cirrhosis. However, as this study is based on patients with advanced cirrhosis, our findings need to be confirmed in a broader population of individuals with cirrhosis.
...
PMID:Is obesity an independent risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma in cirrhosis? 1208 59
Autoimmune diseases of the liver are chronic inflammatory diseases leading to an etiologically undefined immune-mediated attack aimed at the hepatocyte, small microscopic bile ducts, and the entire biliary system detectable by cholangiography, respectively. From the standpoint of clinical disease three entities can be distinguished: autoimmune hepatitis (AIH),
primary biliary cirrhosis
(
PBC
), and primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC). These are not only different regarding their clinical profile but also differ in diagnostic strategy, therapeutic regimen and probability of remission, as well as their association with other immune-mediated diseases and cancer.
PBC
and PSC are cholestatic diseases.
PBC
is most often diagnosed in women. The diagnosis is readily reached by the detection of specific antimitochondrial autoantibodies directed against pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH-E2), is associated with an array of rheumatological extrahepatic syndromes and responds unsatisfactorily to immunosuppressive drugs. Ursodeoxycholic acid leads to biochemical and possibly histological benefits. In contrast, PSC affects younger men who suffer from inflammatory bowel disease in 75% of cases. PSC is not characterized by specific serum autoantibodies. The diagnosis is reached by histology and typical findings upon cholangiography. In 10-20% PSC is associated with cholangiocarcinoma and also with
colon cancer
. PSC also does not respond well to immunosuppression. Therapeutic interventions include mechanical endoscopic manipulation of the bile ducts, treatment of cholangitis and ursodeoxycholic acid. AIH is a classical autoimmune disease with a female predisposition, circulating autoantibodies, elevated immunoglobulins, the association of other extrahepatic autoimmune diseases, and a dramatic response to immunosuppression with normalization of the patient's prognosis upon remission and prevention of cirrhosis. However, the diagnosis is only reached by the exclusion of other liver diseases also characterized by biochemical, histological and clinical features of chronic hepatitis. In this light, the precise diagnosis is essential. In spite of the clear distinctions of the three diseases overlapping syndromes do exist. These can be characterized as the coexistence of serological parameters of
PBC
and AIH, of cholestasis and hepatitis, of autoantibodies and viral markers, or the consecutive manifestation of
PBC
and AIH, or AIH and PSC. However, the overlap of genuine autoimmune diseases is rare. This is relevant regarding therapy and must lead to the precise clinical and diagnostic discrimination of serological autoimmunity (autoantibodies) and genuine autoimmune disease (i.e. AIH) for the initiation of efficatious therapeutic measures. AIH,
PBC
and PSC are well established indications for liver transplantation with good results. Transplantation is required when cirrhosis is progressive despite therapy and is likely to lead to liver failure.
...
PMID:[Autoimmune liver diseases and their overlap syndromes]. 1698 80
Sarcoidosis is a granulomatous disease of unknown origin, with pulmonary findings in more than 90% of patients. Extrapulmonary involvement is common and all organs can be involved (especially lymph nodes, eyes, joints, central nervous system) but it is rare to find an isolated extrapulmonary disease (less than 10% of patients). Granulomatous inflammation of the spleen and the liver is common in patients with systemic sarcoidosis, while hepatosplenic enlargement is unusual and splenic involvement rare. We report two cases of systemic sarcoidosis, that onset with splenic and hepatosplenic disease, and one case with splenic sarcoidosis without pulmonary involvement. In the first case a 53-year-old woman with mild abdominal pain underwent sonography and CT, which revealed one hypoechoic/hypodense splenic lesion. Laboratory tests were normal. In order to exclude a lymphoma, splenectomy was performed: histology revealed a sarcoid granuloma. After surgery the patient was asymptomatic and now, after two years, disease is silent. The second case is a 66-year-old woman with a recent weight loss (8 kg in two months) and alterated liver function tests (AST 61 U/l, ALT 72 U/l, Alkaline phosphatase 748 U/l, g-GT 381 U/l). Since she had a familiar history of
colon cancer
, abdominal US scan, abdominal CT scan and MRI were performed and showed inter-aorto-caval lymphadenopathies and discreet multiple bilobar hepatic and splenic substitutive lesions, with no signs of primary tumor. Upper and lower GI endoscopy, full gynecological workup, complete set of tumor markers, bone marrow biopsy were performed. All resulted negative for neoplasia. Small pulmonary infiltrations were observed on chest-CT scan but cytology on BAL was normal. Infections were also excluded. An exploratory laparotomy showed whitish peritoneal, hepatic and splenic nodules. The histological exam revealed chronic granulomatous lesions typical for sarcoidosis. During a two-year follow-up after the splenectomy the patient feels well without any treatment. The third patient is a 32-year-old woman with mild epigastric pain after meals. Neck-thoracic CT, bone scintigraphy and upper GI endoscopy were negative. Abdominal US and MR showed splenomegaly with multiple splenic lesions. Splenectomy was performed and histological exam showed chronic granulomatous lesions typical for sarcoidosis. Further laboratory tests were normal, except for ACE (66 UI/l). After the surgery ACE became normal and now, three years later, the patient is still asymptomatic. We conclude that hepatosplenic involvement is less rare than it is thought. It is often oligosymptomatic or accompanied with unspecific manifestations and laboratory abnormalities. The diagnosis could be difficult; in fact typical laboratory findings of sarcoidosis such as ACE, lysozyme, calcium, were not diagnostic. Ultrasonography and CT were important but the diagnosis was established only with the histological examination of suspected lesions. This latter required to differentiate liver and/or spleen sarcoidosis from tuberculosis and other infections,
primary biliary cirrhosis
, metastasis or malignant lymphoma.
...
PMID:Atypical sarcoidosis: case reports and review of the literature. 2138 7
Abnormal liver biochemical tests are present in up to 30% of patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and therefore become a diagnostic challenge. Liver and biliary tract diseases are common extraintestinal manifestations for both Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis (UC), and typically do not correlate with intestinal activity. Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is the most common hepatobiliary manifestation of IBD, and is more prevalent in UC. Approximately 5% of patients with UC develop PSC, with the prevalence reaching up to 90%. Cholangiocarcinoma and
colon cancer
risks are increased in these patients. Less common disorders include autoimmune hepatitis/PSC overlap syndrome, IgG4-associated cholangiopathy,
primary biliary cirrhosis
, hepatic amyloidosis, granulomatous hepatitis, cholelithiasis, portal vein thrombosis, liver abscess, and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. Hepatitis B reactivation during immunosuppressive therapy is a major concern, with screening and vaccination being recommended in serologically negative cases for patients with IBD. Reactivation prophylaxis with entecavir or tenofovir for 6 to 12 mo after the end of immunosuppressive therapy is mandatory in patients showing as hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) positive, independently from viral load. HBsAg negative and anti-HBc positive patients, with or without anti-HBs, should be closely monitored, measuring alanine aminotransferase and hepatitis B virus DNA within 12 mo after the end of therapy, and should be treated if the viral load increases. On the other hand, immunosuppressive therapy does not seem to promote reactivation of hepatitis C, and hepatitis C antiviral treatment does not influence IBD natural history either. Most of the drugs used for IBD treatment may induce hepatotoxicity, although the incidence of serious adverse events is low. Abnormalities in liver biochemical tests associated with aminosalicylates are uncommon and are usually not clinically relevant. Methotrexate-related hepatotoxicity has been described in 14% of patients with IBD, in a dose-dependent manner. Liver biopsy is not routinely recommended. Biologics-related hepatotoxicity is rare, but has been shown most frequently in patients treated with infliximab. Thiopurines have been associated with veno-occlusive disease, regenerative nodular hyperplasia, and liver peliosis. Routine liver biochemical tests are recommended, especially during the first month of treatment. All these conditions should be considered in IBD patients with clinical or biochemical features suggestive of hepatobiliary involvement. Diagnosis and management of these disorders usually involve hepatologists and gastroenterologists due to its complexity.
...
PMID:Hepatobiliary manifestations in inflammatory bowel disease: the gut, the drugs and the liver. 2425 64