نتایج جستجو برای: alcoholic cirrhosis

تعداد نتایج: 58498  

2015
Martin Janicko Eduard Veseliny Gabriela Senajova Peter Jarcuska

Background. Alcoholic liver disease is a major cause of liver cirrhosis and the hepatorenal syndrome is a serious complication. Risk factors for hepatorenal syndrome (HRS) in alcoholic liver cirrhosis are not entirely explored. Aim. To assess the risk factors for hepatorenal syndrome in alcoholic liver cirrhosis. Patients and Methods. Consecutive patients with alcoholic liver disease were follo...

Journal: :Gut 1999
D Patch A Armonis C Sabin K Christopoulou L Greenslade A McCormick R Dick A K Burroughs

BACKGROUND Height of portal pressure correlates with severity of alcoholic cirrhosis. Portal pressure indices are not however used routinely as predictors of survival. AIMS To examine the clinical value of a single portal pressure measurement in predicting outcome in cirrhotic patients who have bled. METHODS A series of 105 cirrhotic patients who consecutively underwent hepatic venous press...

Journal: :Annals of hepatology 2015
Michael C Kew

During recent years the incidence of obesity has increased significantly, and in some instances rapidly, in many resource-rich countries. Paralleling this increase has been an increase in the incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma. It has been estimated that as many as 90% of obese adults will develop the metabolic syndrome. The worldwide incidence of this syndrome in adults at this time ranges ...

Journal: :Gut 1970
M Barry G Cartei S Sherlock

The chelating agent diethylenetriamine penta-acetic acid was used to measure iron stores in 83 patients with chronic liver disease. Iron chelation was normal in patients with chronic cholestasis. Chelation was increased above the control range in 14 out of 26 patients with alcoholic cirrhosis, in nine out of 28 patients with non-alcoholic cirrhosis, and in 11 out of 15 cirrhotics with a portaca...

Journal: :Biological research 2004
Morten Grønbaek Majken K Jensen Ditte Johansen Thorkild I A Sørensen Ulrik Becker

Studies have suggested that wine drinkers are at lower risk of death than beer or spirit drinkers. The aim of this study is to examine whether the risk of becoming a heavy drinker or developing alcoholic cirrhosis differs among individuals who prefer different types of alcoholic beverages. In a longitudinal setting we found that both the risk of becoming a heavy or excessive drinker (above 14 a...

Journal: :Alcohol research & health : the journal of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism 2003
Robert E Mann Reginald G Smart Richard Govoni

This article describes the various forms of alcoholic liver disease (ALD), with particular emphasis on cirrhosis, the form of liver disease that often is most associated with alcohol abuse and about which the most information is available. Epidemiological research has evaluated the prevalence of ALD and the factors that often contribute to the disease. Although the most potent factor in ALD is ...

Journal: :Annals of hepatology 2005
Nahum Méndez-Sánchez Paloma Almeda-Valdés Misael Uribe

The prevalence and incidence of alcoholic liver disease are constantly evolving. Alcoholic liver disease has a wide clinical spectrum. It may progress to cirrhosis and to end-stage liver disease requiring liver transplantation. The histological manifestations range from steatosis without inflammation to liver cell injury and ultimately to fibrosis and cirrhosis. In some cases, the histological ...

Journal: :Chinese clinical oncology 2013
Maya Gambarin-Gelwan

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a common cancer worldwide, with significant increase in the incidence observed in the past two decades in the United States. Majority of cases of HCC are due to chronic viral hepatitis B and C infections; however non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, associated with obesity and diabetes emerges as an important risk factor for HCC, in particular in the developed co...

Journal: :The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 1951
Gerald Klatskin Henry M. Gewin Willard A. Krehl

For over a century clinicians and pathologists have recognized a relationship between over-indulgence in alcohol and the occurrence of cirrhosis, but attempts to demonstrate a direct hepatotoxic effect of ethyl alcohol or to produce alcoholic cirrhosis experimentally in animals have generally been unsuccessful. Moreover, as the result of recent studies on the hepatic effects of dietary deficien...

Journal: :British medical journal 1985
A Romelsjö G Agren

In Sweden sales of alcohol dropped 17% from 1976 to 1982. Similarly, comparison of data from 1979 and 1982 shows that the mortality from cirrhosis of the liver declined appreciably, by 28% in men and 29% in women. During 1979-82 mortality from pancreatitis also declined noticeably, by 30% in men and 36% in women. By contrast, no decrease occurred in mortality from alcoholic psychosis, alcoholis...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید