Publications by authors named "Greig P"

Twenty-nine patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) underwent orthotopic liver transplantation (OLTx) at the University of Toronto. Four patients did not have cirrhosis. Of the 25 patients with cirrhosis, 19 had known or suspected HCC before OLTx.

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The Sugiura operation has been reported to have low operative mortality, rebleeding, and encephalopathy rates when carried out in a predominantly nonalcoholic Japanese population with good liver function. A literature review of reports of the Sugiura procedure outside Japan reveals a high complication and mortality rate when it is used as an emergency procedure in patients with advanced liver disease, especially in those with alcoholic cirrhosis. Uncontrolled studies report results that differ little from the Japanese series when the operation is confined to good-risk patients in the elective situation.

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Early and accurate diagnosis and prognosis of patients with fulminant liver failure is of critical importance for optimum management. We investigated the role of transjugular liver biopsy in the management of patients with fulminant liver failure and assessed its value in comparison with the recently proposed King's College criteria. Sixty-one patients with fulminant liver failure, ages 2 to 82 yr, were retrospectively analyzed.

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Background: Small hepatocellular carcinomas frequently were found incidentally during routine pathologic examinations of adult livers removed at liver transplant.

Methods: Sixty-nine carcinomas of all sizes were found in 25 patients; 39 of the tumors were smaller than 1 cm in diameter, and 18 of the carcinomas in five patients were not clinically suspected. These small incidental carcinomas lend themselves to analysis of the morphologic basis of human hepatocellular carcinogenesis.

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Orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) in children is characterized by unique problems including a shortage of compatible-size donors resulting in long waiting periods, significant deterioration while waiting, and death before transplantation. To improve the chances of obtaining an organ for the sickest patients, reduced-size liver transplantation (RSLT) was offered to all hospital-bound children starting in July 1988. Since then, 68 OLTs were performed in 58 children.

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Objectives: Atosiban is a synthetic oxytocin antagonist that is currently undergoing dose-ranging clinical trials. To date, no data are available on the cardiovascular effects of combined oxytocin and vasopressin blockade during late pregnancy. Our aims were (1) to determine the effects of atosiban infusion on the maternal and fetal cardiovascular system and on uterine blood flow and (2) to determine the maternal pharmacokinetics and the rate of placental transfer of atosiban.

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Objectives: Our purpose was (1) to determine the frequency of intraamniotic and extraamniotic intrauterine infection in patients with premature labor and intact membranes and (2) to determine if intrauterine infection is associated with elevated amniotic fluid interleukin-6 levels.

Study Design: Amniocentesis was performed on 57 patients in preterm labor and 201 controls at various gestational ages without labor and at term with labor. The amniotic fluid was evaluated with gram stain, cultures, and an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay specific for interleukin-6.

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We examined platelet adhesion in thirty human donor livers to determine if the degree of platelet adhesion could predict outcome of transplantation. Wedge liver biopsies were taken at the start of the donor operation (biopsy 1) and 1 hr after reperfusion in the recipient (biopsy 2). Biopsies were stained with a monoclonal antibody against platelet glycoprotein Ib and graded for platelet adhesion.

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Background: Sodium retention in cirrhosis has been attributed to an imbalance between vasoconstrictive, antinatriuretic forces such as the renin aldosterone angiotensin system and the sympathetic nervous system, and vasodilatory, natriuretic agents such as atrial natriuretic factor (ANF). Patients with diuretic resistant refractory ascites may require peritoneovenous shunting (PVS) to control ascites.

Methods: To study the factors responsible for the improvement in sodium homeostasis post-PVS, we compared the response to ANF infusion before and 1 month after PVS in 6 patients with massive ascites.

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Studies of hepatic transplant vasculopathy (TV) have described arterial lesions in selected cases but have not sought to establish the relative prevalence of various arterial and venous lesions. We examined 20 unselected liver allografts and 12 controls to establish the spectrum and distribution of transplant-related arterial and venous lesions. Sections of 1,175 arteries and 936 portal and hepatic veins were reviewed and several histologic parameters were tabulated.

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Organ donors are typically subject to acute hyponutrition that might affect postpreservation liver function. Livers from nutritionally supplemented rats function better after preservation than livers from fasted rats. We have developed a method to glycogenate the liver of large animals in the temporal context of a human donor liver operation and have studied the fate of glycogen stores during preservation.

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Objective: The purpose of this study was to determine if cesarean delivery of the nonvertex second twin improved neonatal outcome.

Study Design: We examined the maternal and neonatal records from 457 sets of twins delivered from 1985 to 1990. We compared 1- and 5-minute Apgar scores, umbilical artery and vein blood pH values, duration of neonatal hospitalization, the incidence and length of ventilation, intraventricular hemorrhage, birth trauma, and mortality rate between vertex and nonvertex second twins delivered either vaginally or by cesarean section.

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Recent animal studies suggest that nutritional repletion may improve function of liver allografts, and the authors have found that intraportal glucose infusion in pigs produces rapid and substantial hepatic glycogenation. A controlled prospective randomized study in 32 patients was done to determine glycogen content and degradation in human livers during transplantation, and the effect of intraportal glucose-insulin infusions during the donor operation on these variables and on outcome of transplantation. Peripheral blood glucose concentrations were "clamped" at 14 mmol/L during the glucose-insulin infusion.

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Recurrence of hepatitis is a well-documented complication of hepatitis B liver disease, post-transplantation. It is well established also that the earliest hepatocellular change is the appearance of hepatitis B viral (HBV) markers and that the disease is rapidly progressive. In this article on 17 liver transplants in 16 HBV positive patients with long-term follow-ups (100-1234 days), the distinctive pathologic features of this disease are emphasized: the extreme viral load, the steatosis, and/or fibrosis.

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The sonographic appearances of primary non-Hodgkin lymphoma developing in the porta hepatis in three patients soon after hepatic transplantation were reviewed. The lymphomas appeared as large hypoechoic masses encasing vital portal structures--the hepatic artery and the common bile duct--in all three cases and displacing the portal vein in two. The liver was only locally involved.

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Background And Methods: We describe a new form of hepatitis, occurring in 10 patients over a period of six years, characterized clinically by manifestations of severe hepatitis, histologically by large syncytial giant hepatocytes, and ultrastructurally by intracytoplasmic structures consistent with paramyxoviral nucleocapsids.

Results: The patients ranged in age from 5 months to 41 years. The tentative clinical diagnosis before biopsy was non-A, non-B hepatitis in five patients and autoimmune chronic active hepatitis in the others.

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Scarcity of small donors results in a high mortality rate for children on liver transplant waiting lists. To alleviate this problem, we have recently started to reduce the size of livers from older donors to use in children. In the last year, a total of 20 liver transplants were performed in 17 patients, including seven reduced-size liver transplants (RSLT) in six children.

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Shunt surgery remains an important therapeutic option in the management of variceal bleeding, and both total and selective shunts have a role to play. The distal shunt is associated with a lower long-term encephalopathy rate and may yield better survival in the nonalcoholic patient; it is, therefore, the preferred shunt in the elective situation. The total shunt is technically easier to perform and more widely available; it is, therefore, preferred in the emergency situation.

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Emergency surgery should be considered one of the treatment options for the patient with acute variceal bleeding in whom the usual nonsurgical modes of therapy fail, and who is deemed fit to tolerate a major operation. A total shunt (portacaval or mesocaval) is recommended for most of these patients, although a distal splenorenal shunt might be considered for some very good risk, nonalcoholic patients who have only moderate bleeding. Devascularization procedures have a limited role in the emergency situation, but they may be useful in patients who are nonshuntable because of splanchnic venous thrombosis.

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For 51 liver allograft recipients, we evaluated whether serum profiles of delta (Bd) and conjugated bilirubins (Bc) could be used to diagnose rejection during the first 30-50 postoperative days, in comparison with histology as the "gold standard." Daily measurements of aspartate aminotransferase, alkaline phosphatase, total bilirubin, Bd, and Bc were made, the last two by liquid chromatography. In 34 patients without any biochemical or histological evidence of rejection, within seven to 10 postoperative days Bd increased to greater than 40-50% of total bilirubin, while Bc decreased to less than 10%.

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The effect of PG on patients with fulminant and subfulminant viral hepatitis (FHF) was studied. 17 patients presented with FHF secondary to hepatitis A (n = 3), hepatitis B (n = 6), and non-A, non-B (NANB) hepatitis (n = 8). 14 of the 17 patients had stage III or IV hepatic encephalopathy (HE).

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