The aim of this work was to evaluate liver function in subjects suffering from viral hepatitis and concomitant narcotic dependence. Clinico-biochemical, virologic, and morphological studies involving 92 patients revealed a number of specific features of chronic viral hepatitis complicated by drug addiction. However, the majority of them could be reliably identified only by a quantitative microscopic method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLiver biopsy specimens were morphologically investigated in 87 patients, including 30 with drug (marijuana and poppy straw) addiction, 23 with chronic alcoholic intoxication, and 25 abused narcotics and alcohol concomitantly. All the patients were not found to be infected with viruses of hepatitis B, C, G, TTV, or CMN; the clinical manifestations and biochemical blood parameters were studied over time. In patients who simultaneously used drugs and alcohol, the specific features of hepathopathy were shown to be more pronounced and more rapidly progressive changes as fatty hepatosis and diffuse liver tissue fibrosis than in those used either drugs alone or alcohol alone.
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