With the widespread use of ultrasonography (US) and computerized tomography (CT), the usefulness of alpha-fetoprotein assay in the diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has decreased. The aim of our study was to evaluate the best cut-off value for serum alpha-fetoprotein to discriminate between liver cirrhosis (LC) and HCC and the factors influencing levels in a Sicilian population. Three hundred and seventy-two patients with LC and 197 with HCC-associated LC were studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: To retrospectively evaluate the prevalence of lymph nodes of the hepato-duodenal ligament in a group of patients with chronic liver disease of various aetiologies and to investigate what clinical, aetiological and laboratory data may lead to their appearance.
Materials And Methods: One thousand and three patients (554 men, 449 women) were studied, including 557 with chronic hepatitis and 446 with liver cirrhosis. The presence of lymph nodes near the trunk of the portal vein, hepatic artery, celiac axis, superior mesenteric vein and pancreas head was investigated using ultrasound.
Background: Liver cirrhosis increases portal vein pressure and alters the splanchnic circulation. With Doppler sonography, we investigated the hemodynamic changes in the portal vein, superior mesenteric artery, hepatic and splenic arteries and spleen size in a group of patients with end-stage liver disease before and after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT).
Methods: Ten patients (seven male, three female; mean age = 48.
Patients with chronic cryptogenic hypertransaminasemia are at high risk of developing celiac disease (CD). In fact, among the various serological disorders, CD patients at onset frequently present hypertransaminasemia. In this study, we evaluated usefulness and reliability of the new test for antitissue transglutaminase (tTG) in screening for CD as well as in estimating the prevalence of CD in a population of blood donors presenting unexplained hypertransaminasemia at donation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHepatocellular carcinoma is a neoplasia with a high degree of malignancy and a quite unfavorable prognosis, and its frequency has tripled over the last 30 years. The aim of this study was to shed further light on some epidemiological and clinical aspects of hepatocellular carcinoma, on the basis of experience with a wide ranging patient population. We included 179 patients (127 males, 52 females, age range 31-86 years), diagnosed with hepatocellular carcinoma between January 1993 and December 1998.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Gastroenterol
February 1999
Objective: Abdominal ultrasound has shown a frequent association between abdominal lymphadenopathy (LA) and chronic liver disease, but contradictory data have been reported on its relationship with the main parameters of hepatic function. The aim of this study was to correlate the prevalence of LA in patients who were chronic hepatitis-anti-hepatitis C virus positive prospectively followed-up over the last 3 years and its relationship with biochemical and histological data.
Methods: 136 RIBA II confirmed positive patients with ALT levels >2N were included.
Background/aims: The indications for liver biopsy in anti-HCV-positive patients with persistently normal alanine aminotransferase levels are not clearly established. Recent studies have correlated the presence of abdominal lymphoadenomegaly with disease severity in patients with chronic hepatitis C. Our study aimed to evaluate the frequency of abdominal lymphoadenomegaly in an anti-HCV positive blood donor population with persistently normal alanine aminotransferase and the relationship of abdominal lymphoadenomegaly with the severity of liver changes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground/aims: The Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is quite widespread in Sicily, and in the absence of a vaccine, prophylaxis is important. In order to determine the most effective means of prophylaxis, we must first understand the main vectors of transmission.
Methodology: We performed a case control study on 274 consecutive anti-HCV virus positive subjects and compared them with 548 anti-HCV negative subjects, matched for sex and age and selected from voluntary blood donors.
Wilson's disease is a rare inherited metabolic disorder usually characterized by liver and/or neurological degeneration. Unlike most genetically transmitted diseases, it rapidly responds to pharmacological treatment in case of early diagnosis and treatment. Often, however, as this disease presents with aspecific symptoms, patients are wrongly diagnosed as psychiatric cases or as having generic chronic liver disease and the true cause of symptoms is only discovered at a much later stage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecenti Prog Med
December 1996
The reduction in gallbladder motility could play an important role in the pathogenesis of cholesterinic lithiasis by favouring the precipitation of cholesterol crystals, especially in obese subjects who, as is well known, present a greater biliary secretion of cholesterol. In the present study we evaluated, by ultrasonography, the emptying capacity of gallbladder following a liquid meal in 20 obese subjects (BMI 37.8 +/- 11.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: We measured serum concentrations of the N-terminal peptide of type III procollagen (PIIIP) and laminin (Lam-P1) in patients with chronic viral liver disease in the various stages of the clinical course, to judge their value in assessing liver fibrogenesis, and also compared them with a number of liver function tests and histological scores of inflammation and fibrosis.
Methods: Twenty-nine patients with chronic persistent hepatitis, 39 with chronic active hepatitis and 42 with liver cirrhosis were studied. The control group was composed of 45 healthy blood donors.