Publications by authors named "Mentha G"

The objective of this article is to review technical aspects, discuss potential clinical indications for MR cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) and demonstrate the spectrum of diagnostic findings in benign, postoperative, and malignant conditions. We describe our current imaging protocol in comparison with other available techniques. Using a non-breath-hold, heavily T2-weighted fast-spin-echo (FSE) sequence with or without respiratory gating we obtained coronal and axial source images and maximum intensity projections (MIPs) in 102 patients with suspected abnormalities of the biliary or pancreatic ducts.

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A shortage of small pediatric organ donors has led to the development of reduced size liver transplantation in children. However, the discrepancy between donor and recipient weight can limit the use of this procedure despite transplantation of the left lobe only. Monosegmental liver transplantation using segment III only was recently described.

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To investigate the contribution of IL-11 and LIF to acute-phase protein (APP) production, we first analysed the effects of IL-11 and LIF on production of C-reactive protein (CRP), fibrinogen, and haptoglobin by human primary hepatocytes. We also measured the serum levels of IL-11, LIF, and CRP in serum from patients with inflammatory rheumatic diseases to assess the role of these cytokines in the APP response in vivo. We included patients with conditions associated with a high APP response such as rheumatoid arthritis (RA) or spondylarthropathy (SpA), and others usually associated with a weak APP response such as systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), in order to investigate whether these cytokines could account for the differences in APP responses.

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Complement receptor type 1 (CR1) is an integral membrane protein of many hematopoietic cells and is found in a soluble form in plasma. Preliminary data have indicated that soluble complement receptor 1 (sCR1) levels in serum were increased in patients with cirrhosis. In this study, sCR1 was measured in patients with various liver diseases with a newly established enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA).

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Auxiliary liver transplantation (LT) is a special procedure of LT which could be proposed to patients with fulminant hepatic failure (FHF) and has for aim that complete regeneration of the native liver (NL) left in place will allow the graft recipient to resume normal liver function after allograft withdrawal. We report 30 cases of auxiliary LT performed for FHF in 12 European centers. Twenty-five of 30 patients were younger than 50 years.

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Although the interruption of the hepatic arterial flow usually is well tolerated, this is not always the case, and it is important to predict in which circumstances complications are likely to occur. The main determinants that should guide the surgeon confronted with this problem are (1) whether the portal circulation is normal, (2) whether structures carrying collateral blood supply have been interrupted, and (3) whether some form of biliary reconstruction is needed. We present our experience with three patients in whom the hepatic artery was damaged at operation as examples of how this injury can be dealt with in practice and discuss the measures to prevent or treat the complications that developed.

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Preoperative angiography of the coeliac trunk and superior mesenteric artery is routinely performed before liver resections and transplantations. For this purpose, it is usual to inject each branch of the coeliac trunk separately. Selective angiographic studies, however, may lead to overlooking surgically essential anatomic variations of the hepatic blood supply, as demonstrated by the present report.

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The suitability of organ exchange rules were analysed retrospectively in a country with a population of 7 million not connected to international organ sharing organisations following the opening of a national coordination centre 2 years previously. The results demonstrate that the sharing rules work frictionless and efficiently, and that compulsory registration of every organ donor (cadaveric and living) guarantees entire transparency of organ source and exchange, therefore preventing any illegal activity. An unacceptably high mortality rate for patients awaiting a highly urgent organ (specifically heart or liver) shows that connection to an international organ exchange organisation is desirable in this respect.

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The segmental anatomy of the human liver has become a field of increasing interest to radiologists during the past few years. The number of different terminologies which have been used since the topic has been systemically investigated is, however, a source of serious confusion. The present paper describes the reasons why the authors plead for an international working nomenclature which distinguishes a right hemiliver consisting of a right posterior and a right anterior segment, formed by subsegments 6 and 7, and 5 and 8, respectively, and a left hemiliver consisting of a left medial and a left lateral segment, the former corresponding to segment 4, and the latter to subsegments 2 and 3.

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Surgery is the only treatment which can achieve long-term survival of patients with colorectal liver secondaries. This study reports the results in 71 patients with liver metastases who underwent hepatic resection from January 1980 to December 1994. The mean age was 60 years (range 37 and 80 years).

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The prevalence of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) in cystic fibrosis patients ranges from 2 to 8% and glucose intolerance up to 15%. In recent years, lung transplantation has helped to prolong life expectancy of cystic fibrosis patients and represents 10 to 30% of all indications for lung transplantation. The postoperative need for immunosuppressive therapy using diabetogenic agents has decompensatory effects on glucose regulation and will probably increase the number of insulin-dependent cystic fibrosis patients.

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From January 1986 to September 1995, 4 patients were hospitalized in our ward for gastrointestinal bleeding from ectopic varices. The patients were all female, aged 30 to 65 years. The etiology of portal hypertension in these patients was alcoholic cirrhosis, cirrhosis in Wilson's disease and previous alveolar echinococcosis treated by right hepatectomy, complicated by post-operative portal thrombosis.

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Primary biliary cirrhosis is regarded as one of the optimal indications for orthotopic liver transplantation in adults. With the decrease in the operative mortality, the analysis of the potential long-term complications including disease recurrence is becoming increasingly relevant. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the long-term results of liver transplantation for primary biliary cirrhosis in our center.

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Up to now, liver resections have been the initial treatment of almost all cancers and benign tumors limited to a liver lobe. This retrospective review assesses the results of a consecutive series of 113 major elective hepatic resections during a ten-year period. Major hepatectomy was defined by the resection of at least 3 Couinaud segments.

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Type-I diabetes is considered an autoimmune disease, directed against pancreatic beta cells. Diabetes recurrence after pancreas transplantation is theoretically possible, and some cases have been reported after isotransplantation of segmental grafts in HLA-identical twins, where no rejection phenomenon is possible and where no immunosuppression was used. Diabetes recurrence has never been observed in a cadaveric allograft recipient, probably because immunosuppression efficiently blocks the autoimmune mechanism.

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Interleukin-6 (IL-6) interacts with a system of receptors, which include a 80-kDa IL-6-binding subunit (IL-6R) and a transducing element (gp130). The soluble form of IL-6R (sIL-6R) can bind its ligand and induce cellular responses by association with gp130, thus acting as an IL-6 agonist. We and others have previously shown that the responsiveness to IL-6 is different in hepatoma and human primary hepatocytes.

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Rationale And Objectives: We examined the effects of arterial ischemia on the phagocytic activity of the hepatic macrophage-monocytic phagocytic system (MMPS).

Methods: Six minipigs were studied before and 24 hr after complete arterial devascularization of the liver. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging was performed at 1.

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This paper reports a case of Caroli's disease confined to the left lobe of the liver that mimicked left portal vein thrombosis on MRI studies because of the very high signal intensity on T1-weighted images of intrahepatic pigmented calculi. The preoperative diagnosis was a cholangiocarcinoma infiltrating the left hepatic bile duct and portal branch. The final macroscopic and histological diagnosis was Caroli's disease of the left liver lobe with wide enlarged left bile duct containing multiple pigmented calculi.

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The synthesis of some class 1 acute-phase proteins (APP), including C-reactive protein (CRP) and serum amyloid A (SAA) protein is completely blocked by the IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra), whereas the production of fibrinogen, a class 2 APP, is increased by IL-1Ra in hepatoma cells, but this has never been tested in human hepatocytes in primary culture. Since previous studies on the contributions of cytokine inhibitors in connective tissues diseases suggested that IL-1 and tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) might play an important role in the regulation of CRP, we decided to examine in more detail the respective roles of IL-1 beta, IL-6, and TNF-alpha and their inhibitors in the production of APP by human primary hepatocytes versus the hepatoma cell line PLC/PRF/5. In the hepatoma cell line, IL-1 beta and/or TNF-alpha had synergistic effects with IL-6 on the production of CRP and SAA.

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Glucokinase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase are key enzymes of glucose metabolism in the rat liver. The former is considered to be instrumental in regulating glucose hepatic release/uptake according to the glycaemia level, and cytosolic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase is a major flux-generating enzyme for gluconeogenesis. The level of expression of both enzymes and the regulation of their mRNAs in the human liver cell were investigated.

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Background: Occasionally patients with adult polycystic liver disease (APLD) have symptoms. For these patients surgery may represent a valuable therapeutic option to relieve symptoms.

Methods: From September 1977 to August 1993 at our institution, 10 women with APLD were examined and surgically treated.

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Niemann-Pick type C disease (NPCD) is an autosomal recessive storage lipidosis due to a disorder of cholesterol esterification leading to the accumulation of sphingomyelin and cholesterol in the brain, liver, and spleen. The disease is usually diagnosed when neurological symptoms appear. We report an unusual presentation of NPCD in a young asymptomatic adult with isolated nodular splenomegaly.

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