Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are among the most frequent causes of idiosyncratic, drug-induced liver injury (IDILI). Mechanisms of IDILI are unknown, but immune responses are suspected to underlie them. In animal models of IDILI, the cytokines tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFα) and interferon-gamma (IFNγ) are essential to the pathogenesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPatients with chronic renal failure who were undergoing dialysis were recently shown to have a low prevalence of duodenal Helicobacter (Campylobacter) pylori colonisation in spite of a high incidence of gastric metaplasia. The prevalence of the organism in the gastric antrum of 50 similar patients was estimated and compared with that in a control group comprising 120 consecutive patients with no renal failure who were being investigated for a variety of symptoms and signs related to the upper alimentary tract. Seventeen of the patients with renal disease had upper gastrointestinal symptoms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study was aimed at identifying ultrastructural abnormalities that may be present in the duodenum of patients with chronic renal failure who were undergoing hemodialysis and that may have an effect on the normal absorptive function of the duodenum. Duodenal biopsy specimens from ten patients and four controls were examined. Light microscopy showed gastric metaplasia in eight patients and in none of the controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuodenal biopsy specimens from 80 patients with chronic renal failure, who were undergoing haemodialysis, were examined by light microscopy for evidence of inflammation, gastric metaplasia, and Campylobacter pylori infection. Chronic duodenitis was present in 47 (59%) of patients, of whom only seven (9%) showed evidence of active inflammation. Gastric metaplasia was present in 50 (62.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe frequency of aneuploidy and the proliferative activity of 57 colorectal adenomatous polyps was investigated by static cytophotometry and compared with 43 adenocarcinomas and 60 samples of normal mucosa. Twenty per cent of the adenomas contained aneuploid cells compared with 63 per cent of the adenocarcinomas. Except in the case of villous adenomas, there was a general increase in the proliferative activity of the diploid adenomas with increasing degrees of dysplasia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo patients with chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction are reported, one of whom had definite systemic sclerosis while the other had certain manifestations of the disease. Biopsies of the small intestine revealed increased collagen and elastic fibres in the muscularis propria and subserosa in each case, while ganglion cells were normal. In addition, one patient had severe atrophy of the inner muscle layer and the other obvious vacuolation of the muscularis propria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Pathol Lab Med
September 1987
Six separate foci of superficial adenocarcinoma were seen in the first part of the duodenum of a 53-year-old man with a multicentric superficial adenocarcinoma of the stomach. To our knowledge, duodenal involvement in such a tumor has not been reported before. The duodenal foci were partly covered by gastric-type surface epithelium, suggesting that they might have arisen in areas of gastric metaplasia or heterotopia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDis Colon Rectum
November 1986
A 75-year-old woman presented with rapidly progressive intestinal and general symptoms including diarrhea, melena, weight loss, back pain, and lassitude. Endoscopy revealed multiple intestinal polyps which, microscopically, consisted of metastatic tumor deposits composed predominantly of spindle-shaped tumor cells. The primary tumor, a mixed spindle-cell and clear-cell carcinoma, was later identified in the kidney at autopsy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree cases of secondary amyloidosis are reported, two in patients who had unequivocal Crohn's disease and one in whom the clinical course was that of Crohn's disease, but with histologic findings that were more suggestive of ulcerative colitis. All had evidence of renal failure. A prospective study of 177 patients with inflammatory bowel disease of greater than five years' duration was carried out in an attempt to establish the incidence of secondary amyloidosis, using rectal biopsy and simple renal function tests.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe a new technique of operative orthograde colonic washout followed by colonoscopy for use in patients with severe colonic haemorrhage. We report its use in four patients in whom the exact source of bleeding was localized and treated. In two of these cases a policy of 'blind' hemicolectomy would have been incorrect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe value of radioimmunolocalization (RIL) of cancer depends on its performance in situations where the result determines the choice of management. A rise in serum carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) values after apparently curative resection of colorectal cancer implies localized, resectable recurrence in some patients and widespread unresectable tumour in others. This study investigated the ability of RIL with radiolabelled antibody to CEA and a novel numerical method for analysis of results to determine the extent of disease in 31 patients with raised serum CEA but no physical signs of recurrence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFour hundred and fifty asymptomatic general practice patients and 330 hospital inpatients had their stools tested for occult blood with the Haemoccult and Fecatwin methods. In general practice, 9/64 (14%) of patients with a positive result had a colonic neoplasm (three carcinomas, one Dukes' Stage A, two Dukes' Stage C, six adenomas) and in hospital 12/142 patients (8%) were found to have colonic tumours, (nine carcinomas, two Dukes' Stage A, two Dukes' Stage B, five Dukes' Stage C and three adenomas). The overall detection rates for colonic neoplasia were 2% in general practice and 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe distribution of ferritin and lysozyme in 19 normal and abnormal duodenal biopsies was studied by an immunoperoxidase technique. The abnormal biopsies included cases of chronic duodenitis with gastric metaplasia, gastric heterotopia, villous atrophy, and a case of hemochromatosis. Ferritin is demonstrated in duodenal absorptive cells, with the staining being most intense in the hemochromatosis case.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiopsy specimens of the gastric antrum, duodenum, and rectum from three patients with secondary amyloidosis were examined by electron microscopy in an attempt to determine the ultrastructural distribution of amyloid filaments and to identify any secondary changes in the covering mucosal epithelial cells. The characteristic amyloid filaments were seen in the walls of submucosal arterioles and mucosal capillaries deposited within the basal lamina surrounding the endothelial cells. Filaments were also sometimes seen within the muscularis mucosa.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe incidence and relationship of intestinal metaplasia of the gastric antrum and gastric metaplasia of the first part of the duodenum were studied in endoscopic biopsies from 120 patients with nonulcer dyspepsia. Intestinal metaplasia was present in 29% of antral biopsies and gastric metaplasia in 39% of duodenal biopsies, with 9% of patients having both. Intestinal metaplasia was not related to alcohol consumption, but was significantly higher in patients who smoked 10 cigarettes or more daily.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuodenal biopsies from 11 patients with non-ulcer dyspepsia were examined by electron microscopy. Chronic duodenitis with gastric metaplasia was seen in samples from four patients, and areas of normal-looking duodenal mucosa were present in nine. The metaplastic cells were similar to those previously described in association with duodenal ulcers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeventeen patients with chronic obscure gastrointestinal bleeding presenting over a 5-year period are described. While representing only 6 per cent of the total number of admissions due to gastrointestinal haemorrhage they required a disproportionate amount of medical attention, including 67 admissions, 73 radiological and 56 endoscopic procedures and transfusion of a total of 198 units of blood. The diagnoses included 5 cases of recurrent acute upper gastrointestinal erosions, 7 small bowel abnormalities and 4 colonic lesions, with 1 patient undiagnosed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiopsies from 60 patients with dyspepsia and endoscopically abnormal first part of duodenum were examined. The main endoscopic findings were duodenitis (35 cases), chronic ulceration (eight) and abnormal mucosal patterns (17). The latter included mucosal atrophy, thickening, irregularity, nodularity and polypoid formation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr Med J (Clin Res Ed)
November 1982