Publications by authors named "Richard Rosencrantz"

Primary hepatic malignancies are uncommon in pediatrics. Tumors such as hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) develop typically in the setting of chronic liver disease. The incidence of HCC in Wilson's disease-related cirrhosis is disproportionately lower than in many other forms of end-stage liver disease.

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Hepatocellular adenoma is an uncommon neoplasm, especially in the childhood age group. We describe a previously obese 13-year-old male with a giant hepatocellular adenoma requiring an extensive hepatic resection. The related pediatric tumor literature, diagnosis and clinical management is discussed.

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Liver transplantation is the definitive treatment for end-stage liver disease in both children and adults. Advances over the last 2 decades have resulted in excellent patient and graft survival rates in what were previously cases of fatal disorders. These developments have been due to innovations in surgical technique, increased surgical experience, refinements in immunosuppressive regimens, quality improvements in intraoperative anesthetic management, better understanding of the pathophysiology of the liver diseases, and better preoperative and postoperative care.

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Nearly a century after Dr. Samuel Alexander Kinnier Wilson composed his doctoral thesis on the pathologic findings of "lenticular degeneration" in the brain associated with cirrhosis of the liver we know that the underlying molecular basis for this autosomal recessive inherited disorder that now bears his name is mutation of a copper transporting ATPase, ATP7B, an intracellular copper transporter mainly expressed in hepatocytes. Loss of ATP7B function is the basis for reduced hepatic biliary copper excretion and reduced incorporation of copper into ceruloplasmin.

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AdV hepatitis is a rarely reported complication after pediatric liver transplantation that is associated with high rates of morbidity, mortality and graft failure. Successful treatment of AdV relies on early diagnosis of disease by quantitative PCR measurement of adenoviral DNA in blood and histological evidence in tissue biopsy. Pharmacologic treatment largely consists of antiviral therapy with CDV, an acyclic nucleoside phosphonate analog and reduction in immunosuppression.

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Recent studies have shown that nondividing primary cells, such as hepatocytes, can be efficiently transduced in vitro by human immunodeficiency virus-based lentivirus vectors. Other studies have reported that, under certain conditions, the liver can be repopulated with transplanted hepatocytes. In the present study, we combined these procedures to develop a model system for ex vivo gene therapy by repopulating rat livers with hepatocytes and hepatoblasts transduced with a lentivirus vector expressing a reporter gene, green fluorescent protein (GFP).

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