Tarantino G,Citro V,Esposito P, et al.Blood ammonia levels in liver cirrhosis: a clue for the presence of esophageal varices.BMC Gastroenterology. 2009Tarantino G,Citro V,Esposito P, et al.Blood ammonia levels in liver cirrhosis: a clue for the presence of esophageal varices. BMC ...
a启动速度 Start speed[translate] a他是多幸运啊 He is lucky[translate] aBlood ammonia levels in liver cirrhosis: a clue for the presence of portosystemic collateral veins 血液氨水平在肝病: 一个线索为portosystemic抵押静脉出现[translate]
Ammonia levels and hepatic encephalopathy in patients with known chronic liver disease. J. Hosp. Med. 12, 659–661 (2017). PubMed Google Scholar Haj, M. & Rockey, D. C. Ammonia levels do not guide clinical management of patients with hepatic encephalopathy caused by cirrhosis. Am. J. ...
Ammonia levels are orchestrated by a series of complex interrelated pathways in which the urea cycle has a central role. Liver dysfunction leads to an accumulation of ammonia, which is toxic and is strongly associated with disruption of potassium homeost
cirrhosis,tumours, vascular obstruction, or poisoning. Symptoms may include weakness,low blood pressure, easy bruising and bleeding, tremor, and accumulation of fluid in theabdomen. Blood tests can reveal abnormal levels of bilirubin,cholesterol, serum proteins,urea,ammonia, and various enzymes. A ...
Liver disease caused by alcohol and cirrhosis The liver can be damaged in a variety of ways. Cells can become inflamed due to conditions such ashepatitis. Bile flow can be obstructed, for example, bycholestasis. Cholesterol or triglyceridescan accumulate, for example, insteatosis. Blood flow to...
In several of the patients with hepatitis in whom abnormal ammonia tolerance was found, esophageal varices, which may have accounted for the impaired ammonia tolerance, were demonstrated. Ammonia tolerance was abnormal in 83 per cent of 60 patients with cirrhosis. Impaired ammonia tolerance in ...
(b) hepatitis B virus infection (HBV), (c) hepatitis C virus infection (HCV), (d) metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), (e) alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD), (f) primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), (g) liver cirrhosis, and (h) hepatocellular carcinoma ...
Cirrhosis of the liver involves the formation of permanent scar tissue in the liver and loss of liver function. It is often caused by chronic alcohol abuse (alcoholic liver disease), but it can also be caused by diseases such as hepatitis. Cirrhosis interferes with blood flow through the liver...
Cirrhosis is a generic term used to describe chronic liver disease involving diffuse parenchymal necrosis, active formation of connective tissue leading to fibrosis, and nodular regeneration of liver resulting in disorganization of the hepatic lobular and vascular architecture. ...