Article
Eighteen years of liver transplantation experience in patients with advanced Budd-Chiari syndrome.
Department of General, Visceral, and Transplantation Surgery, Charité, Campus Virchow Clinical Centre, Berlin, Germany.
Liver Transplantation (impact factor:
3.39).
03/2008;
14(2):144-50.
DOI:10.1002/lt.21282
pp.144-50
Source: PubMed
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Article: Budd-Chiari syndrome: our experience of 71 patients.
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ABSTRACT: Hepatic venous outflow obstruction (Budd-Chiari syndrome) is frequently encountered as a cause of portal hypertension at our centre. We studied the clinical presentation, therapeutic modalities and outcome of 71 patients with hepatic venous outflow obstruction between 1992 and 1997. Twenty-seven patients presented with acute disease, while 44 had chronic presentation. Abdominal pain, distension, jaundice and upper gastrointestinal bleeding were the commonest presenting symptoms. The majority of patients had distended veins, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, ascites and ankle oedema. The diagnosis was made on the basis of inferior vena cavography/functional hepatography and pulsed Doppler ultrasonography and/or liver biopsy in 39 patients and pulsed Doppler ultrasonography and/or liver biopsy in 32 patients. Pulsed Doppler ultrasonography accurately detected the site of the block in 31 of 39 patients (79.4%). The obstruction was in the hepatic vein in 20 patients, in the inferior vena cava in 10, and in both in 41 patients. Aetiologically, four had pregnancy-related disease, four tumour-related, three hypercoagulable states, 18 inferior vena cava membranes and 42 were idiopathic. Of 30 patients in whom liver biopsy was carried out, eight had centrizonal congestion and necrosis, 13 had mixed features and nine had established cirrhosis. Seven patients underwent a shunt operation and surgical membranotomy was carried out in one. Three patients (4.2%) died in the hospital. Hepatic venous outflow obstruction is a common problem; patients present with abdominal pain, distension, jaundice, distended veins, ascites and ankle oedema. Chronic presentation is more frequent. Pulsed Doppler ultrasound, venography and liver biopsy are very helpful in diagnosis.Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology 06/2000; 15(5):550-4. · 2.87 Impact Factor -
Article: Treating Budd-Chiari Syndrome: making rational choices from a myriad of options.
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ABSTRACT: Budd-Chiari syndrome represents a spectrum of disorders characterized by obstruction to hepatic venous drainage. Originally described as an "obliterating endophlebitis of the hepatic veins," this condition has come to refer to the manifestations of hepatic venous outflow obstruction anywhere above the level of the hepatic venulae regardless of the etiology, position, or severity of the obstruction or of the clinical course. Depending on the nature and anatomy of the obstruction, the disease presents acutely, with a rapidly progressive course, or insidiously, with gradual development of symptoms. The optimal management strategy for a given patient with Budd-Chiari syndrome depends on the anatomy of the obstruction, its physiologic consequences, and the natural history of the specific lesion. The specific treatments available and their use in the treatment of Budd-Chiari syndrome are reviewed.Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology 04/2000; 30(2):155-61. · 3.16 Impact Factor -
Article: The Budd-Chiari syndrome. Medical and surgical management of 30 patients.
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ABSTRACT: A retrospective review of 30 patients with documented Budd-Chiari syndrome disclosed an overall mortality of 57%. Medical treatment alone was associated with an 86% mortality; hepatic failure was the most common cause of death. Mortality was 31% overall for the surgical group, but there were long-term survivors among patients undergoing portacaval shunting. From this series, no single surgical procedure was found to be clearly superior. Surgical treatment with a side-to-side portacaval shunt seems to be the preferred operation when it can be performed. Surgical intervention should proceed soon after the diagnosis is made, lest extension of thrombus occur. Medical therapy most often is ineffective.Archives of Surgery 07/1985; 120(6):657-62. · 4.24 Impact Factor
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Keywords
27 patients
3 patients
39 patients
42 orthotopic liver transplantations
actuarial 5-year
disease characteristics
higher rates
interventional therapy
Leiden mutation
liver failure
liver transplantation
liver veins
long-term results
median follow-up period
medical therapy
myeloproliferative disorders
portal vein
portal vein thrombosis
specific complications
vascular complications