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Insuffisance hépatocellulaire fulminante ou subfulminante secondaire à une infiltration métastatique du foie: une autre cause d'hépatite hypoxique?

Authors :
UCL - MD/MINT - Département de médecine interne
UCL - MD/CHIR - Département de chirurgie
UCL - MD/MNOP - Département de morphologie normale et pathologique
Henrion, J.
Hautekeete, M
Brenard, R.
Schapira, M.
Somers, G
Geubel, André
Schmitz, Ann
Gerard, R.
Rahier, Jacques
Hoorens, A
Klöppel, G
UCL - MD/MINT - Département de médecine interne
UCL - MD/CHIR - Département de chirurgie
UCL - MD/MNOP - Département de morphologie normale et pathologique
Henrion, J.
Hautekeete, M
Brenard, R.
Schapira, M.
Somers, G
Geubel, André
Schmitz, Ann
Gerard, R.
Rahier, Jacques
Hoorens, A
Klöppel, G
Source :
Gastroentérologie clinique et biologique, Vol. 20, no. 6-7, p. 535-43 (1996)
Publication Year :
1996

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this retrospective study was to report a series of 9 new cases of fulminant hepatic failure due to metastatic liver disease and to identify signs to support a theory of hypoxia. METHODS: In these 9 cases and in 38 previously published cases of fulminant or subfulminant liver failure, we looked for clinical (shock, sepsis, and cutaneous signs of circulatory failure), laboratory (marked increase in serum aminotransferases levels) and histological (cell necrosis) parameters compatible with liver hypoxia. RESULTS: Cutaneous signs of circulatory failure or shock were observed in 3 of the 9 cases in this study, and were not due to cardiogenic or septic shock. A marked increase in serum aminotransferases levels, 10 times above the upper limit of normal, was observed in 8 of the 9 cases in the present study and in 23 of 37 cases of the literature. Liver cell necrosis was observed in 6 of the 7 autopsied patients in this series and in 20 of 34 cases in the literature. Generally, liver cell necrosis was more severe than tumor cell necrosis and was related to the degree of sinusoidal involvement by tumoral cells. In one case, hepatic blood flow was decreased despite a high level of cardiac blood flow suggesting impairment of circulation in the liver. CONCLUSIONS: These 9 cases and a review of the literature support the hypothesis of hypoxic liver cell necrosis leading to acute liver failure in cases of metastatic liver disease. However, liver hypoxia cannot explain all the reported cases and was never due to circulatory failure from cardiac or septic causes, but to the sinusoidal involvement by tumor cells.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Gastroentérologie clinique et biologique, Vol. 20, no. 6-7, p. 535-43 (1996)
Notes :
French
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1130574427
Document Type :
Electronic Resource