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1.
Clinics ; 73: e289, 2018. tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-952809

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The prognosis of patients with biliary atresia undergoing Kasai portoenterostomy is related to the timing of the diagnosis and the indication for the procedure. The purpose of the present study is to present a practical flowchart based on 257 children who underwent Kasai portoenterostomy. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective cohort study of patients who underwent Kasai portoenterostomy between 1981 and 2016. RESULTS: During the first period (1981 to 2009), 230 infants were treated, and the median age at the time of surgery was 84 days; jaundice was resolved in 77 patients (33.5%). During the second period, from 2010 to 2016, a new diagnostic approach was adopted to shorten the wait time for portoenterostomy; an ultrasonography examination suggestive of the disease was followed by primary surgical exploration of the biliary tract without complementary examination or liver biopsy. Once the diagnosis of biliary atresia was confirmed, a portoenterostomy was performed during the same surgery. During this period, 27 infants underwent operations; the median age at the time of surgery was 66 days (p<0.001), and jaundice was resolved in 15 patients (55.6% - p=0.021), with a survival rate of the native liver of 66.7%. CONCLUSION: Primary surgical exploration of the biliary tract without previous biopsy was effective at improving the prognostic indicators of patients with biliary atresia undergoing Kasai portoenterostomy.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Infant, Newborn , Infant , Biliary Atresia/surgery , Portoenterostomy, Hepatic/methods , Time Factors , Biliary Atresia/mortality , Biliary Atresia/pathology , Brazil/epidemiology , Portoenterostomy, Hepatic/mortality , Survival Rate , Retrospective Studies , Age Factors , Liver Transplantation/methods , Liver Transplantation/mortality , Treatment Outcome , Kaplan-Meier Estimate , Jaundice, Neonatal/surgery , Jaundice, Neonatal/pathology , Liver/surgery , Liver/pathology
2.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 49(3): e4808, Mar. 2016. tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-771942

ABSTRACT

Biliary atresia (BA) is classically described at the neonatal age. However, rare cases of BA in older infants have also been reported. We report four cases of late-onset BA in infants older than 4 weeks (3 males, 1 female), and describe the diagnostic and management difficulties. One of the cases had a late-onset (29 weeks) presentation with a successful surgical procedure. We highlight the importance of this unusual differential diagnosis in infants with cholestatic syndrome, who may benefit from Kasai surgery, regardless of age.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Infant , Biliary Atresia/diagnosis , Late Onset Disorders/diagnosis , Liver/pathology , Biliary Atresia/pathology , Biliary Atresia/surgery , Biopsy , Diagnosis, Differential , Hepatic Artery/pathology , Late Onset Disorders/pathology , Late Onset Disorders/surgery
3.
J. pediatr. (Rio J.) ; 84(4): 331-336, jul.-ago. 2008. ilus, tab
Article in English, Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-511750

ABSTRACT

OBJETIVOS: Definir a sensibilidade, especificidade e a acurácia do espessamento ecogênico periportal à ultra-sonografia e da histopatologia hepática, isolados ou em conjunto, na distinção diagnóstica entre atresia biliar e as colestases intra-hepáticas. MÉTODOS: Trata-se de estudo retrospectivo realizado entre janeiro de 1990 e dezembro de 2004. Foram analisados 51 casos de atresia biliar e 45 com colestase intra-hepática. A histopatologia foi realizada por uma patologista de forma cega. O espessamento ecogênico periportal foi pesquisado na ultra-sonografia como único sinal diagnóstico de atresia biliar. Foram calculados os índices de sensibilidade, especificidade e acurácia do espessamento ecogênico periportal e da histologia isoladamente ou associados. O padrão-ouro utilizado para o diagnóstico de atresia biliar foi o aspecto da via biliar extra-hepática à laparotomia. RESULTADOS: O espessamento ecogênico periportal revelou sensibilidade de 49 por cento, especificidade de 100 por cento e acurácia de 72,5 por cento. A histopatologia compatível com obstrução biliar extra-hepática conferiu sensibilidade de 90,2 por cento, especificidade de 84,6 por cento e acurácia de 87,8 por cento. O espessamento ecogênico periportal e a histopatologia isolados ou associados proporcionaram sensibilidade de 93,2 por cento, especificidade de 85,7 por cento e acurácia de 90,3 por cento. CONCLUSÕES: A evidência do espessamento ecogênico periportal na ultra-sonografia é indicação de laparotomia. Se o espessamento ecogênico periportal é negativo, está indicada a biopsia hepática; se a histopatologia revelar sinais de atresia biliar, impõe-se a laparotomia exploradora. Nos casos de espessamento ecogênico periportal negativo com histopatologia de hepatite neonatal ou de outras colestases intra-hepáticas, recomenda-se o acompanhamento ou o tratamento clínico conforme o diagnóstico.


OBJECTIVES: To define the sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of the ultrasound triangular cord sign and hepatic histopathology, in isolation or in combination, for diagnostic differentiation between biliary atresia and intrahepatic cholestasis. METHODS: This was a retrospective study carried out between January 1990 and December 2004. Fifty-one cases of biliary atresia and 45 of intrahepatic cholestasis were analyzed. Histopathology was performed blind by a pathologist. The triangular cord sign was identified in ultrasound reports as the only diagnostic sign of biliary atresia. Sensitivity, specificity and accuracy were calculated for the triangular cord sign and histology both in isolation and in combination. The gold standard for diagnosis of biliary atresia was the appearance of the extrahepatic biliary tree via laparotomy. RESULTS: The triangular cord sign alone had sensitivity of 49 percent, specificity of 100 percent and accuracy of 72.5 percent. Histopathology compatible with extrahepatic biliary obstruction alone had 90.2 percent sensitivity, 84.6 percent specificity and 87.8 percent accuracy. The triangular cord sign and histopathology in isolation or combination resulted in sensitivity of 93.2 percent, specificity of 85.7 percent and accuracy of 90.3 percent. CONCLUSIONS: Finding the triangular cord sign on ultrasound is an indication for laparotomy. If the triangular cord sign is negative, liver biopsy is indicated; if histopathology reveals signs of biliary atresia, explorative laparotomy is indicated. In cases where the triangular cord sign is absent and histopathology indicates neonatal hepatitis or other intrahepatic cholestasis, clinical treatment or observation are recommended in accordance with the diagnosis.


Subject(s)
Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Biliary Atresia , Cholestasis, Intrahepatic , Biopsy , Biliary Atresia/pathology , Biliary Atresia , Cholestasis, Intrahepatic/pathology , Cholestasis, Intrahepatic , Diagnosis, Differential , Liver Diseases/diagnosis , Liver/pathology , Retrospective Studies , Sensitivity and Specificity
4.
Clinics ; 63(5): 689-694, 2008. graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-495046

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Although there is much known about liver diseases, some aspects remain unclear, such as the nature of the differences between the diseases observed in newborn infants and those in adults. For example, how do newborns respond to duct epithelial cell injury? Do the stellate cells in newborns respond similarly to those in adults during biliary obstruction? METHODS: Ninety newborn Wistar rats aged six days, weighing 8.0 - 13.9 g each, and 90 adult rats weighing 199.7 - 357.0 g each, were submitted to bile duct ligation. After surgery, they were randomly divided and sacrificed on the 3rd, 5th, 7th, 14th, 21st or 28th day post-bile duct ligation. Hepatic biopsies were obtained and immunohistochemical semi-quantification of desmin and á-SMA expression was performed in hepatic stellate cells and in myofibroblasts in the portal space, and between the portal space and the liver lobule. RESULTS: Desmin expression in the myofibroblast cells post-bile duct ligation was higher in young rats, reaching its peak level in a shorter time when compared to the adult animals. The differences between the groups for á-SMA expression were less significant than for desmin. CONCLUSIONS: These findings indicate that there is an increase in the number of collagen-producing myofibroblast cells in young animals, suggesting that there is more intense fibrosis in this population. This finding may explain why young animals with bile duct obstruction experience more intense portal fibrosis that is similar to the pathology observed in the livers of newborns with biliary atresia.


Subject(s)
Animals , Female , Male , Rats , Biliary Atresia/pathology , Cholestasis/pathology , Fibroblasts/pathology , Hepatic Stellate Cells/pathology , Portal System/pathology , Age Factors , Animals, Newborn , Actins/analysis , Biomarkers/analysis , Disease Models, Animal , Desmin/analysis , Extracellular Matrix Proteins/analysis , Ligation , Rats, Wistar
5.
The Korean Journal of Hepatology ; : 233-236, 2004.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-56382
6.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 31(7): 911-9, jul. 1998. ilus, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-212868

ABSTRACT

The histopathology of the liver is fundamental for the differential diagnosis between intra- and extrahepatic causes of neonatal cholestasis. However, histopathological findings may overlap and there is disagreement among authors concerning those which could discriminate between intra- and extrahepatic cholestasis. Forty-six liver biopsies (35 wedge biopsies and 11 percutaneous biopsies) and one specimen from a postmortem examination, all from patients hospitalized for neonatal cholestasis in the Pediatrics Service of Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre, were prospectively studied using a specially designed histopathological protocol. At least 4 of 5 different stains were used, and 46 hepatic histopathological variables related to the differential diagnosis of neonatal cholestasis were studied. The findings were scored for severity on a scale from 0 to 4. Sections which showed less than 3 spaces were excluded form the study. Sections were examined by a pathologist who was unaware of the final diagnosis of each case. Bile tract permeability was defined by scintigraphy of the bile ducts and operative cholangiography. The F test and discriminant analysis were used as statistical methods for the study of the hepatic histopathological variables. The chi-square method with Yates correction was used to relate the age of the patients on the date of the histopathological study to the discriminatory variables between intra- and extrahepatic cholestaasis selected by the discriminant function test. The most valuable hepatic histopathological variables for the discrimination between intra- and extrahepatic cholestasis, in decreasing order of importance, were periportal ductal proliferation, portal ductal proliferation, portal expansion, cholestasis in neoductules, foci of myeloid metaplasia, and portal-portal bridges. The only variable which pointed to the diagnosis of intrahepatic cholestasis was myeloid metaplasia. Due to the small number of patients who were younger than 60 days on the date of the histopathological study (N=6), no variable discriminated between intra- and extrahepatic cholestasis before the age of 2 months and all of them, except for the portal expansion, were discriminatory after this age. In infants with cholestasis, foci of myeloid metaplasia, whenever present in the liver biopsy, suggested intrahepatic cholstasis. Periportal ductal proliferation, portal ductal proliferation, portal expansion, cholestasis in neoductules...


Subject(s)
Humans , Infant, Newborn , Infant , Biliary Atresia/pathology , Cholestasis, Extrahepatic/pathology , Cholestasis, Intrahepatic/pathology , Biopsy, Needle , Chi-Square Distribution , Diagnosis, Differential , Discriminant Analysis , Jaundice, Neonatal/pathology , Liver/pathology
7.
Acta gastroenterol. latinoam ; 26(3): 177-81, 1996. tab, graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-186208

ABSTRACT

Biliary atresia (BA) is one of the biliary tree anomaly more frecuent. Occurs in about 0,8 to 1/10.000 live births. BA is defined as a progressive biliary tree. The prognosis depends ond the age of the diagnosis and precocity surgery. We present the resuls of a retrospective analysis of 71 RA carried out at the Garrahan Hospital from 1987 to 1993. 47 were female and 24 were male. Age ranged from 45 to 120 days of life. This study involved a consecutive series of 58 patients with histopathologic study of Porta-hepatis (PH) and liver biopsy obteined during the Kasai. The purpose of this study was to determine the value of histological factors as type of PH and hepatocitic giant cell transformation (GCT). 82.8 per cent had favorable type of PH and the CCT was mild in 84,5 per cent. 72,4 per cent had bad outcome and was independent of the type of PH. Neither of them were statiscaly significant with survive and evolution. In our serice neither PH non CGT were predicators of a bad outcome. There were good outcome in 27.5 per cent, died 37,9 per cent and 10.3 per cent undergo liver transplantation. The precocity in a diagnosis and surgical procedure before two months of age are the most important factors in correlation with survival. Others immunomorphologic factors must be estudied in BA that explained the ethiopatogenic process. Orthotopic liver transplantation is the succesful therapy in childrens with BA.


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Infant , Biliary Atresia/pathology , Liver/pathology , Biliary Atresia/mortality , Biopsy , Prognosis , Retrospective Studies , Sex Factors , Survival Rate
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