GRANULOMATOUS LIVER DISEASE
Hepatic granulomas are common, being found in 2 to 10 per cent of all liver biopsies, often in association with an elevated serum alkaline phosphatase level. However, they are rarely a specific finding and have been reported in association with a wide variety of infections, systemic illnesses, hepatobiliary disorders, drugs, and toxins, some of which are listed in. Although granulomas are a nonspecific finding, occasionally specific features are seen, such as acidfast bacilli in tuberculosis, ova in schistosomiasis, larvae in toxocariasis, and birefringent granules in starch, talc, or silicone granulomas. The differential diagnosis of hepatic granulomas is one of the most extensive in medicine, and the workup requires meticulous attention to details of the history, physical examination, and laboratory tests. Indeed, in 20 per cent or more of patients, no cause for granulomas is found despite extensive investigation. A subset of these patients, who have a syndrome consisting of fever, hepatomegaly, and hepatic granulomas which responds to administration of corticosteroids, has been described as having granulomatous hepatitis, although some feel that these individuals have a variant of sarcoidosis.
Conversely, liver biopsy (and culture, particularly of acidfast bacteria) is of considerable value in the diagnosis of sarcoidosis, miliary tuberculosis, and histoplasmosis, as virtually all patients with these disorders will have hepatic granulomas. Similarly, characteristic granulomas are seen in many patients with primary biliary cirrhosis, and granulomas may be the first clue to Hodgkin’s disease.
- CARDIAC PACEMAKERS
- MEDIASTINITIS
- ACUTE RENAL INSUFFICIENCY
- GASTROESOPHAGEAL REFLUX DISEASE
- Incidence
- LIMITATION OF MFARCT SIZE
- CIRCULATORY PHYSIOLOGY
- Important NEPHROTOXIRIS
- SCREENING TESTS OF HEPATOBILIARY DISEASE
- Portal Hypertension
- Differential Diagnosis and Evaluation of the Patient
- DROWNING AND NEAR-DROWNING
- MYOCARDIAL METABOLISM
- Diabetes Mellitus (DM)
- Outcome and Prognosis
- SPECIFIC ENTITIES - DISEASES WITH KFiOWIi ETIOLOGIES -
- ACUTE MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION
- CLINICAL TESTS OF DIGESTION AND ABSORPTION
- DEFINITION
- CHEST WALL DISEASE
- Endocrine Systems
- Hematopoietic System
- PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
- Renal Tubular Acidosis
- MULTIVALVULAR DISEASE
- CONTROL OF BREATHING IN DISEASE STATES
- Indications for Dialysis and Adequacy of Dialysis
- Incidence
- RENAL PARENCHYMAL
- Mesangioproliferative Glomerulonephritis
- Hepatic Diseases
- Bretylium Tosylate
- Gardner's Syndrome
- POSTCAPILLARY PULMONARY HYPERTENSION
- ETIOLOGY