1,537 research outputs found
Improved survival with cytomegalovirus infection after intestinal transplantation in children
Smooth muscle tumor arising de novo in a liver allograft: A case report
A case of a primary smooth muscle tumor arising in a liver allograft is presented. This complication has not been previously reported in the literature. The tumor was diagnosed while still asymptomatic, and the patient, a young child, has done well following a left lateral segmentectomy
Liver transplantation for type IV glycogen storage disease
TYPE IV glycogen storage disease is a rare autosomal recessive disorder (also called Andersen's disease1 or amylopectinosis) in which the activity of branching enzyme alpha-1, 4-glucan: alpha-1, 4-glucan 6-glucosyltransferase is deficient in the liver as well as in cultured skin fibroblasts and other tissues.2,3 This branching enzyme is responsible for creating branch points in the normal glycogen molecule. In the relative or absolute absence of this enzyme, an insoluble and irritating form of glycogen, an amylopectin-like polysaccharide that resembles plant starch, accumulates in the cells. The amylopectin-like form is less soluble than normal glycogen, with longer outer and inner chains. © 1991, Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved
Investigation of marmoset hybrids (Cebuella pygmaea x Callithrix jacchus) and related Callitrichinae (Platyrrhini) by cross-species chromosome painting and comparative genomic hybridization
We report on the cytogenetics of twin offspring from an interspecies cross in marmosets (Callitrichinae, Platyrrhini), resulting from a pairing between a female Common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus, 2n = 46) and a male Pygmy marmoset (Cebuella pygmaea, 2n = 44). We analyzed their karyotypes by multi-directional chromosome painting employing human, Saguinus oedipus and Lagothrix lagothricha chromosome-specific probes. Both hybrid individuals had a karyotype with a diploid chromosome number of 2n = 45. As a complementary tool, interspecies comparative genomic hybridization (iCGH) was performed in order to screen for genomic imbalances between the hybrids and their parental species, and between Callithrix argentata and S. oedipus, respectively. Copyright (C) 2005 S. Karger AG, Basel
Causes of death after liver transplantation in children treated with cyclosporine and steroids
Two-hundred-and-twenty-seven children underwent orthotopic liver transplantation between March 1980 and March 1986. Seventy (31%) patients died during the study period. Four patients who died within 24 hours of the initial liver transplant and 5 patients who died outside of our institution were excluded from the analysis. Liver failure, related to either thrombosis of the hepatic artery, primary non-function of the graft or rejection accounted for 25 of the remaining 61 deaths. In 21 patients death was related to overwheming sepsis while 7 patients died from excessive bleeding. Eight of the deaths were due to a miscellaneous group of causes. Twenty percent of the 150 patients who received a single liver transplant died compared to a death rate of 50% in patients who underwent three transplants. Eighty-five percent of the deaths occurred within 6 months after the initial liver transplant. Liver failure was the cause in the majority of the early deaths whereas the later deaths were more likely to be due to sepsis. This detailed analysis of the causes of death after pediatric liver transplantation in a large group of patients has revealed that advances in certain areas could lead to even better results
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