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2.
J Pediatr ; 124(1): 49-56, 1994 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8283375

RESUMO

We report on 56 children with sclerosing cholangitis (SC) seen between 1972 and 1992. The first symptoms occurred at a mean age of 3.7 years; 15 infants had neonatal cholestatic jaundice. At diagnosis, cholestatic jaundice was present in 25 children, hepatomegaly in 54, splenomegaly in 41, and ascites in 12. Serum alkaline phosphatase activity was increased in 49 patients and gamma-glutamyltransferase activity in all patients tested. Most often the histopathologic findings were extensive portal fibrosis and neoductular proliferation. Cholangiography showed abnormal intrahepatic bile ducts in all children and abnormal extrahepatic bile ducts in 35 (63%). The children were separated into three groups: (1) those with SC of neonatal onset (27%); (2) those with SC of postneonatal onset associated with another disease (55%)--histiocytosis X in 14 children, immunodeficiency syndromes in 8, chronic inflammatory bowel disease or autoimmune hepatitis in 8, and congenital psoriasis in 1; and (3) those with SC of postneonatal onset without an associated disease (18%). Biliary cirrhosis was present in all but three children after 6 months to 19.3 years of follow-up. Eleven children died of portal hypertension or liver failure, and six died of a complication related to the associated disease. Fifteen children had liver transplantation; 11 of these are alive 6 months to 6 1/2 years later without recurrence of SC. The overall estimated median survival time of children with SC was 10 years from clinical onset. These results indicate that SC should be suspected in all children with a chronic cholestatic disease and increased serum gamma-glutamyl transferase activity, especially when diseases known to be associated with SC are present. The prognosis is poor, but liver transplantation should be considered except in those with severe immunodeficiency syndromes.


Assuntos
Colangite Esclerosante , Adolescente , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Colangiografia , Colangite Esclerosante/complicações , Colangite Esclerosante/diagnóstico , Colangite Esclerosante/mortalidade , Colangite Esclerosante/terapia , Feminino , Seguimentos , Hepatite Crônica/complicações , Hepatite Crônica/imunologia , Histiocitose de Células de Langerhans/complicações , Humanos , Síndromes de Imunodeficiência/complicações , Lactente , Recém-Nascido , Doenças Inflamatórias Intestinais/complicações , Icterícia Neonatal/etiologia , Masculino , Prognóstico , Análise de Sobrevida
3.
J Pediatr ; 122(3): 385-91, 1993 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8441092

RESUMO

During a 17-year period, 40 infants less than 1 year of age were investigated for cholelithiasis; 32 infants were seen within the past 10 years. Seventeen of them had no recognizable predisposing factors. In 6 infants, gallbladder lithiasis was a fortuitous finding on a plain radiograph or sonogram with no signs of common bile duct obstruction; under conservative management, no complications of lithiasis were observed on follow-up of 3 infants and spontaneous resolution occurred in 2 others. In the remaining 34 infants with lithiasis of the common duct or cystic duct or both, the initial symptoms were cholestatic jaundice in 21, acholic stools in 8, sepsis in 4, and abdominal pain in 1. Ultrasonography, performed in 33 of them, showed dilation of the biliary tract in 28, and stones in the gallbladder in 13 and in the bile ducts in 10. Percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography or operative cholangiography in 26 infants showed stones in the bile ducts in 23. In 3 infants, no lithiasis was visible, suggesting the spontaneous elimination of stones. Treatment was initially surgical in 9 infants, but starting in 1981 interventional radiologic procedures were attempted in 15 infants and were successful in 12. Spontaneous resolution of cholelithiasis occurred in 10 other infants with cholestasis. Recurrence of biliary stones was observed in 3 infants only after a follow-up of 7 months to 10 years. These results suggest that common bile duct lithiasis should be considered among the causes of cholestatic jaundice in infancy, and that some of the gallbladder calculi found in older children may have resulted from a lithogenic process that occurred during fetal life or shortly after birth. Percutaneous cholangiography with biliary drainage appears to be an effective means of treatment of infants with common bile duct obstruction; surgery can then be restricted to a limited number of cases, especially those with associated strictures of the bile ducts.


Assuntos
Colelitíase/diagnóstico , Bile/microbiologia , Colangiografia , Colelitíase/diagnóstico por imagem , Colelitíase/etiologia , Colelitíase/terapia , Escherichia coli/isolamento & purificação , Família , Feminino , Seguimentos , Humanos , Lactente , Recém-Nascido , Testes de Função Hepática , Masculino , Remissão Espontânea , Ultrassonografia
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