Chronic portal-systemic encephalopathy with normal portal vein pressure possibly due to noncirrhotic portal fibrosis
- 1 July 1984
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Springer Nature in Digestive Diseases and Sciences
- Vol. 29 (7), 669-673
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf01347302
Abstract
This is the report of a 50-year-old man with a more than 20-year history of chronic progressive portal-systemic encephalopathy. Liver tests were normal except for increased serum ammonia and indocyanine green plasma retention. The liver pathology was compatible with idiopathic portal hypertension or noncirrhotic portal fibrosis, demonstrating localized surface nodularity and portal fibrosis. Percutaneous transhepatic catheterization of the portal vein revealed near top normal portal vein pressure and a large shunt connecting the left gastric or superior mesenteric vein and the left renal vein. Presumably, the patient had portal hypertension in the past and formation of a short, largecaliber shunt between the portal system and the renal vein effectively decompressed the portal circulation.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Invasion of the lumen of the bile ducts by hepatocellular carcinomaLiver International, 2008
- Branched-chain amino acids in the treatment of chronic hepatic encephalopathy.Gut, 1982
- Liver pathology of idiopathic portal hypertension. Comparison with non‐cirrhotic portal fibrosis of India The Japan idiopathic portal hypertension study*,+Liver International, 1982
- Plasma amino-acid patterns in liver disease.Gut, 1982
- Anatomical basis of hepatic venographic alterations in idiopathic portal hypertensionLiver International, 1981
- Spontaneous portosystemic shuntDigestive Diseases and Sciences, 1981
- Percutaneous transhepatic portographyKanzo, 1980
- Noncirrhotic portal fibrosisThe American Journal of Medicine, 1971
- Prolonged survival after portal decompression of patients with non-cirrhotic intrahepatic portal hypertensionGut, 1970
- Studies on Portal HypertensionAnnals of Surgery, 1959