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HEPATITIS C VIRUS-RELATED FIBROSING CHOLESTATIC HEPATITIS AFTER RENAL TRANSPLANTATION
95
Citations
9
References
1997
Year
Liver FibrosisImmunologyPathologyChronic Hepatitis BNephrologyCholestatic HepatitisChronic Hepatitis CCirrhosisAutoimmune Liver DiseaseViral HepatitisChronic Liver FailureHepatology FibrosisChronic Kidney DiseaseAutoimmune DiseaseKidney TransplantLiver PhysiologyHepatologyHepatitis CHepatitisAcute Liver FailureLiver DiseaseLiver CancerMedicineHepatocellular Carcinoma
Fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis is a well-described syndrome in patients with immunodeficiency and chronic hepatitis B. It is clinically, biologically, and histologically characterized by rapidly progressive hepatic failure, a mildly elevated serum aminotransferase level, an extensive periportal fibrosis associated with intense cholestasis, mild inflammatory cellular infiltrate, no cirrhosis, and a high hepatocellular level expression of B viral antigens. This syndrome reflected a direct hepatocytopathic injury linked to high intrahepatic viral antigen expression. Because the syndrome of fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis has not been described in chronic hepatitis C, we report the first well-characterized case in a renal transplant patient with chronic hepatitis C and discuss the clinical and pathogenic implications of such a syndrome in this setting.
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