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cholestasis/fever

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Conservative management of cholestasis with and without fever in acute biliary pancreatitis.

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The presence of cholestasis in both mild and severe forms of acute biliary pancreatitis (ABP) does not justify, of itself, early endoscopic retrograde cholangiography (ERC) or endoscopic sphincterotomy (ES). Clinical support treatment of acute pancreatitis for one to two weeks is usually accompanied

[HIV infection, fever and cholestasis].

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A 35-year-old Swiss woman with AIDS experienced fever, jaundice and cough. Laboratory evaluation revealed signs of an infection and cholestasis. The examination by ultrasound showed thickening of the intra- and extrahepatic bile ducts and gallbladder wall, without dilatation or stones. Endoscopic

Multiple myeloma in a patient with fever of unknown origin and cholestasis.

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The differential diagnosis of fever of unknown origin includes infectious diseases, malignancies and connective tissue diseases. Multiple myeloma is not usually included in the differential diagnosis, nor is it considered a frequent cause of cholestasis in the absence of amyloidosis. We report a

Case of multiple myeloma mimicking an infectious disease with fever, intrahepatic cholestasis, renal failure, and pulmonary insufficiency.

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We describe a case of multiple myeloma (MM) presenting with high fever, inflammatory chemistry abnormalities, simultaneous acute renal failure, cholestatic hepatitis, and acute lung failure. The extremely aggressive course and pulmonary involvement in the form of pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (PAP)

[Thoracic dissecting aortic aneurysm. Contribution to the differential diagnosis of increased enzymes indicating cholestasis, fever and thoracic pain].

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A 68 years old female patient was admitted with thoracic pain and fever (40.0 degrees C). A coronary heart disease was known. The liver was enlarged, the cholestatic enzymes elevated without bilirubinaemia. In the blood culture gram-negative bacilli was found. Our diagnosis: septic cholangitis,

Cholestasis preceding ileal perforation in a patient with typhoid fever.

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[Dissociated cholestasis and typhoid fever].

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A 60-year-old man with fever, cholestasis and granulomatous hepatitis.

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[Clinico-pathologic conference. A 61-year-old patient with high fever, signs of cholestasis and enlarged paraaortic lymph nodes].

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[Fever, pain in the right hypochondrium, cytolysis and cholestasis in a 70-year-old woman].

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[80-year old patient with antibiotic-resistant fever and cholestasis].

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[Intrahepatic cholestasis: clinical and nosological classification. Critical survey of personal experience].

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We reviewed 20 patients (16 females and 4 males) with intrahepatic cholestasis and recognised the following miscellaneous disorders: 12 primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), 3 primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), 1 immune cholangiopathy (IC), 3 liver sarcoidosis and 1 cholestasis with Horton's

[Unexplained fever or inflammatory syndrome. Diagnostic value of liver puncture-biopsy].

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The value of transcutaneous biopsy of the liver was assessed in a series of 110 cases of fever of unknown origin or of unexplained inflammatory syndrome. Liver histology was useful to the ultimate etiological diagnosis in 12 cases (11 per cent). The result of a transcutaneous biopsy of the liver was

Coinfection of hepatitis A virus genotype IA and IIIA complicated with autoimmune hemolytic anemia, prolonged cholestasis, and false-positive immunoglobulin M anti-hepatitis E virus: a case report.

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A 37-year-old male presented with fever and jaundice was diagnosed as hepatitis A complicated with progressive cholestasis and severe autoimmune hemolytic anemia. He was treated with high-dose prednisolone (1.5 mg/kg), and eventually recovered. His initial serum contained genotype IA hepatitis A

[Severe cholestatic hepatitis due to Q fever: report of a case].

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Severe cholestatic hepatitis due to Coxiella burnetii is a rare form of clinical presentation of acute Q fever that is only occasionally detected in association with this infectious disease. We report a case of severe cholestatic hepatitis due to acute Q fever, with clinical signs of hepatic
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