A case of Schönlein-Henoch Purpura (SHP) in a 32 year-old female, showing gastrointestinal manifestations including acute vasculitic cholecystitis was reported. In the course of hospitalization urgent laparotomy was performed because of the severe abdominal pain. The gallbladder was inflamed with a brownish-red edematous wall and subserosal hemorrhage, and was resected. Histological examination of the resected gallbladder specimen revealed leucocytoclastic vasculitis. The patient was treated with prednisolone postoperatively, and symptoms abated over two weeks. Acute cholecystitis with SHP is extremely rare, and as far as the authors know this is the second case of this disorder documented by histological examination. Patients with acute abdomen associated with SHP should be managed with consideration of the complications of acute cholecystitis.
We determine the concentration of proapolipoprotein (proapo) A-I and its ratio with total apolipoprotein (apo) A-I (proapo A-I/total apo A-I) in plasma of patients with liver disease; we used a noncompetitive sandwich method, an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The mean (SD) proapo A-I concentrations in patients with decompensated or compensated liver cirrhosis were higher than in normal subjects: 88 (25), 105 (36), and 69 (25) mg/L, respectively. The mean (SD) ratio (expressed as %) for each of these types of liver cirrhosis was also higher than in normal subjects: 10.0 (3.5), 10.2 (3.9), and 4.6 (1.6), respectively. In the patients, the proapo A-I concentration was positively correlated with the concentration of high-density lipoprotein subtype 2 cholesterol (HDL2-C) (r = 0.736), and the proapo A-I/total apo A-I ratio was correlated inversely with the HDL3-C concentration (r = -0.609). The activity of proapo A-I converting enzyme in patients with liver cirrhosis (62 +/- 30 nmol/h per liter) was significantly (P < 0.01) lower than that in normal subjects (172 +/- 55 nmol/h per liter). The increases of the plasma proapo A-I concentration and ratio in patients with liver cirrhosis may be caused by a decreased production of the converting enzyme in the liver. The increase of plasma proapo A-I may thus also affect the circulating HDL subtypes.
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