The high prevalence of HCV or HBV infections in our study population provides epidemiologic evidence suggesting that HCV and HBV infections may be involved in the development of a subgroup of NHL in males. Our investigation also revealed that both HCV- and HBV-infected NHL patients showed certain similarities in clinical and pathologic manifestations.
Wilson's disease associated with hepatic failure is not common and the underlying mechanism triggering the event is not known at present. We treated a 28-year-old Japanese woman with Wilson's disease who developed hepatic failure associated with hemolytic crisis just after delivery. She was diagnosed as having Wilson's disease at 12 years of age, at which time she started taking D-penicillamine. She had previously delivered two children without difficulty. When she found out she was pregnant this time, she stopped taking D-penicillamine in contrast to taking it faithfully during her first two pregnancies. On the day of delivery of her full-term baby, jaundice developed accompanied with severe hemolytic crisis. Plasma exchanges and blood transfusion were performed and D-penicillamine administration was started again. She gradually recovered and apparently was following a good clinical course. However, on day 30 the second hemolytic crisis occurred and subsequent liver failure led her to death on day 50. At autopsy her liver was cirrhotic and showed massive necrosis. Prophylactic oral administration of D-penicillamine and careful observation are therefore recommended to prevent hemolytic crisis during the perinatal period.
Hypoxic and hypercapnic ventilatory responses were measured after two levels of acute inhalation of cigarette smoke, minimum-level nicotine smoke (smoke 1) and nicotine-containing smoke (smoke 2), in 10 normal men. Chemosensitivity to hypoxia and hypercapnia was assessed both in terms of slope factors for ventilation-alveolar PO2 curve (A) and ventilation-alveolar PCO2 line (S) and of absolute levels of minute ventilation (VE) at hypoxia or hypercapnia. Ventilatory response to hypoxia and absolute level of VE at hypoxia significantly increased from 23.5 +/- 22.6 (SD) to 38.6 +/- 31.3 l . min-1 . Torr and from 10.6 +/- 2.5 to 12.6 +/- 3.5 l . min-1, respectively, during inhalation of cigarette smoke 2 (P less than 0.05). Inhalation of cigarette smoke 2 tended to increase the ventilatory response to hypercapnia, and the absolute level of VE at hypercapnia rose from 1.42 +/- 0.75 to 1.65 +/- 0.58 l . min-1 . Torr-1 and from 23.7 +/- 4.9 to 25.5 +/- 5.9 l . min-1, respectively, but these changes did not attain significant levels. Cigarette smoke 2 inhalation induced an increase in heart rate from 64.7 +/- 5.7 to 66.4 +/- 6.3 beats . min-1 (P less than 0.05) during room air breathing, whereas resting ventilation and specific airway conductance did not change significantly. On the other hand, acute inhalation of cigarette smoke 1 changed none of these variables. These results indicate that hypoxic chemosensitivity is augmented after cigarette smoke and that nicotine is presumed to act on peripheral chemoreceptors.
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