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Cholestasis

In medicine, cholestasis is a condition where bile cannot from from the liver to the duodenum. more...

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Medicines

Etiology

  • gallstones
  • abdominal mass (e.g. cancer)
  • primary sclerosis cholangitis, secondary to inflammatory bowel disease
  • Primary biliary cirrhosis, secondary to autoimmune disorders
  • congential anomalies of the bilary tract
  • biliary trauma

Symptoms

  • Pale stools,
  • dark urine,
  • itchiness (pruritis) and
  • jaundice.

Bile is secreted by the liver to aid in the digestion of fats. Drugs such as golds salts,nitrofurantoin, anabolic steroids, chlorpromazine, prochlorperazine, sulindac, cimetidine, erythromycin, can cause cholestasis and may result in damage to the liver.

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Fetal problems rise with serum bile acid levels in cholestasis of pregnancy
From OB/GYN News, 10/1/04 by Jeff Evans

The rate of fetal complications increases when maternal serum bile acid levels become elevated in women who develop intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy, reported Dr. Anna Glantz of Sahlgrenska University Hospital/East, Goteborg, Sweden, and her colleagues.

Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy (ICP), defined as pruritus in pregnancy plus 10 [micro]mol/L or more of serum bile acids, occurred in 1.5% of 45,485 pregnancies recorded in a region of Sweden in February 1999-January 2002. The probability of the fetal complications of spontaneous preterm deliveries, asphyxial events, and meconium staining of amniotic fluid, placenta, and membranes rose by 1%-2% for each additional [micro]mol/L of maternal serum bile acid when the total level of bile acids exceeded 40 [micro]mol/L.

Most of the women with ICP (81%) had serum bile acid levels between 10 and 39 [micro]mol/L, while the other 19% had serum bile acid levels of at least 40 [micro]mol/L.

"Pregnant women with pruritus should be surveilled with repeated determinations of serum bile acids" with expectant management when the bile acid level is below 40 [micro]mol/L and control of symptoms with [H.sub.1]-receptor blockers or ursodeoxycholic acid, the investigators suggested (Hepatology 40[2]:467-74, 2004).

COPYRIGHT 2004 International Medical News Group
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group

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