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Intrahepatic Cholestasis of Pregnancy

Nursing for Women's Health, 2015
Itching is commonly reported by pregnant women and may be due to physiologic changes of pregnancy or could indicate a more serious health concern. Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy, while classified as a pregnancy dermatosis, is actually a liver disease of pregnancy associated with significant fetal mortality and morbidity, as well as lifelong ...
Cathi, Phillips, Margaret, Boyd
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Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy

Current Treatment Options in Gastroenterology, 2003
Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy (or obstetric cholestasis) is a liver disorder that occurs in late pregnancy. Despite the potential adverse maternal and fetal/neonatal outcomes, cholestasis of pregnancy is often neglected and treated expectantly.
Frank, Lammert   +2 more
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Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy

Clinics in Liver Disease, 2004
Patients with ICP should be considered to have a high-risk pregnancy. Once the diagnosis of ICP is suspected, usually because of generalized pruritus, it should be confirmed by liver function tests, and other causes of cholestasis should be ruled out.
Caroline A, Riely, Yannik, Bacq
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[Intrahepatic cholestasis].

Revista espanola de las enfermedades del aparato digestivo, 1976
Intrahepatic cholestasis has become a very important aspect of liver disease. The author, in the light of electron microscopy and the theory of filtration-reabsorption of bile secretion proposes that the disease may be explained by obstructions situated at various levels of the inter-cellular spaces of the liver. This obstruction is functional at first,
L, Yuguero del Moral   +4 more
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Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy

Seminars in Perinatology, 1998
Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy (ICP) is a disease of the third trimester of pregnancy involving pruritus and elevated bile acid levels. Its pathogenesis likely involves a genetic hypersensitivity to estrogen. Once thought to be benign for both mother and fetus, ICP has been associated with increased rates of fetal morbidity and mortality and an ...
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Estrogens in Intrahepatic Cholestasis of Pregnancy

Obstetrics & Gynecology, 2000
To determine whether estrogen production and excretion are impaired in gravidas with intrahepatic cholestasis.Plasma and urine samples were collected from 13 women from the United States and Chile at 35-38 weeks' gestation with mild (n = 9) or severe (n = 4) intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy.
K K, Leslie   +5 more
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BENIGN RECURRENT INTRAHEPATIC CHOLESTASIS

Clinics in Liver Disease, 1999
Benign recurrent intrahepatic cholestasis is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by repeated episodes of intense pruritus and jaundice. Each attack lasts from several weeks to months before resolving spontaneously. Patients are completely asymptomatic for months to years between symptomatic periods.
Velimir A, Luketic, Mitchell L, Shiffman
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Pregnancy Outcome With Intrahepatic Cholestasis

Obstetrics & Gynecology, 1999
To determine the risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes resulting from intrahepatic cholestasis.We analyzed 91 women with singleton pregnancies complicated by cholestasis who gave birth at Kuopio University Hospital from January 1990 to December 1996.
S, Heinonen, P, Kirkinen
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[Intrahepatic cholestasis].

La Clinica terapeutica, 1997
The intrahepatic cholestasis is not an common syndrome, in particular way in people between 50 and 60 years of age. It is often unknown or confused, because of itching, with allergic or dermatologic diseases. The most frequent causes of intrahepatic cholestasis are primary sclerosing cholestasis, primary biliary cirrhosis and hepatic cirrhosis.
F, Stazi, P, Farello, C, Stazi
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PROGRESSIVE FAMILIAL INTRAHEPATIC CHOLESTASIS

Clinics in Liver Disease, 1999
Abstract Progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis (PFIC), also known as Byler disease, is an inherited disorder of childhood in which cholestasis of hepatocellular origin often presents in the neonatal period and leads to death from liver failure before adolescence. The pattern of appearance of affected children within families is consistent with
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