Peritoneoscopic Findings of Autoimmune Hepatitis

1994 
: To clarify the morphologic differences between hepatitis C virus (HCVI-negative autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) and HCV-positive AIH, peritoneoscopic findings were studied. Among twenty three patients with AIH according to the Japanese criteria (1992), 15 were HCV-negative and 8 were HCV-positive. The terms grooved depression, coarse depression, coarse elevation, coarse undulation, and round-shaped reddish marking (RM) were used in this study to evaluate the peritoneoscopic findings. Grooved depressions, coarse depressions, coarse elevations, coarse undulations and round-shaped RMs were all common findings (53%, 87%, 73%, 80%, and 80%, respectively) in HCV-negative AIH patients, but they were less common (13%, 25%, 13%, 13%, and 0%, respectively) in HCV-positive AIH patients. This study revealed that HCV-negative AIH patients had different peritoneoscopic findings from HCV-positive AIH patients. Thus HCV-negative AIH may be typical AIH, and HCV-positive AIH may essentially be a subset of type C chronic hepatitis.
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