Krónikus C vírus hepatitis szövettani jellemzöi biopsziás anyagunkban.

1998 
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is one of the most important diseases with high chronicity rate (50-80%) leading to end-stag cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Hepatic histology shows a characteristic but not diagnostic picture. The aim of this study was to evaluate the characteristic histological findings in correlation with epidemiological features in our liver biopsy material. PATIENTS/METHODS: 106 liver biopsies were studid between 1993-1996. All patients (60 males, 46 females, age between 11-81 years, mean age: 43 years) were found to be positive for HCV antibody by a second-generation ELISA method. The biopsy materials were fixed in buffered formalin and having embedded in paraffin, stained with hematoxylin and eosin, periodic acid-Schiff after diastase digestion, Gomori's reticulin stain and picrosirius red for collagen. The histological evaluation was based upon the new classification of chronic hepatitis proposed by Desmet et al. The statistical analysis was performed by the Chi square test. RESULTS: Minimal chronic hepatitis (HAI: 1-3) was found in 14 (13.2%), mild chronic hepatitis (HAI: 4-8) in 69 (65.09%) and moderate chronic hepatitis (HAI: 9-12) in 23 (21.69%) cases, while assessment of fibrosis (staging) resulted fibrosis 0/1 in 44 (41.5%), fibrosis 2 in 14 (13.2%), fibrosis 3 in 37 (34.9%) and cirrhosis (fibrosis 4) in 11 (10.37%) cases. Among histological features of chronic hepatitis C, the frequency of steatosis (70.75%), lymphoid F/A (63.2%), and bile duct lesions (12.26%) have paralelly increased with activity (grade) of hepatitis and these changes were more pronounced in moderate chronic hepatitis (p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: More than half of chronic hepatitis C patients presented mild histological lesions with stage 1 fibrosis. Lymphoid F/A, bile duct damage and steatosis are important diagnostic features that show a strong correlation with the activity of chronic hepatitis. The assessment of fibrosis (stage: 3 and stage: 4) in mild chronic hepatitis cases does alert the hepatologist to perform the liver biopsy to detect the fibrotic changes in chronic hepatitis C.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    3
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []