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  • Title: [Primary biliary cirrhosis: current modes of presentation. Clinical, biochemical, immunologic and histologic study of 206 patients seen from 1978 to 1988].
    Author: Brenard R, Degos F, Degott C, Lassoued K, Benhamou JP.
    Journal: Gastroenterol Clin Biol; 1990; 14(4):307-12. PubMed ID: 2190853.
    Abstract:
    The aim of this study, based on a series of 206 patients (186 women and 20 men) with primary biliary cirrhosis seen from 1978 to 1988, was to assess the current modes of presentation of the disease. In approximately 30 percent of patients, primary biliary cirrhosis was recognized at an asymptomatic stage. Two thirds of these patients remained asymptomatic: they were older (mean age 57 years) and had less severe histological lesions than the patients who became symptomatic (mean age 45 years). The modes of presentation were not markedly different in the male and female patients of our series. The prevalence of cholelithiasis seemed to be particularly high (more than 20 percent in our patients). Complications of portal hypertension (bleeding esophageal varices or ascites) were the initial manifestations of primary biliary cirrhosis in 8 percent of our symptomatic patients. Alkaline phosphatase level was normal or only slightly increased in 15 percent of our patients: a normal level or a slight increase in alkaline phosphatases is not an argument against the diagnosis of primary biliary cirrhosis. Antinuclear antibodies with perinuclear fluorescence were demonstrated in 26 percent of our patients; in most of these patients, an antibody to a 200 kD protein of the nuclear envelope was present; in patients with this antibody, asthenia, arthralgias and associated extrahepatic diseases were less common and the titers of antibodies to mitochondria were lower than in the patients without this antibody.
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