Rare Diseases Symptoms Automatic Extraction
Home
A random Abstract
Our Project
Our Team
Cholestatic liver diseases: slow progress in understanding and treating slowly progressive disorders.
[benign recurrent intrahepatic cholestasis]
Cholestatic
liver
diseases
are
characterized
by
failure
of
normal
amounts
of
physiological
bile
to
reach
the
gastrointestinal
tract
.
Any
interference
with
normal
bile
flow
from
the
canalicular
membrane
of
the
hepatocyte
to
the
distal
common
bile
duct
may
result
in
cholestasis
.
Literature
review
.
In
primary
biliary
cirrhosis
(
PBC
)
,
the
small
intrahepatic
bile
ducts
are
destructed
,
resulting
in
obstruction
of
intrahepatic
bile
flow
,
whereas
extrahepatic
and
/
or
intrahepatic
biliary
strictures
block
the
passage
of
bile
towards
the
intestine
in
primary
sclerosing
cholangitis
(
PSC
)
.
In
contrast
,
the
biliary
tree
is
morphologically
unaffected
in
less
common
cholestatic
liver
diseases
as
benign
recurrent
intrahepatic
cholestasis
(
BRIC
)
and
progressive
familiar
intrahepatic
cholestasis
(
PFIC
1
-
4
)
.
Genetic
defects
in
hepatic
canalicular
transport
mechanisms
and
bile
salt
synthesis
deficiencies
seem
to
underlie
these
types
of
cholestatic
disorders
.
Recent
advances
in
understanding
and
treatment
of
cholestatic
liver
diseases
may
help
in
better
diagnosing
and
treating
the
various
conditions
characterized
by
cholestasis
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"failure of normal amounts of physiological bile"
symptom
benign recurrent intrahepatic cholestasis
You can validate or delete this automatically detected symptom
Validate the Symptom
Delete the Symptom