Pathology with reference to the bile retention syndrome
Open Access
- 1 June 1974
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Postgraduate Medical Journal
- Vol. 50 (584) , 344-347
- https://doi.org/10.1136/pgmj.50.584.344
Abstract
Summary: The pathological significance of giant cells, inspissitated bile plugs and hepatic fibrosis in the liver of infants is critically reviewed. Evidence is presented suggesting that a wide variety of pathological change in the paediatric liver results from the interaction of the effects of growth, metabolic maturity, genetic metabolic variability and infection. Understanding of the bile retention syndromes might increase if the diagnosis of ‘Neonatal Hepatitis’ and ‘biliary atresia’ as finite conditions, were to cease and their pathogenesis considered in such a multifactorial way.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- The connective tissue in livers of childrenJournal of Clinical Pathology, 1970
- Neonatal hepatic necrosis.1969
- Morphologic and cytochemical study on neonatal liver “giant” cell transformationExperimental and Molecular Pathology, 1969
- Neonatal hepatitis in congenital rubella. A histopathological study.1968
- ISOLATION OF RUBELLA VIRUS IN A CASE OF NEONATAL GIANT-CELL HEPATITISThe Lancet, 1966
- Fine Structural Changes of the LiverAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1963
- Prolonged Obstructive Jaundice in InfancyA.M.A. Journal of Diseases of Children, 1958
- Listeriosis: Report of 10 CasesAmerican Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1957
- Hepatic Necrosis in Disseminated Herpes SimplexArchives of Disease in Childhood, 1954
- Liver Damage in AmoebiasisBMJ, 1947