Dear Nikul,
Cirrhosis is a term that means scarring of th eliver. There are many possible causes for the scarring that include chronic infections wiith a hepatitis virus, other infections that can damage the liver, alcohol use,
industrialIndustrial bronchitis exposures to chemicals that damage the liver and metabolic abnormalities.
One of the consequences of the liver scarring is a diversion of blood away from the liver. As a result of this change in blood flow, vessels of the stomach and esophagus that usually carry a relatively small amount of blood are now engorged by the additional blood from the liver. These vessels, termed varices, can bleed causing catastrophic results including death.
To treat the varices a doctor can either inject chemicals into the vein or place elastic bands around the vein. The end result of these manipulations is to thronbose (create a clot) in th evessels so that blood flow is obstructed and the risk of bleeding reduced.
With regard to the cirrhosis, there is no way that we can currently reverse liver scarring. Replacing the liver with a transplanted organ is the only option.
Each transplant program has its own style for evaluation of patients for liver transplantation. I suggest that you contact a liver transplant program close to your home and discuss the situation with them.
If you'd like to e-mail me, I can pass along some hrebal recommendations from this book.
Regards,
Wendell < ***@**** >
I have cut and pasted information from Northwestern Memorial Hospital's website below. (The section dealing with their liver program.) Good luck to you and your family.
-------SECTION FROM THEIR WEB PAGE----------------------------
Division Chief:
Peter J. Kahrilas, MD
Consultation or Referral: Contact us by calling our Physician Referral Service at (312) 926-8400, or click here to send e-mail.
The Northwestern Memorial Division of Gastroenterology/Hepatology includes a diverse medical staff with expertise in diagnosing and treating the full range of GI and liver diseases, including cancers of the digestive system, Crohn's disease, inflammatory bowel disease, ulcerative colitis, viral hepatitis, peptic ulcer disease, esophageal and chronic liver diseases, gallstones and their complications, and pancreatic diseases. Section members are active in research into hepatobiliary disease, GI motility and manometry, absorption-nutrition, gastrointestinal immunology, gastrointestinal cancer, and interventional endoscopy. Together with its extensive organ transplantation programs, Northwestern Memorial's Gastroenterology/Hepatology program provides state-of-the-art patient care.
The latest test reports of the patients has revealed that the person is suffering from an infection caused due to HEPATITIS C+. This is the major cause of the damange to the lever. Reader who might read this are requested to send me the information about any medicine or surgery that might help us cure this HEPATITIS c+.
A BIG THANKS TO EVERYONE WHO WOULD BE TRYING THEIR BEST FOR US..
there has been studies on hepatocyte growth factor in Japan.
the tests were on rats that showed complete reversal of cirrhosis. this was a year ago aand i guess they have done tests on humans--dont know with what results.i have been trying to post here to find out but it is always full. if you find out anything please let me know. goodluck
who stoped drinking 5 months ago due to a pulsing pain in the lower/middle right side of my body. At first it did radiate to the left side and to my back. I have had blood tests and even an ultrasound and they turn out normal. My physician thinks its Fatty Liver but im not convinced. I have been abstanant from booze for 5 months and still suffer the pain. I recently took some Roxicet pills and had a complete relapse, the pain was terrible and I belive it could be related to the pill. Im sick of suffering and would like some positive diagnosis. I need to feel like my absitinance from alcohol is worthwhlile and the pain has only caused me depression and frustration. HELP
The study was performed on rats. The success rate was 100% regeneration of healthy liver cells that replaced the cirrhosis. This was done by injecting Human Growth Gene incased in fat, into the muscle of the rats.
The Japanese were proposing dogs as the next test group.
My Doctor tells me that there are several things to consider here.
1. The rats had cirrhosis that was created in the lab. None of us ( that I know of have lab invented cirrhosis)
2. testing takes years... He says to count on 20 years before it reaches human patients in America.
3. Even if all goes well with the tests it may not affect all types of cirrhosis.
Personally, I am saving up for a trip to Japan and a dog suit:-)
Linda http://clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/livercirrhosissupport?as
he thinks the treatment is too severe. He recommended coming back in a year for followup tests.
I have recently been diagnosed w/ Hep-C
My mother in law has recently in the last two years undergone the year of injections and ribavirin capsules and in December 2000 will be clear for the virus for a year. She has already passed the 6 mo. mark plus. However she now has many problems
and is being told by all the other specialists that the interferon has caused all of this? It is a horrific thing as I am only 38 and do not want to have the samr experience? She was treated aggressively as her liver was already damaged.
Do you have any statistics on aftermath of interferon in a large group of people? A specific study rather than
numbers and guessing alone? I really need some specifics
as I do not know the stats on my liver as of yet and am very reluctant in hammering these frying shots into my body??????