pubmed:abstractText |
The peculiarities of the type of liver cirrhosis that occurs in patients with cystic fibrosis of the pancreas depend on a number of factors. Two such factors, which have received little attention in the past, became apparent during a study of the livers of patients dying of this disease at the Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit. Firstly, the onset of the disease in fetal life may disturb the development of the bile duct system whose normal development is essential for normal structural relationships to be maintained in the liver. Focal lesions of intrahepatic biliary atresia will then complicate the histologic picture of "multi-lobular biliary cirrhosis". Secondly, scars formed in an infantile liver will considerably distort the subsequent growth of the liver, resulting in bizarre nodularity. Despite massive deformation large portions of the liver will still be composed of primary parenchyma that will enable normal liver functions as revealed by laboratory tests.
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