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AIDS:
11 January 2007 - Volume 21 - Issue 2 - p 187-192
doi: 10.1097/QAD.0b013e3280119e47
Clinical Science: Concise Communication

Nodular regenerative hyperplasia is a new cause of chronic liver disease in HIV-infected patients

Mallet, Vincent; Blanchard, Pierre; Verkarre, Virginie; Vallet-Pichard, Anaïs; Fontaine, Hélène; Lascoux-Combe, Caroline; Pol, Stanislas

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Abstract

Objective: To describe and explain the syndrome of HIV-associated cryptogenic liver disease in eight consecutive patients suffering from portal hypertension.

Methods: The study was undertaken at a liver disease centre in Paris and involved eight of 97 consecutive HIV-infected patients presenting abnormal liver function tests and/or symptomatic portal hypertension of unknown origin. Serology, pathology, and liver function tests were performed.

Results: A clear nodular architecture corresponding to nodular regenerative hyperplasia was observed in seven patients and suggested in one, based on the presence of sinusoidal dilatation in a clinical context of portal hypertension, without overt liver disease.

Conclusions: Nodular regenerative hyperplasia appears to be a new cause of portal hypertension in HIV-infected patients. This syndrome can be of critical importance as patients can be exposed to the significant complications of portal hypertension and to refractory ascites which may require liver transplantation.

© 2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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