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Inflammation and portal hypertension - The undiscovered country.

Authors :
Mehta, Gautam
Gustot, Thierry
Mookerjee, Rajeshwar P
Garcia-Pagan, Juan Carlos
Fallon, Michael B
Shah, Vijay H
Moreau, Richard
Jalan, Rajiv
Mehta, Gautam
Gustot, Thierry
Mookerjee, Rajeshwar P
Garcia-Pagan, Juan Carlos
Fallon, Michael B
Shah, Vijay H
Moreau, Richard
Jalan, Rajiv
Source :
Journal of hepatology, 61 (1
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Portal hypertension has traditionally been viewed as a progressive process, involving ultrastructural changes including fibrosis, nodule formation, and vascular thrombosis, leading to increased intrahepatic resistance to flow. However, it is increasingly recognized that a significant component of this vascular resistance results from a dynamic process, regulated by complex interactions between the injured hepatocyte, the sinusoidal endothelial cell, the Kupffer cell and the hepatic stellate cell, which impact on sinusoidal calibre. Recent findings suggest these haemodynamic findings are most marked in patients with superimposed inflammation. The precise mechanisms for vascular dysfunction in cirrhosis with superimposed inflammation remain to be fully elucidated but several studies over the past decade have started to generate the hypothesis that inflammation may be a key mediator of the pathogenesis and severity of portal hypertension in this context. This review provides a comprehensive overview of the biological mechanisms for inflammation playing a key role in the severity of portal hypertension, and illustrates potential novel therapies that act by modifying these processes.<br />REVIEW<br />SCOPUS: re.j<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Journal of hepatology, 61 (1
Notes :
1 full-text file(s): application/pdf, other
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn893990764
Document Type :
Electronic Resource