Clinical Dilemmas in Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease

eBook - Clinical Dilemmas (UK)

58,99 €
(inkl. MwSt.)
E-Book Download

Download

Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9781118924976
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 256 S., 20.41 MB
Auflage: 1. Auflage 2016
E-Book
Format: PDF
DRM: Adobe DRM

Beschreibung

Clinical Dilemmas in Non-AlcoholicFatty Liver Disease offers hepatologists practical, up-to-date and expert guidance on the most topical dilemmas, difficulties and areas of controversy/difficulty surrounding this ever-increasing area of liver disease they face in daily practice.

Roger Williams and Simon Taylor-Robinson, two of Europes leading hepatologists, have recruited leading figures from across the world to assist them, resulting in a truly international approach.  Each chapter covers a specific area of difficulty, containing clear learning points and providing evidence-based expert guidance on the latest hot topics in clinical management such as:

Is NAFLD different in absence of Metabolic Syndrome?Are the pros outweighed by the cons of obtaining a liver biopsy?Is progression to cirrhosis more likely in children with NAFLD?What are the dangers as well as the true benefits of bariatric surgery?How is it best to use antifibrotic agents in clinical practice?

Clinical Dilemmas in Non-AlcoholicFatty Liver Disease provides the answers to the questions and challenges that clinicians face every day in this area.  It is essential reading for hepatologists of all levels and researchers in hepatology, as well as all those involved in the care of patients with NAFLD, including gastroenterologists, pathologists and specialist hepatology nurses.

Autorenportrait

Professor Roger Williams CBE, runs the Institute of Hepatology at UCL, and is a twice former president of EASL. He has authored an incredible 2100 journal articles. Despite advancing years, he is still actively involved in clinical research -- 340 articles in the past ten years, and analysis by ISI shows him to be one of the most influential researchers in his field. The award of a CBE for services to medicine recognised his major contribution to the study of liver disorders over 25 years including leading the team who performed the first ever UK liver transplant. He also performed George Best's controversial liver transplant in 2002.
Prof Williams has had many awards, medals, honorary fellowships, and in 2006 was included by HRH The Queen in a celebration at Buckingham Palace to honour those who continue to contribute to public service beyond the age of 65yrs. He was made a Fellow of King's College London in 1992 and an Honorary Fellowship from UCL was conferred on him in 2008, in recognition of his distinguished career and outstanding service to UCL.

Professor Simon Taylor-Robinson joined the Department of Medicine at Imperial College London in 1997, having previously been Senior Registrar in Gastroenterology and Hepatology at Hammersmith Hospital. He was awarded the Sir Francis Avery Jones Gold Medal by the British Society of Gastroenterology in 1999 and the Young Investigator Award of the Liver Section of the European Gastroenterology Association in 1997. He is currently Director of the Imperial Clinical Research Facility at St Mary's Hospital, London.

Inhalt

List of Contributors vii

Preface ix

Part I: Nature of the condition

1 Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease: Hype or harm? 3
Stephen H. Caldwell and Curtis K. Argo

2 NAFLD: A worldwide problem 8
Joanna K. Dowman Geoffrey C. Farrell and Philip Newsome

3 Is insulin resistance the principal cause of NAFLD? 15
Ian F. Godsland Sanjeev Mehta Shareen Forbes Fabian Meienberg Michael Yee Simon D. TaylorRobinson and Desmond G. Johnston

4 Paediatric NAFLD: A distinct disease with the propensity for progressive fibrosis 29
Emer Fitzpatrick and Anil Dhawan

5 Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) as cause of cryptogenic cirrhosis 36
Jay H. Lefkowitch

6 Is NAFLD different in absence of metabolic syndrome? 44
Yusuf Yilmaz

7 Occurrence of noncirrhotic HCC in NAFLD 50
Dawn M. Torres and Stephen A. Harrison

8 Fibrosis progression: Putative mechanisms and molecular pathways 61
WingKin Syn and Anna Mae Diehl

9 When is it NAFLD and when is it ALD?: Can the histologic evaluation of a liver biopsy guide the clinical evaluation? 72
Elizabeth M. Brunt and David E. Kleiner

10 Of men and microbes: Role of the intestinal microbiome in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease 82
Muhammad Bilal Siddiqui Mohammed Shadab Siddiqui and Arun J. Sanyal

11 Can genetic influence in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease be ignored? 91
YangLin Liu Christopher P. Day and Quentin M. Anstee

12 Is there a mechanistic link between hepatic steatosis and cardiac rather than liver events? 103
Soo Lim

Part III: Diagnosis and Scoring

13 How to best diagnose NAFLD/NASH? 113
Vlad Ratziu

14 The clinical utility of noninvasive blood tests and elastography 124
Emmanuel A. Tsochatzis and Massimo Pinzani

15 Are the guidelinesAASLD IASL EASL and BSGof help in the management of patients with NAFLD? 131
Cristina Margini and JeanFrançois Dufour

16 Imaging methods for screening of hepatic steatosis 138
Hero K. Hussain

17 Are the advantages of obtaining a liver biopsy outweighed by the disadvantages? 152
Jeremy F. L. Cobbold and Simon D. TaylorRobinson

18 Screening for NAFLD in highrisk populations 161
Nader Lessan

Part IV: Value of treatment measures

19 Defining the role of metabolic physician 173
Nicholas Finer

20 Should physicians be prescribing or patients selfmedicating with orlistat vitamin E vitamin D insulin sensitizers pentoxifylline or coffee? 182
Haripriya Maddur and Brent A. NeuschwanderTetri

21 Effects of treatment of NAFLD on the metabolic syndrome 189
Hannele YkiJärvinen

22 What are the dangers as well as the true benefits of bariatric surgery? 196
Andrew Jenkinson

23 Liver transplantation: What can it offer? 203
Roger Williams

Part V: What does the future hold?

24 Molecular antagonists leptin or other hormones in supplementing environmental factors? 211
Jonathan M. Hazlehurst and Jeremy W. Tomlinson

25 What is the role of antifibrotic therapies in the current and future management of NAFLD? 218
Natasha McDonald and Jonathan Fallowfield

26 Developmental programming of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease 226
Jiawei Li Paul Cordero and Jude A. Oben

Index 232

Informationen zu E-Books

Herzlichen Glückwunsch zum Kauf eines Ebooks bei der BUCHBOX! Hier nun ein paar praktische Infos.

Adobe-ID

Hast du E-Books mit einem Kopierschutz (DRM) erworben, benötigst du dazu immer eine Adobe-ID. Bitte klicke einfach hier und trage dort Namen, Mailadresse und ein selbstgewähltes Passwort ein. Die Kombination von Mailadresse und Passwort ist deine Adobe-ID. Notiere sie dir bitte sorgfältig. 
 
Achtung: Wenn du kopiergeschützte E-Books OHNE Vergabe einer Adobe-ID herunterlädst, kannst du diese niemals auf einem anderen Gerät außer auf deinem PC lesen!!
 
Du hast dein Passwort zur Adobe-ID vergessen? Dann kannst du dies HIER neu beantragen.
 
 

Lesen auf dem Tablet oder Handy

Wenn du auf deinem Tablet lesen möchtest, verwende eine dafür geeignete App. 

Für iPad oder Iphone etc. hole dir im iTunes-Store die Lese-App Bluefire

Für Android-Geräte (z.B. Samsung) bekommst du die Lese-App Bluefire im GooglePlay-Store (oder auch: Aldiko)
 
Lesen auf einem E-Book-Reader oder am PC / MAC
 
Um die Dateien auf deinen PC herunter zu laden und auf dein E-Book-Lesegerät zu übertragen gibt es die Software ADE (Adobe Digital Editions).
 
 

Andere Geräte / Software

 

Kindle von Amazon. Wir empfehlen diese Geräte NICHT.

EPUB mit Adobe-DRM können nicht mit einem Kindle von Amazon gelesen werden. Weder das Dateiformat EPUB, noch der Kopierschutz Adobe-DRM sind mit dem Kindle kompatibel. Umgekehrt können alle bei Amazon gekauften E-Books nur auf dem Gerät von Amazon gelesen werden. Lesegeräte wie der Tolino sind im Gegensatz hierzu völlig frei: Du kannst bei vielen tausend Buchhandlungen online Ebooks für den Tolino kaufen. Zum Beispiel hier bei uns.

Software für Sony-E-Book-Reader

Wenn du einen Sony-Reader hast, dann findest du hier noch die zusätzliche Sony-Software.
 

Computer/Laptop mit Unix oder Linux

Die Software Adobe Digital Editions ist mit Unix und Linux nicht kompatibel. Mit einer WINE-Virtualisierung kommst du aber dennoch an deine E-Books.