The hepatic veins in health and disease
dc.contributor.author
Gibson, James Blackburn
en
dc.date.accessioned
2018-09-13T15:56:35Z
dc.date.available
2018-09-13T15:56:35Z
dc.date.issued
1958
dc.description.abstract
en
dc.description.abstract
"La phlébite domine toute la pathologie" wrote Cruveilhier
in his great work on morbid anatomy more than a hundred years
ago. Since then venous disease has become of less account.
No modern writer could make Cruveilhierts claim, and diseases of
veins now receive less attention than they deserve. In many
parts of the body compensation for temporary or permanent venous
occlusions is readily achieved and functional perfection of the venous system masks the presence of extensive lesions. But
this is not the case in the liver. Such channels as exist
collateral to the hepatic veins are totally inadequate for the
great flow of blood through the liver, and the organ is more
affected than most other viscera by venous occlusions.
en
dc.description.abstract
Where hepatic- venous occlusions are extensive compensatory
readjustments of circulation may suffice for a while to obscure
the severe congestion of the liver, but the clinical manifestations are eventually striking. This occurs in the Budd- Chiari!
Syndrome, and a chapter of this thesis is devoted to cases of
that condition in which the occlusions were not secondary to
disease of other organs. In another chapter experimentally
induced venous congestion of the liver of the rat is described.
Although the Budd -Chiari Syndrome is rare, these instances of
severe venous congestion are of general interest in relation to
other and commoner hepatic conditions. Passive venous
congestion of the liver is a frequent sequel to heart failure.
The simplicity of pathogenesis in the conditions studied here
however, and, in many instances, the slow tempo of their
advance make them useful standards of comparison in any
investigation of the more complex pathogenesis of portal
cirrhosis and of the phenomena of ascites. Further, the recent
descriptions of "Veno- occlusive disease" in Jamaica and
possibly elsewhere makes it desirable to reassess the causes and
effects of occlusions of the hepatic veins as they are encountered in this country.
en
dc.description.abstract
To understand the causes of hepatic -venous occlusions and
their effects on the liver it is necessary to consider some of
the less known facts and some debatable theories concerning the
normal structure and the function of the hepatic - venous system
in health and these form the subject in the earlier chapters of
the thesis. The afferent portions of the hepatic circulation
have been studied widely in the past few decades in connection
with diseases of the liver, but the efferent portions have been
relatively neglected. Accordingly some of the scattered
information on the structure of the hepatic veins of man has been
reviewed and checked by personal observations. Similar studies
on animals are of almost equal importance because structural
'differences exist between species which render it impossible to
:extrapolate unreservedly to human problems the results of
observations on the hepatic circulation in animals. While
observations on structure cannot be translated directly into
functional terms, function can be understood only in the context
f structure, whether that be gross, microscopical or ultra - ,microscopical. Where direct measurements of flow, pressure
and other elements are few or unreliable, as in the case of the
iv
hepatic veins and their small radicles, useful deductions
regarding the action of the vessels and the flow through them
can still be drawn from a sufficiently comprehensive examination
of their structure.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/32270
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2018 Block 20
en
dc.relation.isreferencedby
en
dc.title
The hepatic veins in health and disease
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
MD Doctor of Medicine
en
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