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  2. Hepatic encephalopathy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hepatic_encephalopathy

    The diagnosis of hepatic encephalopathy is a clinical one, once other causes for confusion or coma have been excluded; no test fully diagnoses or excludes it. Serum ammonia levels are elevated in 90% of people, but not all hyperammonaemia (high ammonia levels in the blood) is associated with encephalopathy.

  3. Hyperammonemia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperammonemia

    When ammonia levels rise greater than 200 μmol/L, serious symptoms, including seizures, encephalopathy, coma, and even death, can occur. [3] Hyperammonemia with blood ammonia levels greater than 400 to 500 μmol/L is associated with 5- to 10-fold higher risk of irreversible brain damage.

  4. Alzheimer type II astrocyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alzheimer_type_II_astrocyte

    The presence of Alzheimer type II astrocytes is a key indicator of hepatic encephalopathy, and may be induced by increased bodily ammonia. [10] In hepatic encephalopathy, Alzheimer type II astrocytes are characterized by thin chromatin and increased glycogen levels. [5]

  5. Hepatorenal syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hepatorenal_syndrome

    [8] [38] [39] Complications of TIPS for treatment of HRS include the worsening of hepatic encephalopathy (as the procedure involves the forced creation of a porto-systemic shunt, effectively bypassing the ability of the liver to clear toxins), inability to achieve adequate reduction in portal pressure, and bleeding. [8] [38]

  6. Fetor hepaticus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fetor_hepaticus

    Fetor hepaticus or foetor hepaticus (Latin, "liver stench" ("fetid liver") [1] (see spelling differences), also known as breath of the dead or hepatic foetor, is a condition seen in portal hypertension where portosystemic shunting allows thiols to pass directly into the lungs.

  7. Liver failure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liver_failure

    One scheme defines "acute hepatic failure" as the development of encephalopathy within 26 weeks of the onset of any hepatic symptoms. This is sub-divided into "fulminant hepatic failure", which requires onset of encephalopathy within 8 weeks, and "subfulminant", which describes onset of encephalopathy after 8 weeks but before 26 weeks. [6]

  8. How Elon Musk Lost $10 Billion Dollars Today

    www.aol.com/finance/elon-musk-lost-10-billion...

    The drop in TSLA stock caused CEO Elon Musk to lose $10.1 billion, one of his single-largest declines in net worth. Only an $18 billion loss at the end of January when Tesla missed earnings caused ...

  9. Encephalopathy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Encephalopathy

    Hepatic encephalopathy: Arising from advanced cirrhosis of the liver. Hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy: Permanent or transitory encephalopathy arising from severely reduced oxygen delivery to the brain. Static encephalopathy: Unchanging, or permanent, brain damage, usually caused by prenatal exposure to ethanol.