Keeping cool in acute liver failure: Rationale for the use of mild hypothermia
Open Access
- 31 December 2005
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Elsevier BV in Journal of Hepatology
- Vol. 43 (6), 1067-1077
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhep.2005.05.039
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 154 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mild hypothermia prevents brain edema and attenuates up-regulation of the astrocytic benzodiazepine receptor in experimental acute liver failureJournal of Hepatology, 2005
- Pathogenesis of intracranial hypertension in acute liver failure: inflammation, ammonia and cerebral blood flowJournal of Hepatology, 2004
- Prophylactic phenytoin does not improve cerebral edema or survival in acute liver failure—a controlled clinical trialJournal of Hepatology, 2004
- Ammonia-induced heme oxygenase-1 expression in cultured rat astrocytes and rat brain in vivoGlia, 2002
- Indomethacin prevents the development of experimental ammonia-induced brain edema in rats after portacaval anastomosisHepatology, 2001
- Restoration of cerebral blood flow autoregulation and reactivity to carbon dioxide in acute liver failure by moderate hypothermiaHepatology, 2001
- Memantine, a noncompetitive NMDA receptor antagonist improves hyperammonemia-induced encephalopathy and acute hepatic encephalopathy in ratsHepatology, 1997
- Selective Alterations of Extracellular Brain Amino Acids in Relation to Function in Experimental Portal‐Systemic Encephalopathy: Results of an In Vivo Microdialysis StudyJournal of Neurochemistry, 1995
- Cerebral hemodynamic and metabolic changes in fulminant hepatic failure: A retrospective studyHepatology, 1994
- Amino Acid Release from Cerebral Cortex in Experimental Acute Liver Failure, Studied by In Vivo Cerebral Cortex MicrodialysisJournal of Neurochemistry, 1992