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Arsenicosis,possibly from contaminated groundwater,associated with noncirrhotic intrahepatic portal hypertension
Authors:Ashish Goel  Pamela Christudoss  Renu George  Banumathi Ramakrishna  G. Jayakumar Amirtharaj  Shyamkumar N. Keshava  Anup Ramachandran  K. A. Balasubramanian  Ian Mackie  Jude J. Fleming  Elwyn Elias  Chundamannil E. Eapen
Affiliation:1.Department of Hepatology,Christian Medical College,Vellore,India;2.Department of Clinical Biochemistry,Christian Medical College,Vellore,India;3.Department of Dermatology,Christian Medical College,Vellore,India;4.Department of Pathology,Christian Medical College,Vellore,India;5.Wellcome Trust Research Laboratory,Christian Medical College,Vellore,India;6.Department of Radiology,Christian Medical College,Vellore,India;7.Haemostasis Research Unit, Haematology Department,University College London,London,UK;8.University Hospital Birmingham,Birmingham,UK
Abstract:

Background and Aims

Idiopathic noncirrhotic intrahepatic portal hypertension (NCIPH), a chronic microangiopathy of the liver caused by arsenicosis from use of contaminated groundwater, was reported from Asia. This study aimed to see, if in the twenty-first century, arsenicosis was present in NCIPH patients at our hospital and, if present, to look for groundwater contamination by arsenic in their residential locality.

Methods

Twenty-seven liver biopsy proven NCIPH patients, 25 portal hypertensive controls with hepatitis B or C related cirrhosis and 25 healthy controls, matched for residential locality, were studied. Eighty-four percent to 96 % of study subjects belonged to middle or lower socioeconomic category. Arsenicosis was looked for by estimation of arsenic levels in finger/toe nails and by skin examination. Arsenic levels in nails and in ground water (in NCIPH patients with arsenicosis) was estimated by mass spectrometry.

Results

Nail arsenic levels were raised in five (10 %) portal hypertensive study subjects [two NCIPH patients (both had skin arsenicosis) and three portal hypertensive controls]. All of these five patients were residents of West Bengal or Bangladesh. Skin arsenicosis was noted in three NCIPH patients (11 %) compared to none of disease/healthy controls. Ground water from residential locality of one NCIPH patient with arsenicosis (from Bangladesh) showed extremely high level of arsenic (79.5 μg/L).

Conclusions

Arsenicosis and microangiopathy of liver, possibly caused by environmental contamination continues in parts of Asia. Further studies are needed to understand the mechanisms of such ‘poverty-linked thrombophilia’.
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