Abstract
Diseases with disappearing intrahepatic bile ducts may be developmental, immunological, infective, vascular, or chemical in origin. The immunological group includes primary biliary cirrhosis, graft-versus-host disease, and sarcoidosis. HLA class 2 antigens are displayed on the bileducts and recognition of biliary antigens by cytotoxic T-cells leads to destruction of interlobular ducts. Primary sclerosing cholangitis is associated with immunological features, but the hepatic histology is not that of immunological duct disease. The association with immunodeficiency syndromes, and the finding that secondary sclerosing cholangitis may occur in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome who are infected with cytomegalovirus, suggest that primary sclerosing cholangitis might be infective in origin. In bacterial cholangitis there is contiguity between the biliary system and the intestinal tract and usually, but not necessarily, partial biliary obstruction. Interference with the hepatic arterial supply to the bileducts leads to vascular cholangitis. Chemical cholangitis follows injection of scolicidal agents into the biliary tree. Diseases with disappearing bileducts have a long natural history and hepatocellular failure occurs late. In the late stages hepatic transplantation gives good results.
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