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Query: EC:2.6.1.2 (
alanine aminotransferase
)
26,722
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 38-year-old otherwise healthy man presented with hepatic failure (aspartate aminotransferase of 7212 U/L,
alanine aminotransferase
of 6629 U/L, total and direct bilirubin of 10.7 mg/dL) and acute renal failure (creatinine of 11.6 mg/dL and blood urea nitrogen of 42 mg/dL), which required hemodialysis when the creatinine increased to 21 mg/dL, with a blood urea nitrogen of 115 mg/dL, and the patient became oliguric. On admission, this patient also had a lipase of 1833 U/L, amylase of 211 U/L, glucose of 210 mg/dL, and reactive IgM antibody for acute hepatitis A. The hepatitis and acute renal failure resolved in 3 months, but this patient continues to have type II diabetes mellitus 7 years after the hepatitis A infection. This case illustrates that hepatitis A infection may be severe with liver failure, acute renal failure, and permanent
diabetes mellitus
as sequale of this infection.
...
PMID:Hepatitis A-induced diabetes mellitus, acute renal failure, and liver failure. 1037 44
Urinalysis was carried out in 231 inpatients with alcohol dependence syndrome (215 males and 16 females). Fifty-nine patients (25.5%) showed proteinuria, 97 (42.0%) showed glucosuria, and 62 patients (26.8%) showed hematuria on admission. A total of 135 out of 231 patients (58.4%) showed abnormal urinalysis. Proteinuria was related to high blood pressure, high serum glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase,
glutamic-pyruvic transaminase
, lactate dehydrogenase, uric acid, and triglyceride levels, and high urinary amylase concentration. Glucosuria was related to high serum glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase concentration and a history of gastrectomy. Hematuria was related to high age and high urinary amylase levels. By chi-square test, there was a significant correlation between proteinuria and hematuria (p < 0.001) and between hematuria and glucosuria (p < 0.001), but no correlation was found between proteinuria and glucosuria. The incidence of
diabetes mellitus
was 10.8% (25 out of 231 patients), but transient hyperglycemia was observed in some patients without
diabetes mellitus
on admission. Elevated hemoglobin A1, hemoglobin A1c, and fructosamine concentrations were observed in patients with either impaired glucose tolerance or transient hyperglycemia, which suggested the presence of persistent hyperglycemia before admission. On discharge, only 12 out of 198 patients (6.1%) showed abnormal urinalysis. We report that heavy ethanol consumption induces transient abnormal urinalysis results in Japanese alcoholics.
...
PMID:Induction of transient proteinuria, hematuria, and glucosuria by ethanol consumption in Japanese alcoholics. 1039 97
The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis of a causal relationship between high insulin levels and the development of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and to determine the clinical, anthropometric, metabolic and insulin profile in men with fast-growing BPH compared with men with slow-growing BPH. The present study was designed as a risk factor analysis of BPH in which the estimated annual BPH growth rate was related to components of the metabolic syndrome. Two hundred and fifty patients referred to the Urological Section, Department of Surgery, Central Hospital, Varberg, Sweden, with lower urinary tract symptoms with or without manifestations of the metabolic syndrome were consecutively included. The prevalences of atherosclerotic disease manifestations, non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM) and treated hypertension were obtained. Data on blood pressure, waist and hip measurement, body height and weight were collected and body mass index (BMI) and waist/hip ratio (WHR) were calculated. Blood samples were drawn from fasting patients to determine insulin, total cholesterol, triglycerides, HDL and LDL cholesterol, uric acid,
alanine aminotransferase
(ALAT) and prostate-specific antigen (PSA). The prostate gland volume was determined using ultrasound. The median annual BPH growth rate was 1.04 ml/year. Men with fast-growing BPH had a higher prevalence of NIDDM (p = 0.023) and treated hypertension (p = 0.049). These patients were also taller (p=0.004) and more obese as measured by body weight (p<0.001), BMI (p=0.026), waist measurement (p <0.001), hip measurement (p = 0.006) and WHR (p=0.029). Moreover, they had elevated fasting plasma insulin levels (p = 0.018) and lower HDL cholesterol levels (p = 0.021) than men with slow-growing BPH. The annual BPH growth rate correlated positively with diastolic blood pressure (rs = 0.14; p = 0.009), BMI (rs = 0.24; p < 0.001) and four other expressions of obesity and fasting plasma insulin level (rs = 0.18; p = 0.008), and negatively with the HDL cholesterol level (rs = -0.22; p = 0.001). In conclusion, the data suggest that NIDDM, hypertension, tallness, obesity, high insulin and low HDL cholesterol levels constitute risk factors for the development of BPH. The results also suggest that BPH is a component of the metabolic syndrome and that BPH patients may share the same metabolic abnormality of a defective insulin-mediated glucose uptake and secondary hyperinsulinaemia, as patients with the metabolic syndrome. The findings support the hypothesis of a causal relationship between high insulin levels and the development of BPH, and give rise to a hypothesis of increased sympathetic nerve activity in men with BPH.
...
PMID:Clinical, anthropometric, metabolic and insulin profile of men with fast annual growth rates of benign prostatic hyperplasia. 1041 80
Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) may present with increased hepatic fibrosis progressing to end-stage liver disease. No factors that determine increasing fibrosis and histologically advanced disease have been recognized, thus, liver biopsy is recommended in all patients for diagnosis and prognosis. Our aim was to identify independent predictors of severe hepatic fibrosis in patients with NASH. One hundred and forty-four patients were studied. All patients underwent liver biopsy. Clinical and biochemical variables were examined with univariate and multivariate analysis. Thirty-seven (26%) patients had no abnormal fibrosis, 53 (37%) had mild fibrosis, 15 (10%) had moderate fibrosis, 14 (10%) had bridging fibrosis, and 25 (17%) had cirrhosis. In multivariate analysis, older age (P =. 001), obesity (P =.002),
diabetes mellitus
(P =.009), and aspartate transaminase/
alanine transaminase
(AST/
ALT
) ratio greater than 1 (P =.03) were significant predictors of severe liver fibrosis (bridging/cirrhosis). Body mass index (P =.003) was the only independent predictor of the degree of fat infiltration. Increased transferrin saturation correlated positively with the severity of fibrosis (P =.02) in univariate analysis, and there was a trend for more female patients among those with more advanced fibrosis (P =. 09). However, iron studies or gender were not significant when controlled for age, obesity,
diabetes
, and AST/
ALT
ratio. In conclusion, older age, obesity, and presence of
diabetes mellitus
help identify those NASH patients who might have severe liver fibrosis. This is the subgroup of patients with NASH who would be expected to derive the most benefit from having a liver biopsy and considering investigational therapies.
...
PMID:Independent predictors of liver fibrosis in patients with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis. 1057 11
The health care burden caused by hepatitis C is projected to increase significantly in the next 20 years, on the basis of modeling estimates of cirrhosis, hepatic decompensation, and HCC likely to be seen in this population in the future. The number of cases of HCV-induced liver decompensation and mortality in the United States is projected to be approximately 4 times higher by the year 2018 than is currently seen, because of the aging of those presently infected. HCV also poses a significant quality-of-life decrement in the majority of individuals with chronic infection. Quality-of-life assessment in these patients has shown substantial reductions in both somatic and physical functioning compared with the general population, regardless of disease severity. The impact of chronic HCV on quality-of-life issues has been equated to that of non-insulin-dependent
diabetes
. Thus, HCV imparts a considerable toll on individual level of functioning and on overall health care resources. Hepatitis C evolves into a chronic infection in approximately 85% of individuals exposed to the virus, and progression to cirrhosis occurs in 20% to 30% of patients, with a disease duration up to 20 years. Hepatic decompensation will occur in approximately 20% and HCC in about 10% of those with HCV-related cirrhosis within 5 years of the determination of cirrhosis. End-stage liver disease caused by HCV is now the most common indication for liver transplantation in this country. Patients in whom liver decompensation develops should be considered for liver transplant evaluation, with referral to appropriate centers if these complications arise. Individuals with decompensated disease should not be treated with any of the current regimens available for HCV eradication, because these agents can accelerate hepatic dysfunction and will not mitigate the clinical outcome after the onset of decompensation. Available treatment options for HCV are rapidly changing, with INF as the standard and combination therapy with INF plus ribavirin rising to prominence as the optimal option. The need for abstinence from alcohol cannot be underestimated, given its documented synergistic effects on hepatotoxicity when combined with chronic HCV. Patients must be counseled in this regard and provided with the rationale for this recommendation. The benefits of therapy from a medical resource standpoint have recently been defined through analyses of cost-effectiveness. Bennett et al. used a mathematical model to estimate the cost-effectiveness of INF in the treatment of mild chronic HCV (no bridging fibrosis or cirrhosis). Therapy was found to be cost-saving for patients aged 20 to 35 years and was found to increase life expectancy by 3 and 1.5 years, respectively, at the spectrums of this age range. Kim et al. found the cost-effectiveness of a 12-month course of INF to compare favorably to other accepted medical interventions in the United States in patients younger than 60 years. Similar data for combination therapy has not yet been reported but would be expected to be comparable. Interferon monotherapy for 12 months is the current standard treatment recommendation for individuals with chronic HCV and elevated
ALT
levels. The explosive expansion of information now available to, and frequently quoted by, HCV patients seeking treatment will increasingly make this option less acceptable to a great many of this group. Combination therapy has emerged as the most efficacious option to date, both as initial treatment and for patients who relapse after standard INF. Unless data appear to the contrary, combination therapy should be considered first-line treatment in these groups. A suggested treatment algorithm for chronic HCV is outlined in Figure 2. Patients intolerant to ribavirin should be considered for continuation of INF to complete a 12-month course, dependent upon the assessment of HCV PCR status at week 12 of therapy. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
...
PMID:Advances in the treatment of hepatitis C. 1063 46
Decreased elasticity of the cardiovascular system is one of the hallmarks of the normal aging process of mammals. A potential explanation for this decreased elasticity is that glucose can react nonenzymatically with long-lived proteins, such as collagen and lens crystallin, and link them together, producing advanced glycation endproducts (AGEs). Previous studies have shown that aminoguanidine, an AGE inhibitor, can prevent glucose cross-linking of proteins and the loss of elasticity associated with aging and
diabetes
. Recently, an AGE cross-link breaker (
ALT
-711) has been described, which we have evaluated in aged dogs. After 1 month of administration of
ALT
-711, a significant reduction ( approximately 40%) in age-related left ventricular stiffness was observed [(57.1 +/- 6.8 mmHg x m(2)/ml pretreatment and 33.1 +/- 4.6 mmHg x m(2)/ml posttreatment (1 mmHg = 133 Pa)]. This decrease was accompanied by improvement in cardiac function.
...
PMID:An advanced glycation endproduct cross-link breaker can reverse age-related increases in myocardial stiffness. 1070 7
Liver cirrhosis may occur in chronic hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) carriers.
Diabetes mellitus
(DM)-associated chronic hepatitis may also occasionally lead to cirrhosis; however, its role in the course of chronic HBsAg carriers has not been studied. A cohort of 500 HBsAg carriers (398 men; mean age at entry, 42 +/- 15 years) were followed up longitudinally. After a mean follow-up of 5.8 +/- 3.3 years, 71 (14.2%: 70 men) patients developed cirrhosis. Increased risks of cirrhosis were found among men and the elderly (p < 0.001). Fifteen (21.1%) cirrhotic patients were noted to have had DM for 2-15 years before the development of cirrhosis. By contrast, only eight (1.9%; p < 0.001 ) of the patients without cirrhosis developed DM. When cirrhotic patients were compared to 102 age- and sex-matched non-cirrhotic controls, DM and elevation of serum
alanine transaminase
levels were found to be independent factors associated with the advent of cirrhosis in multivariate analysis. Other factors, including acute exacerbation, bridging hepatic necrosis, and superinfection by hepatitis C or D viruses, were insignificant. Our results suggest that DM may play a role in the progression to liver cirrhosis in chronic HBsAg carriers. High-risk subjects should be closely monitored for late complications.
...
PMID:Diabetes mellitus as a risk factor of liver cirrhosis in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus infection. 1077 76
Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is a histological diagnosis applied to a constellation of liver biopsy findings that develop in the absence of alcohol abuse. Steatosis, a mixed cellular inflammatory infiltrate across the lobule, evidence of hepatocyte injury and fibrosis are the findings that can be seen. This entity is often identified during evaluation of elevated aminotransferases after exclusion of viral, metabolic and other causes of liver disease. Obesity is a major risk factor for NASH. The role of
diabetes
is less certain, although evidence is accumulating that hyperinsulinism may play an important pathophysiological role. Patients sometimes suffer from right upper quadrant abdominal pain and fatigue; examination may reveal centripetal obesity and hepatomegaly. Although patients are often discovered because of persistent aminotransferase elevations, these enzymes can be normal in NASH. When they are elevated, the
alanine aminotransferase
level is typically significantly greater than the aspartate aminotransferase level. This can be particularly helpful for excluding occult alcohol abuse. Imaging studies identify hepatic steatosis when the amount of fat in the liver is significant; however, imaging does not distinguish benign steatosis from NASH. Ultimately a liver biopsy is needed to diagnose NASH. The biopsy may be useful for establishing prognosis based on the presence or absence of fibrosis and for excluding other unexpected causes of liver enzyme elevations. Weight loss is the mainstay of treatment for obese patients. About 15% to 40% of NASH patients develop fibrosis; how many of these cases progress to cirrhosis is unknown, but about 1% of liver transplants are performed with a pretransplant diagnosis of NASH.
...
PMID:Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis: an evolving diagnosis. 1079 85
The aim of our study was to verify if the diabetic population can be considered at risk for HBV (B hepatitis virus) and/or HCV (C hepatitis virus) correlated viral hepatitis. We examined 1514 diabetic patients, 668 males and 846 females. In patients who had, on at least two occasions, pathological transaminase values (AST and/or
ALT
), the markers for HBV and HCV infection were determined. Of the 1514 patients studied, 295 (19.48%) had pathological values of
ALT
and /or AST. Among the hypertransaminase patients (295), 69 were not tested for the markers because they refused to give informed consent; of the remaining 226 patients, 54 were negative and 172 (76.6%) were positive for at least one of the hepatitis markers (HBV, HCV or both). Those who were anti-HCV positive were 115 (38.98%), of which 50 were also positive to hepatitis B (16.9%), while those positive only to the B markers were 57 (19.3%). If we compare the patients with positive markers (172) to the total number of diabetic patients studied (1514), we find that there is a hepatitis B and/or C prevalence of 11.36%, with no statistically significant difference between females (95/846, 11.23%) and males (77/668, 11.53%). The prevalence of only hepatitis C was 7.6%, while only hepatitis B was 7.1%. In conclusion, our study shows an increasing prevalence of hepatitis C and B, often associated, in type 2 diabetic patients that allows us to define them as a group at risk for viral hepatitis.
Diabetes
Res Clin Pract 2000 May
PMID:Increased frequency of HCV and HBV infection in type 2 diabetic patients. 1080 52
In clinical trials, all lipid-lowering agents have been associated with mild, asymptomatic elevations of
alanine aminotransferase
(
ALT
) and asparate aminotransferase enzymes. This, along with the fact that 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase inhibitors are hepatotoxic in some animals, led the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to recommend monitoring of liver enzymes for all lipid-lowering agents, except the bile acid sequestrants. Because the drugs act by different mechanisms,
ALT
elevations may be a pharmacodynamic effect related to lipid lowering, rather than a direct effect of the drug. Animal studies support this assumption.
ALT
elevations of 3 times the upper limit of normal occur in <3% of patients in clinical trials of lipid-lowering drugs. The elevations are transient and often dose-related, and they usually revert to normal while continuing therapy and have never been associated with hepatotoxicity. Confounding factors include alcohol, acetaminophen, and pre-existing liver disease, such as chronic hepatitis C and type II
diabetes
with fatty liver, which are both associated with mild, intermittent elevations of
ALT
. The more important issue is whether or not lipid-lowering agents are hepatotoxic. There are case reports of hepatotoxicity (cholestasis, jaundice, hepatitis, chronic active hepatitis, fatty liver, cirrhosis and acute liver failure) with all of the drugs, except cholestyramine. To date there are just 5 cases of documented liver failure linked to lovastatin. There is no evidence that monitoring reduces the rate of hepatotoxicity. Mild elevations of
ALT
that occur with many drugs, including HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors, do not predict hepatotoxicity. Liver enzyme elevations appear to be a class characteristic of lipid-lowering agents. Hepatotoxicity is a rare idiosyncratic reaction, occurring only with sustained released nicotinic acid.
...
PMID:Defining patient risks from expanded preventive therapies. 1085 89
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