Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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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)
The presence of antibody to the hepatitis C virus was determined in 254 alcoholic patients with non-B chronic hepatitis and a titre of antinuclear antibodies of 1/40 or lower.
Alcoholic hepatitis
was present in 12 patients, steatohepatitis in 20, active chronic hepatitis in 22, cirrhosis in 181, and hepatocarcinoma in 19. Twenty patients had previously received blood transfusion alone or during surgery, 49 had undergone previous surgery without transfusion, a clinical episode of hepatitis could be traced in 14, 4 patients were drug addicts, 41 had received blood transfusion after the diagnosis was made, and 128 presented with alcoholism alone. Anti-hepatitis C antibody was found in 20 out of 2,000 blood donors (1%) in our hospital. Anti-hepatitis C antibody was found in 87 patients (34.2%) in our series, a figure unaltered by past medical history. Patients with anti-HC antibody had higher levels of AST,
ALT
, total proteins, gamma-globulin, and IgG. The incidence of active chronic hepatitis was higher among patients with anti-HC antibody, whereas the incidence of steatohepatitis was higher among patients without anti-HC. Regarding findings on liver biopsy, the incidence of anti-HC was significantly higher (p less than 0.001) among patients with active chronic hepatitis (72.7%) than in any other group; no significant differences were found between patients with cirrhosis (33.3%), hepatocarcinoma (31.5%), steatohepatitis (15%), or
alcoholic hepatitis
(16.7%). Among HBsAg-negative patients, the incidence of anti-HC was similar between those with (39.7%) and without other serum markers of HB (32.9%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Prevalence and significance of the C virus antibody in chronic hepatopathy not related to B virus in alcoholics]. 131 33
The extracellular matrix (ECM) is a complex of macromolecules that includes collagens, proteoglycans, and complex glycoproteins. In fibrotic liver tissue there is an increase in all of these matrix components, and they increase in serum in the patients with
alcoholic hepatitis
or liver cirrhosis. These ECM components have been used as a serum marker of hepatic fibrosis. Prolonged obstruction of bile flow results in morphologic and biochemical changes and the development of secondary biliary cirrhosis. In congenital biliary atresia (CBA) there is a close correlation between the degree of the hepatic fibrosis and bile flow after the operation. We estimated that, in CBA, ECM increased in serum, and it would reflect the degree of the hepatic fibrosis. To clarify this we examined the serum procollagen-III-peptide (P-III-P) and laminin in CBA patients. P-III-P was elevated in all preoperative patients but in two of the three postoperative patients whose jaundice disappeared P-III-P was in the normal range. In the all 3 patients whose jaundice continued, P-III-P was in normal range. Serum laminin was elevated in 12 preoperative patients with CBA, but there is no correlation between day of diagnosis and level of laminin. Mean concentration in CBA without jaundice after operation was 3.18 U/mL, 3.226 U/mL in CBA with jaundice and 3.3 U/mL in infantile hepatitis. There were no significant differences among three groups. With the elevation of serum
alanine aminotransferase
, aspartate aminotransferase, and total bilirubin, serum laminin level was also increased.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Laminin and procollagen-III-peptide as a serum marker for hepatic fibrosis in congenital biliary atresia. 150 Oct 26
The relationship between alcoholic liver disease and hepatitis C virus was studied in 80 patients by searching for hepatitis C virus RNA with the polymerase chain reaction and by measuring hepatitis C virus antibodies. By C-100 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, hepatitis C virus antibodies were found in 2 of 10 patients with fibrosteatosis, 8 of 20 patients with
alcoholic hepatitis
, 14 of 19 patients with chronic hepatitis and 19 of 31 patients with cirrhosis. Percentages of patients with antibodies found by C-100 radioimmunoassay and by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay based on sequence peptide 42 were lower; of the 16 patients with a low titer by C-100 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, 10 were negative by radioimmunoassay and 6 were negative by sequence peptide 42. By a second-generation recombinant immunoblot assay, hepatitis C virus antibodies were found in 1 of 10 patients with fibrosteatosis, 2 of 20 patients with
alcoholic hepatitis
, 15 of 19 patients with chronic hepatitis and 18 of 31 patients with cirrhosis. Hepatitis C virus RNA was found in 1 of 10 patients with fibrosteatosis, 3 of 20 patients with
alcoholic hepatitis
, 13 of 19 patients with chronic hepatitis and 20 of 31 patients with cirrhosis. Of the 37 patients with hepatitis C virus RNA, 31 had antibodies by C-100 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (25 patients at a high titer [cut-off index greater than 6]), and 31 had antibodies by second-generation recombinant immunoblot assay. Patients with cirrhosis and hepatitis C virus RNA had higher
ALT
activity than such patients without hepatitis C virus RNA (p less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Detection of hepatitis C virus antibodies and hepatitis C virus RNA in patients with alcoholic liver disease. 166 25
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) has been proposed to be a cofactor in the pathogenesis of cirrhosis in patients with chronic alcoholism. The demonstration of a different liver histological pattern in anti-HCV positive patients might provide additional evidence. We studied 164 patients with chronic alcoholism, and histologically proven cirrhosis. For all of them, serum samples were collected at the time of a liver biopsy and stored at -80 degrees C. Testing for anti-HCV antibodies was done using the Ortho Diagnostic Systems Anti-HCV ELISA test. Only reproducible results were considered positive. A semi-quantitative assessment of seven histological parameters was made independently on liver biopsy samples. In the study group, 29 patients (18%) had anti-HCV antibodies. When compared with anti-HCV negative patients, both groups had similar
ALT
and AST seric activities. Anti-HCV positive patients had a greater score of mononuclear cells infiltrate (0.71 +/- 0.57 vs 0.41 +/- 0.52; p less than 0.05) and a lesser score of
alcoholic hepatitis
(0.19 +/- 0.57 vs 0.74 +/- 0.74; p less than 0.005). The scores for steatosis, perisinusoidal and perinodular fibrosis, and hepatocellular necrosis were similar in the two groups. In anti-HCV positive patients, with a clearly positive recombinant immunobinding assay (RIBA, Chiron-Ortho Diagnostic Systems), a greater score for hepatic necrosis and a lesser one for fibrosis were demonstrated. Among the seven patients with active cirrhosis, six were anti-HCV positive. Therefore, HCV is likely to play a role in the pathogenesis of liver damage in a few patients with alcoholic cirrhosis, especially, those with active cirrhosis.
...
PMID:Pathogenesis of liver cirrhosis in alcoholic patients: histological evidence for hepatitis C virus responsibility. 166 14
Two hundred eighty-one alcoholic patients were prospectively evaluated by clinical, biochemical, and histologic parameters during a 4-yr period to assess their prognosis. They were stratified into four categories of injury: 1) fatty liver (26 patients), 2) acute alcoholic hepatitis (106), 3) cirrhosis (39), and 4) cirrhosis with superimposed
alcoholic hepatitis
(111). The rate of survival and variables correlating with survival varied according to the group. At 48 months, 70% of the patients with fatty liver were alive, 58% in the
alcoholic hepatitis
group, 49% in cirrhosis, and 35% in
alcoholic hepatitis
superimposed upon cirrhosis. Within group one, deaths were due to causes unrelated to liver disease. In the
alcoholic hepatitis
group, factors significantly correlating with survival were ascites, alanine amino-transferase levels, grams of alcohol consumed, continuation of alcohol intake, and clinical severity of disease. Survival in patients of group three correlated significantly with prothrombin time and histologic severity score. Patients with combined cirrhosis and
alcoholic hepatitis
exhibited the worst prognosis, with the most significant predictors of survival being age, grams of alcohol consumed, the ratio of serum aminotransferases (AST:
ALT
) and the histologic and clinical severity of the disease. Although a different pattern of correlates was observed for each pathologic level of injury, knowledge of the various correlates aids in prognostic assessment.
...
PMID:Prognostic factors in alcoholic liver disease. VA Cooperative Study Group. 199 35
Colchicine treatment was used in this randomized placebo-controlled trial in patients with severe acute alcoholic hepatitis [serum bilirubin greater than or equal to 5 mg/dL (85.5 mumol/L) mean, 17.5 +/- 7.5 mg/dL (299.25 +/- 128.25 mumol/L)]. Hospitalization mortality and morbidity and the effect on biochemical test results were the end points of the treatment. Patients in the two groups were evenly matched by demographics and laboratory test results. Mean time to study entry was less than 7 days from admission. The duration of the trial was 30 days. Thirty-six patients (24 men, 12 women) received colchicine (1 mg orally every morning) and 36 (25 men, 11 women) received an identical placebo. Seven (19%) colchicine-treated and six (17%) control patients died during the index hospitalization after a mean of 17.4 +/- 10.8 and 17.8 +/- 5.3 days, respectively (NS). During a 4-month follow-up period from entry into the trial, there were two additional deaths in each group. No differences between placebo- and colchicine-treated patients were observed in any of the laboratory parameters (serum bilirubin, aspartate transaminase,
alanine transaminase
, prothrombin activity, albumin, white blood cell count, hemoglobin, and creatinine) that were followed up over the 30-day treatment period. The frequency of complications did not differ statistically between the two groups. This study showed no effect of colchicine treatment on mortality and morbidity of severe
alcoholic hepatitis
. Colchicine cannot be recommended for the treatment of patients with
alcoholic hepatitis
.
...
PMID:Failure of colchicine to improve short-term survival in patients with alcoholic hepatitis. 219 90
Significance of the antibody to alcohol altered hepatocyte plasma membrane (AAHM) was studied in various types of alcoholic liver diseases (ALD). AAHM was detected in the sera that were collected within 3 months of alcohol abstinence from patients with various types of ALD, with higher frequency in
alcoholic hepatitis
and cirrhosis. Serum acetaldehyde, gamma-globulin fraction, immunoglobulin A and G were higher in patients positive for AAHM, though the levels of GOT,
GPT
, mGOT were indifferent of the existence of AAHM. Histologically, hepatocyte ballooning and pericellular fibrosis were frequently seen in patients positive for AAHM, but close relationship between the extent of necrosis and existence of AAHM was not observed. These findings suggest that the occurrence of AAHM is closely related with the functional and morphological changes of the hepatocyte induced by acetaldehyde but not with hepatocyte necrosis.
...
PMID:[Study of the antibody to alcohol altered hepatocyte plasma membrane in alcoholic patients]. 222 84
We studied the relationship between the ratio of serum aspartate aminotransferase (ASAT) to
alanine aminotransferase
(ALAT) and histologic changes in human and experimental alcoholic liver disease. The patient population included 52 hospitalized patients enrolled in a Veterans Administration Cooperative study. The experimental animal group consisted of male Wistar rats fed an ethanol-liquid diet. Of the 52 patients with
alcoholic hepatitis
, 33 had evidence of cirrhosis. The mean +/- SD for the ASAT/ALAT ratio in the group with
alcoholic hepatitis
and no cirrhosis was 1.47 +/- 0.84, the mean +/- SD in the group with hepatitis and cirrhosis was significantly higher (2.68 +/- 1.32, p less than 0.01). There was no difference in the ratio between the rats with and without liver fibrosis. The cause for the increased ASAT/ALAT ratio in serum in the presence of cirrhosis is unknown and may reflect more severe liver damage.
...
PMID:Serum aspartate aminotransferase to alanine aminotransferase ratio in human and experimental alcoholic liver disease: relationship to histologic changes. 270 13
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the clinical diagnostic value of serum total bile acid (STBA) in hepatobiliary diseases. Fasting STBA was measured using the enzymatic colorimetric method in 44 normal control cases and 153 cases of hepatobiliary disease, and then abnormal rates were compared to other conventional liver function tests. These 153 cases of hepatobiliary diseases included acute viral hepatitis (10 cases), chronic persistent hepatitis (32 cases), chronic active hepatitis (16 cases), liver cirrhosis (15 cases),
alcoholic hepatitis
(11 cases), alcoholic fatty liver (23 cases), alcoholic cirrhosis (17 cases), chronic liver diseases with slight fatty changes (10 cases) and hepatocellular carcinoma (6 cases). Except for 8 cases of acute viral hepatitis, the above cases were verified by liver biopsy. There were also 13 cases of biliary tract diseases. Fasting STBA and other conventional liver function tests were used in the above hepatobiliary diseases during the acute, exacerbated or decompensated stage, and the stable or compensated stage, and their abnormal rates compared. The results of this study revealed that the concentration of STBA is raised in various hepatobiliary diseases, which is related to the degree of hepatic cell injury and the various stages of liver. The concentration of STBA was higher in the acute, exacerbated or decompensated stage than in the convalescent, stable or compensated stage of liver diseases. When the abnormal rates of STBA were compared to other conventional liver function tests, the abnormal rates of STBA were not inferior to r-GT, GOT and
GPT
, and were more accurate than the other liver function tests.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Diagnostic value of serum total bile acid in hepatobiliary diseases]. 275 25
A prospective study was undertaken in order to investigate the association between clinical and biochemical parameters and the histopathological findings in liver biopsies in the morbidly obese. Wedge liver biopsy specimens were taken at the beginning of the surgical procedure from 100 consecutive morbidly obese patients undergoing Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. Histological abnormalities were found in almost all of the examined material (98 of 100), which ranged from mild fatty infiltration through inflammatory change and
alcoholic hepatitis
-like change to fibrosis and cirrhosis. The patients with abnormalities were divided into two groups: those with a single abnormality (n = 56) and those with two or more histopathological findings (n = 42). Age, excess body weight, total cholesterol and triglyceride levels were significantly higher in the group with more than one histopathological finding. In a discriminant function analysis, it was found that the preoperatively available measures of age, sex and excess body weight, as well as
ALT
and triglyceride levels, could discriminate between the two patient groups. A model which uses these variables has been described which correctly assigns the patients to their histology groups in 73% of the cases. This model could provide a useful noninvasive clinical tool for the preoperative evaluation of possible hepatic damage in morbidly obese patients in whom there is no other known cause of possible liver disease.
...
PMID:Liver histology abnormalities in the morbidly obese. 280 69
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