Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.6.1.2 (alanine aminotransferase)
26,722 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Alcoholic liver disease encompasses the progressive stages of liver dysfunction that culminates in alcoholic cirrhosis (AC) and in severe cases alcoholic hepatitis (AH). Currently, prognostic scores have limited specificity and sensitivity. Plasma keratin-18 (K18) levels are elevated during liver disease and may be biomarkers of outcome. The objective of this study was to determine if total K18 (M65) or caspase-cleaved K18 (M30) levels were different between AC and AH patients. M65 and M30 levels were measured in the plasma of consented healthy controls and patients with AC and AH. Cell death was assessed by TUNEL staining and caspase activity. M65 and M30 values were significantly higher in AC patients compared to healthy controls and further increased in AH patients. The M65 values and the M30/M65 ratios of nonsurviving AH patients were significantly elevated above their surviving counterparts and healthy controls. Statistical analysis indicated that M30/M65 ratios outperformed current indices for accurately distinguishing the prognosis of AH patients. These scores occurred with minimal increase in plasma cell death markers such as ALT and AST. Serum caspase activity, TUNEL staining, and M30 immunohistochemistry in biopsies indicated that serum and tissue values may not correlate well with overall cell death. In conclusion, both M65 and M30 differentiate AH from AC patients, and M65 values and the M30/M65 ratio are capable of predicting early stage mortality; however, they may not accurately reflect pure hepatocyte cell death in these populations, as they do not strongly correlate with traditional cell death markers.
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PMID:Cell Death and Prognosis of Mortality in Alcoholic Hepatitis Patients Using Plasma Keratin-18. 2877 Jul 1

Here in we report a case of acute liver failure with hepatic infarction after transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS). An upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage patient with a medical history of alcoholic cirrhosis underwent a TIPS procedure. One day after TIPS, his alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase levels increased to 1214 U/L and 1511 U/L, respectively. Two days after TIPS, they peaked at alanine aminotransferase 8389 U/L and aspartate aminotransferase >7500 U/L, respectively. An emergent stent occlusion was performed on the second day. Portography showed that there were no portal vein branches or parenchymal stains on the edge of the right liver lobe. A CT scan demonstrated diffuse hepatic parenchyma, homogeneous hypodense lesion, and bilateral pleural effusion. The patient died of liver failure and multiple organ dysfunction syndrome 6 hours after the stent occlusion.
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PMID:Acute liver failure and infarction complicating TIPS placement. 3119 26

Our aim was to explore the relationship between liver cirrhosis (LC), portal hypertension (PH), and diabetes mellitus (DM). LC displayed hemodynamic alterations reflected by signs and symptoms of hypertension and hyperdynamic circulation. Portal hypertension also caused splenomegaly because of the blood flow into the spleen from the portal vessels and portal flow. The alcoholic cirrhosis displayed abnormal values (AST, ALT, AST/ALT, albumin, ammonia, bilirubin, blood platelet, erythrocytes, glucose, Hb, international normalized ratio (INR), PT, prothrombin index (PI), thymol test, white blood cell (WBC) count), which demonstrated the presence of portal hypertension, ascites, DM, infection, and coagulopathy. The evaluation of liver enzymes and other laboratories data helped to determine the severity of the condition and prognosis. Diabetes appeared to be less affecting the prognosis of patients with cirrhosis than LC itself, showing that hepatocellular failure was largely responsible for patients' mortality rather than diabetes and its complications. Patients displayed a BMI correlating obesity, although affected by concomitant diseases that commonly cause a severe weight loss. The elevated BMI in this case was accentuated by the presence of ascitic fluid, which is responsible for the increase in weight and the inaccurate BMI evaluation. Ascites affect patients' recovery from liver diseases. Obese patients with cirrhosis can be related to have a large amount of ascites and that physicians should be expecting to notice changes in their BMI pre- and postoperatively, subsequently making a prior classification as obese inappropriate. Disease severity could be assessed through the evaluation of PH stage, which was characterized by a significant depletion of WBC and as well as platelet counts.
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PMID:Relationship Between Portal HTN and Cirrhosis as a Cause for Diabetes. 3138 Feb 41

We report our first case of deceased-donor liver transplantation (LT) using a reuse liver graft after the first LT. The recipient was a 38-year-old female with fulminant hepatic failure from toxic hepatitis. She had a history of herb intake and her liver function deteriorated progressively. She was enrolled as the Korean Network for Organ Sharing (KONOS) status 1 and the model for end-stage liver disease score was 34. The donor was a 42-year-old male patient who fell into brain death after LT for alcoholic liver cirrhosis. Donation of multiple organs including the transplanted liver graft was performed 10 days after the first LT operation. Since the liver graft appeared to be normal and frozen-section liver biopsy showed only mild fatty changes, we decided to reuse the liver graft. A modified piggy-back technique of the suprahepatic inferior vena cava reconstruction was used. Other surgical procedures were comparable to the standard deceased-donor LT procedures. The explant liver pathology revealed submassive hepatic necrosis, which was compatible with toxic hepatitis. The peak of serum liver enzyme levels were aspartate transaminase 1,063 IU/L and alanine transaminase 512 IU/L at posttransplant day 3. Since the pretransplant general condition of the recipient was very poor, hospital stay was prolonged and she was discharged 51 days after LT operation. She is currently doing well for 3 years to date. Experience in our case and the literature review suggest that a reuse liver graft can be regarded as one of the marginal grafts which can be transplantable to the LT candidates requiring urgent LT.
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PMID:Reuse of liver allograft from a brain-dead recipient: A case report. 3245 66

A diagnosis of alcohol-related liver disease (ALD) requires information on the history of excessive alcohol consumption (average intake of 40 g or more in men and 20 g or more in women a day). Furthermore, blood tests, such as GGT, AST, ALT, and mean corpuscular volume, and imaging studies, including abdominal ultrasound or transient elastography, are also useful. A liver biopsy can be useful for confirming the diagnosis and has prognostic value. ALD includes alcoholic fatty liver, alcoholic hepatitis, and alcoholic cirrhosis, and in most cases, clinical manifestations can overlap. The prognostic scoring systems of ALD are limited mainly to alcoholic hepatitis, and the early mortality and treatment response can be predicted using various scoring systems. This review summarizes how to diagnose and evaluate the severity of ALD in clinical practice.
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PMID:[Diagnosis and Severity Assessment of Alcohol-Related Liver Disease]. 3283 67


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