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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Enzyme
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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)
One hundred eighty-four patients with hepatitis B surface antigen-positive chronic hepatitis were evaluated for antibodies to hepatitis C virus (anti-HCV). Only 11 (8%) of 136 patients with hepatitis B virus (HBV) replication (HBV-DNA-positive in serum) while 7 (35%) of 20 positive for antibody to hepatitis B e antigen (anti-HBe) but HBV-DNA-negative were positive for anti-HCV. By contrast, anti-HCV was never found in 30 anti-HBe-positive "healthy" carriers. Anti-HCV was more frequent in hepatitis D virus (HDV)-positive than in HDV-negative cases (32% vs. 12%). During 1-11 years of follow-up, anti-HCV persisted in 90% of cases, who showed continuing
alanine aminotransferase
elevation. Liver histology deteriorated in 2 of 4 anti-HCV-positive, anti-HBe-positive, HBV-DNA-negative patients. These results demonstrate the existence of a subgroup of patients with anti-HBe-positive, HBV-DNA-negative, HDV-negative chronic hepatitis B, where HCV may play a leading role in causing
liver disease
.
...
PMID:Hepatitis C virus infection in chronic hepatitis B virus carriers. 172 90
Non-A, non-B hepatitis is a significant cause of
liver disease
among renal allograft recipients. In order to assess the impact and prevalence of hepatitis C in a series of renal allograft recipients, we retrospectively screened 621 consecutive patients transplanted between 1979 and 1989 and 484 cadaver organ donors retrieved in the same interval for serologic evidence of hepatitis C viral (HCV) infection using the enzyme-linked assay for anti-HCV antibody. Of 596 HBsAg negative patients, 180 (30%) were anti-HCV positive at the time of transplant. One-year posttransplant, 117 (22%) had detectable levels of anti-HCV antibody. Chemically significant hepatitis developed in 52/234 (22%) anti-HCV positive patients, and 26 of these followed a clinical course consistent with chronic hepatitis. Significantly more males and patients with antibody to HCV detectable at 1 year posttransplant were in the group experiencing an increase in liver enzymes. Ten-year patient and graft survival was 78% and 50%, respectively, for the anti-HCV positive patients who had an elevation of
alanine aminotransferase
, and 76% and 57% for the cohort maintaining normal liver function (P = NS). There were also no differences in patient and graft survival among the anti-HCV positive group and the consistently sero-negative patients. Of 484 cadaver organ donors with serum available for analysis (out of 1200 retrieved), 67 (14%) were anti-HCV positive at the time of organ donation. Among 23 anti-HCV negative kidney recipients who received a kidney from an HCV antibody positive donor, only one had seroconverted at 1 year posttransplant. Antibody to HCV appears to be widespread among renal transplant recipients and cadaver organ donors. We were unable to demonstrate any evidence of long-term adverse effects on patient and graft survival among anti-HCV positive patients employing the first generation anti-HCV assay.
...
PMID:Detection of antibody to hepatitis C virus in renal transplant recipients. 184 50
Serum level of osteocalcin (OC) is believed to be a specific biochemical parameter of bone formation. Decreased serum OC has been reported in alcohol-intoxicated subjects, in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis and in patients with chronic alcoholic
liver disease
. The question was, whether lower OC level could be detected in patients with nonalcoholic and non-cholestatic chronic liver disease. The serum OC was measured by RIA developed in our laboratory. Results were compared to age and sex matched controls. Decreased OC level was found in 35 out of 47 (74%) patients with non-alcoholic and non-cholestatic
liver disease
as chronic persistent hepatitis, chronic active hepatitis, fatty liver and cirrhosis, in 21 out of 26 (80%) patients with alcoholic
liver disease
and in 8 out of 15 (53%) primary biliary cirrhosis. None of the patients had elevated value. There was no correlation between the decreased OC level and the duration or severity of the
liver disease
and the laboratory parameters as bilirubin, AST,
ALT
, alkaline phosphatase, albumin, prothrombin, and serum 25-OH-D3 vitamin level. Decreased OC was found also in the patients without cirrhosis. The possible causes are discussed. Relying upon these findings it is supposed that chronic liver disease by itself can influence the osteoblast activity also by some unknown mechanism.
...
PMID:[Decreased serum osteocalcin level in non-alcoholic and alcoholic chronic liver diseases]. 185 6
Chronic hepatitis C is often a progressive
liver disease
for which there is no satisfactory treatment. We studied the efficacy of recombinant alpha-interferon or gamma-interferon in the treatment of this disease in comparison with a control group. Thirty patients were randomly assigned to three groups. Ten patients received 7.5 MU alpha-interferon/m2 body surface three times weekly for 3 mo, then 5 MU/m2 for 3 mo and 2.5 MU/m2 for 6 mo. Ten patients were treated with gamma-interferon at a dose of 2 MU/m2 for 6 mo and the other 10 served as controls without treatment. The mean serum
ALT
levels and liver histological findings improved significantly only in the patients treated with alpha-interferon. No changes were observed in patients treated with gamma-interferon or in controls. Five of 10 patients treated with alpha-interferon had complete responses (mean
ALT
normal during therapy). After treatment
ALT
returned to pretreatment levels in two of 5 patients. The long-term response rate after alpha-interferon therapy was 30% at 18 mo. We conclude that alpha-interferon is effective in controlling disease activity in a portion of patients with chronic hepatitis C. High doses of alpha-interferon do not appear to add further benefit in the response rate or relapse rate. gamma-Interferon therapy is ineffective.
...
PMID:High doses of recombinant alpha-interferon or gamma-interferon for chronic hepatitis C: a randomized, controlled trial. 189 52
In an attempt to investigate the incidence and clinical course of non-A, non-B (NANB) hepatitis following blood transfusion in Taiwan, 288 patients who underwent cardiovascular surgery and received blood transfusion were followed prospectively with serum liver aminotransferase levels and viral hepatitis markers for at least six months. None had any past history of
liver disease
or drug abuse. All blood donors were tested for serum hepatitis B surface antigen and
alanine aminotransferase
(
ALT
) (greater than 45 U/L). Thirty-seven (12.8%) patients developed PTH. 34 (91.9%) were considered to be cases of NANB hepatitis, 2 (5.4%) were cytomegalovirus hepatitis, and one (2.7%) was caused by Epstein-Barr virus. No one developed hepatitis B post-transfusion hepatitis (PTH). Of the 34 NANB PTH patients, 15 (44.1%) were asymptomatic, 16 (47.1%) had clinical symptoms, and 9 (26.5%) had serum total bilirubin levels higher than 2 mg/dl. There was no case of fulminant hepatic failure. Of 26 NANB PTH patients who were followed up for more than one year, 15 (57.7%) still had abnormal serum
ALT
levels. The incubation period of NANB PTH ranged from 2 to 16 (mean 6.1 +/- 3.2) weeks. Of the 37 PTH patients, 32 (86.5%) were found to have anti-HCV seroconversion during one year follow-up period. NANB PTH is as common in Taiwan as in the United States and Japan, and is demonstrated by this study to be due mostly to HCV.
...
PMID:A prospective study of post-transfusion non-A, non-B (type C) hepatitis following cardiovascular surgery in Taiwan. 190 89
By now in France HBV seric markers (Ag HBs and Ac HBc) and transaminases level (
ALT
) screenings are compulsory by law in blood donors. People whose blood donation is discarded should be informed. A clinical, epidemiological and virological survey of such donors is required to differentiate healthy Ag HBs carriers and patients suffering from hepatitis B (who may eventually be treated). Similar guidelines may be recommended for the blood donors presenting high transaminases level without HBV seric markers in order to find a cause for such impaired biochemical tests: overweight, alcohol, drug consumption, auto-immune
liver disease
, genetic disorder, Non-A, Non-B, Non-C hepatitis....
...
PMID:[Practical approach to the discovery of serum markers for infection by hepatitis B virus (HBs antigen or anti HBc antibody). Hypertransaminasemia or the two anomalies in a blood donor]. 191 Mar 49
Chronic liver disease associated with hepatitis C virus (HCV) is an important cause of morbidity and mortality in hemophilia. We have used recombinant interferon alpha-2b (IFN alpha-2b) in a randomized controlled liver biopsy trial to treat hemophiliacs with chronic hepatitis. Eighteen patients entered the study, 16 of whom were subsequently shown to have antibodies to the HCV. All underwent liver biopsy at entry and were randomized to either treatment with self-administered IFN alpha-2b, 3 million units subcutaneously thrice weekly (n = 10) or no treatment (control group) (n = 8). Nine subjects had chronic active hepatitis, seven had chronic persistent hepatitis, and two had cirrhosis. Twelve months after entry into the study 17 patients underwent a second liver biopsy. All biopsies were coded, assessed, and scored according to the histologic severity of the
liver disease
. Ten patients were administered IFN for 1 year, and in four patients normalization of
alanine aminotransferase
(
ALT
) occurred compared with none in the untreated group. After the second liver biopsy, six of the eight initial no-treatment patients were treated with interferon 3 million units thrice weekly for 6 months, and normalization of
ALT
was seen in five patients. Biochemical relapse within 4 months of stopping IFN occurred in one of four patients treated for 1 year and in four of five patients treated for 6 months. IFN treatment was well tolerated. Although the histologic scores of the two groups were similar at entry into the study, after 12 months the biopsy appearances in the treated group were significantly improved compared with the controls (P less than .01). Histologic improvement was noted in the three interferon-treated human immunodeficiency virus antibody-positive patients and also in other patients who had no biochemical response. We conclude that low-dose recombinant IFN alpha is effective in normalizing transaminases and improving the histologic appearances in at least 50% of hemophiliacs with chronic hepatitis C.
...
PMID:A randomized controlled trial of recombinant interferon-alpha in chronic hepatitis C in hemophiliacs. 191 56
In liver and serum, AST activity is dependent on two isoenzymes, which are mitochondrial and cytosolic in nature. In an attempt to explain the well-known increase of serum mitochondrial AST-to-total AST ratio in chronic alcoholism (which is due to a specific increase of the mitochondrial isoenzyme), we analyzed: (a) liver and serum AST,
ALT
and glutamate dehydrogenase activities in 23 active drinkers with minimal liver changes, 11 alcoholic patients with cirrhosis who had stopped drinking, 18 nonalcoholic patients with viral chronic hepatitis and 11 subjects with normal livers; and (b) the expression of messenger RNAs for AST isoenzymes in the corresponding liver samples. Enzymatic activities were decreased in the liver irrespective of the origin of the
liver disease
. In patients with viral chronic hepatitis (or in those with alcoholic cirrhosis when abstinent), variations in liver proteins and messenger RNAs paralleled significant decreases in mitochondrial AST,
ALT
and glutamate dehydrogenase and a nonsignificant decrease of cytosolic AST. In alcoholic patients with minimal liver changes, the significant decrease of hepatic cytosolic AST,
ALT
and glutamate dehydrogenase activities contrasted with a close-to-normal liver mitochondrial AST activity; the increased amounts of mitochondrial AST messenger RNA give evidence for a pretranslational mechanism of regulation, indicating a possible increase in the total production of mitochondrial AST in the liver. The decrease of hepatic cytosolic AST activity was statistically significant only in alcoholic patients without cirrhosis who had a normal cytosolic AST mRNA level, thus suggesting a contributory role of translational or posttranslational regulation. In conclusion, regulation of AST isozymes during
liver disease
is complex, including differential, pretranslational and translational or posttranslational mechanisms.
...
PMID:Hepatic activity and mRNA expression of aspartate aminotransferase isoenzymes in alcoholic and nonalcoholic liver disease. 191 63
Twenty-one of 40 patients with chronic non-A, non-B hepatitis (37 anti-HCV positive) were randomised to receive interferon alpha 2b (3 million units subcutaneously thrice weekly for 24 weeks) and then to be observed for six months. Among the other 19 patients (controls) randomised to be observed without treatment for 12 months, eight have subsequently been treated with interferon for six months. One treated patient and three controls were lost to follow-up. A return to normal serum
alanine aminotransferase
levels which lasted until the end of the treatment period occurred in 18 (64%) of the 28 patients given interferon (and in 13 of 21 (62%) randomised to treatment), but only in one of the 16 untreated controls (p less than 0.001). Multivariant analysis indicated that, compared with the ten nonresponders, the 18 patients who responded to interferon were more likely to have acquired infection by intravenous drug abuse than by blood transfusion (p less than 0.05), and were more likely to have histologically less severe chronic liver disease (p less than 0.01). Thus, all 13 patients with less severe
liver disease
histologically responded to interferon, but only five of 15 patients with cirrhosis or bridging fibrosis responded. Among 17 responders followed for more than four months, five (28%) are still in remission a median of 13 months (range four months to 24 months) after stopping interferon. The characteristics which favoured a response during treatment also appeared to distinguish those who experienced sustained post-treatment remission.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Can the response to interferon treatment be predicted in patients with chronic active hepatitis C? 195 24
Persistence of HBV replication (serum HBV-DNA and intrahepatic HBcAg) and markers of HBV-induced (IgM anti-HBc positive)
liver disease
in anti-HBe-positive patients characterize a peculiar form of chronic hepatitis B. This form of hepatitis B prevails in the Mediterranean Basin, Middle and Far East and is associated with the infection of an HBV variant that lacks the capacity to produce HBeAg. We analysed the results of interferon treatment of 90 patients with chronic anti-HBe-positive hepatitis included in four randomized controlled trials. Interferon inhibited viral replication to undetectable levels and
ALT
normalized in about 70% of patients. However, the effect was transient in the majority of cases and hepatitis B relapsed in 41 to 90% of patients. A discrepancy in the rate of relapses could be explained by a significant difference in patients populations with a higher prevalence of cirrhotic patients in studies with poorer response. Therefore, in advanced anti-HBe-positive chronic hepatitis B, interferon shows a lower efficacy than in HBeAg-positive patients. The earlier treatment starts, the more efficacious is the response to interferon. Future clinical trials should focus on higher doses for longer periods, repeated courses or on combination therapy with nucleoside analogs or immuno-stimulant drugs.
...
PMID:Treatment with interferon of chronic hepatitis B associated with antibody to hepatitis B e antigen. 196 Mar 79
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