Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.1.8 (cholinesterase)
12,691 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Indirect measurement of portal pressure and hepatic venography using the balloon catheter technique were investigated to assess the stage of chronic alcoholic liver disease, especially, to diagnose cirrhoses. 80 patients were studied and were categorised in 4 groups according to their liver histology: normal liver (N, n = 6), fibrosis (F, n = 27), incomplete cirrhosis (F/C, n = 11), complete cirrhosis (C, n = 36). Medians of wedged hepatic venous pressure gradient P (= WHVP-FHVP) and of a semiquantitative venographic score S showed increasingly higher values with more severe stages of the disease. Portal pressure (P) and venographic appearance (S) were correlated significantly (r = 0.778, p less than 0.0001). P was most useful to diagnose cirrhosis: Precirrhotic forms were associated with pressure gradients P less than or equal to 5 mm Hg in 97%. Incomplete cirrhoses were distributed in about 50% above and below P = 5 mm Hg, for complete cirrhoses P greater than or equal to 8 mm Hg was found in 97%. Pressure gradients P greater than or equal to 5 mm Hg indicated cirrhotic disease with a specificity of 97%. Sensitivity for complete cirrhoses was also high (97%), for incomplete cirrhoses however low (47%). Venography and measurement of portal pressure as diagnostic tools to predict cirrhoses of alcoholic origin were clearly more useful than biochemical tests (serum bilirubin, quick and cholinesterase). In comparison to laparoscopy the acceptance by patients is higher and the risk is lower if patients with known adverse reactions to contrast materials and risk of thyreotoxicosis induced by iodine are excluded.
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PMID:[Diagnosis of alcohol-induced liver cirrhosis by indirect portal vein pressure measurement and liver venography]. 160 9

A survival analysis was carried out based on the data of 190 male patients with alcoholic liver cirrhosis (Child A: 82.2%; Child B: 17.8%). Patients (mean age: 49.6 +/- 7.1 years) were examined during the period 1983-1990. Censoring in May 1993 was based on the recordings of the "Rentenversicherungsanstalten". There were no "drop-outs". During follow-up (mean: 4.2 years) 64 (33.7%) of the patients died. 13 potential prognostic variables were examined individually by drawing Kaplan-Meier curves and performing log-rank tests. Portal pressure, determined during hepatic vein catheterization as hepatic vein pressure gradient HVPG (P), size of esophageal varices, serum bilirubin, serum albumin, prothrombin time (Quick), thromboplastin time (PTT), cholinesterase (ChE) and Child scores were correlated to survival (p < 0.05), whereas age, gamma GT, IgA, drinking habits and additional diagnoses were not. A multivariate Cox regression analysis stepwise eliminated all but three variables: ChE, albumin and variceal size were included in the prognostic index PI of the final model. The usefulness of the model was tested by a cross validation method. No significant difference was found between estimated and observed survivorship functions. To compare the PI of the Cox model with Child's scores, ROC curves of sensitivity and specificity of predicting death within one, three and five years were constructed. Better prognostic efficiency was indicated for PI. Because ChE, albumin and the size of varices are determined as a routine in our clinic, we consider the construction of PI an advisable alternative to Child's classification.
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PMID:Survival in alcoholic liver cirrhosis: prognostic value of portal pressure, size of esophageal varices and biochemical data. Comparison with Child classification. 877 35

We have already reported that the ratio of portal venous flow 30 min after oral intake of glucose 75 g to that before intake (PVFR30), measured using pulsed-Doppler ultrasonography (US), correlated significantly with other indicators of liver function and that it could be used to estimate hepatic function before surgery, including liver resection. In this study, to assess the disadvantages of pulsed-Doppler ultrasonography, PVFR30 was measured using two-dimensional (2D) phase-shift (PS) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). PVFR30 was measured in 17 patients and 7 volunteers: 13 with liver cirrhosis (LC) and 11 without LC (non-LC). Portal venous flow could be measured in all patients without any disturbance of intestinal gas or patient fat, or the high degree of technical skill that Doppler US requires. PVFR30 was significantly lower in the LC group than in the non-LC group. In addition, it correlated significantly with other indicators of liver function, including the indocyanine green clearance test, prothrombin time, hepaplastin test, and cholinesterase activity. These results suggest that PVFR30 measured by 2D PS MRI can be used to estimate liver function, and that this MRI method can be performed more easily than pulsed-Doppler US.
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PMID:[Assessing liver function by magnetic resonance imaging two-dimensional phase-shift flow measurement of portal venous blood flow after oral intake of glucose]. 1204 82