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Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (
alkaline phosphatase
)
47,916
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The interpretation of the morphological features of
alcoholic hepatitis
is discussed in terms of a comparison with the results of an ultrastructural and histoenzymological study of the liver biopsies of nine patients. In these patients liver biopsies were performed in the initial stage of the illness and fifteen days after five were re-biopsied, when the clinical and biological signs were improved. The correlations between morphological and biological data were good, especially for the levels of serological and histoenzymological
alkaline phosphatase
and gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase evaluations. However, when histological appearances had returned to normal, after two weeks of abstinence from alcohol several histological and ultrastructural features of the initial hepatitis persisted. The presence of evolving cirrhosis was a contributing factor to the severity of the changes seen. Morphologically, apart from the changes due to chronic alcoholic intoxication (steatosis, mitochondrial alteration), the hepatitic lesions comprise Mallory's bodies, cytoplasmic oedema and mitochondrial swelling. Cholestasis was invariably present. Histo-enzymologically there was a reduction in ATPase activity suggesting a metabolic failure in the energy producing pathways. In addition, in the periphery of lobules an active cirrhotic process was present, with tubular de-differentiation of hepatocytes and an increase in gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase on the cytoplasmic membrane. Because of the absence of any topographical relationship between hepatitis and cirrhosis, the presence of lymphocytes in the neighbourhood of the ductules suggested an indirect relationship between both processes, perhaps an autoimmune response initiated by Mallory's bodies.
...
PMID:[The hepatocyte in acute alcoholic hepatitis. Histoenzymological and ultrastructural analysis (author's transl)]. 3 Oct 27
Twenty patients with longstanding alcoholism and biopsy-proven alcoholic liver disease presented with marked elevation of serum
alkaline phosphatase
(in excess of four times the upper limit of normal). None had a past or present history to suggest pancreatitis or biliary tract disease, nor had any of these patients recently taken medication which could be implicated in cholestatic jaundice. Thirteen (65%) of this group either had radiologic or post mortem confirmation of nonobstructed biliary systems. The histologic findings in this group of patients were compared with those of a group of patients with alcoholic liver disease and normal or only mild elevation of serum
alkaline phosphatase
. Significantly more hepatocellular necrosis (P less than 0.05), alcoholic hyaline (P less than 0.02), and cholestasis (P less than 0.002) were noted in the severely hyperphosphatasemic group. Minimal degrees of steatosis were found in both groups. These data indicate that intrahepatic cholestasis occurs in patients with alcoholic liver disease, and this may often be secondary to
alcoholic hepatitis
. Overemphasis has previously been given to alcoholic fatty liver as a cause of this syndrome.
...
PMID:Alcoholic liver disease presenting with marked elevation of serum alkaline phosphatase. A combined clinical and pathological study. 73 13
A 38-year-old male patient with the juvenile variant of Parkinson's disease, in whom onset had occurred at the age of 24 yr, was autopsied. There were no clear symptoms of pancreatic or hepatic insufficiency during the entire clinical course. The only notable features were a slightly delayed decrease of the blood glucose level in an oral glucose tolerance test, slightly elevated levels of serum
alkaline phosphatase
and serum lactate dehydrogenase, and episodic loose stools. Autopsy revealed uniform enlargement of the pancreas due to massive fat replacement (lipomatous pseudohypertrophy): the exocrine glandular elements showed marked atrophy and loss, while the islets of Langerhans were preserved. The liver exhibited a histology closely mimicking
alcoholic hepatitis
associated with the diffuse presence of Mallory bodies (MBs), possibly indicative of a disturbance of protein metabolism. The nervous system showed the diffuse presence of Lewy bodies (LBs) in the cerebrum in addition to the ordinary lesions of Parkinson's disease. Although the etiopathogenesis of none of these three lesions has been well elucidated, common epitopes of MBs and LBs have recently been demonstrated. Therefore, the present case study suggests that a specific underlying toxic agent may cause diffuse LBs in the brain on the one hand, and diffuse MBs in the liver and lipomatous pseudohypertrophy of the pancreas on the other.
...
PMID:Diffuse Mallory bodies in the liver, diffuse Lewy bodies in the brain and diffuse fat replacement (lipomatous pseudohypertrophy) of the pancreas in a patient with juvenile Parkinson's disease. 147 30
Tissue cholestasis is a histologic feature in some patients with alcoholic liver disease, but its significance is unknown. We studied prospectively the clinical, laboratory, and histologic findings of 306 chronic male alcoholics in whom liver tissue was available. Tissue cholestasis permitted identification of two groups: group I, absent or mild cholestasis (239 patients), and group II, moderate to severe cholestasis (67 patients). Statistical evaluation was performed by Student's t test and regression analyses. In patients with tissue cholestasis, 97% had elevated serum cholylglycine levels, while only 61% had significant jaundice (serum bilirubin greater than 5 mg/dl). In patients without tissue cholestasis, 66% had elevated serum cholylglycine and 13.5% jaundice. Highly significant statistical correlations (P less than 0.0001) were found between cholestasis and malnutrition, prothrombin time, AST,
alkaline phosphatase
, bilirubin, Maddrey's discriminant function, serum cholylglycine level, albumin, and histologic severity score. In group I, 54% survived 60 months versus 22% in group II (P less than 0.0001). Highly significant statistical correlations (P less than 0.0001) were noted between serum cholylglycine levels and the parameters enumerated earlier, but not with survival. We conclude that tissue cholestasis is a highly significant prognostic indicator of outcome in
alcoholic hepatitis
and is more consistently associated with bile salt retention than jaundice.
...
PMID:Prognostic significance of cholestatic alcoholic hepatitis. VA Cooperative Study Group #119. 236 44
Thirty nine patients undergoing surgery for chronic pancreatitis were investigated for evidence of hepatobiliary disease. In addition to pre-operative assessment by liver function tests, ultrasound, ERCP (in 33) and percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography (in five), all had peroperative liver biopsy. Common bile duct stenosis was diagnosed in 16 (62%) of the 26 patients with successful cholangiography. Features of extrahepatic biliary obstruction were found on biopsy in 11 patients, three of whom showed features of secondary sclerosing cholangitis. No patients had secondary biliary cirrhosis. Three had parenchymal liver disease (cirrhosis, resolving hepatitis and
alcoholic hepatitis
respectively) and two others had features suggestive of previous alcohol-induced injury. Five (83%) of the patients with clinical jaundice had biopsy features of extrahepatic biliary obstruction, as did eight (67%) with
alkaline phosphatase
above twice normal and seven (44%) with radiological common bile duct stenosis. Neither
alkaline phosphatase
rise, nor common bile duct stenosis alone or in combination, were a reliable indication of the need for biliary enteric bypass surgery. Pre-operative liver biopsy may be a valuable adjunct in the assessment of such patients.
...
PMID:Hepatobiliary complications in chronic pancreatitis. 271 85
Purpose of this study was to elucidate the difference in severity of alcoholic liver diseases (ALD), especially of
alcoholic hepatitis
(AH) between female and male. We have experienced 15 female and 113 male patients with ALD laparoscopically and histologically proved during the past 10 years. In female patients, histological analysis revealed 8 cases of cirrhosis, 2 each cases of AH, fibrosis and chronic hepatitis, and 1 case of fatty liver. Occurrence of AH in female (13%) was significantly higher than male in which AH was seen in 3 cases (3%) (p less than 0.05). Duration of alcoholic abuse in female AH patients was shorter than male AH patients (5.5 +/- 0.5 years vs 24.0 +/- 2.9 years). Total alcohol consumed in female AH patients was less than male AH patients (256 +/- 52 kg vs 1560 +/- 703 kg). Abnormality in liver function tests including hepaplastin test, serum bilirubin, transaminases, lactate dehydrogenase,
alkaline phosphatase
, gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase, immunoglobulins was outstanding in female patients compared with male patients. Histological findings such as hepatocellular ballooning, neutrophilic infiltration, fatty change and wiremesh fibrosis were intensive in female patients compared with male patients. In conclusion, there were much more severe ALD like AH or cirrhosis in female than male patients. In female AH patients duration of alcoholic abuse was shorter and total alcohol consumed was less than male AH patients. And it was suggested that female AH is clinically and pathologically getting severe compared with male AH.
...
PMID:[Sex difference in alcoholic liver disease: with special reference to the severity of alcoholic hepatitis]. 280 7
Patients with
alcoholic hepatitis
with plasma B12 levels above 800 pg/ml have overt clinical manifestations of liver disease including severe hepatocellular damage. High plasma B12 levels significantly correlate (P less than 0.0001) with standard liver function tests, e.g. bilirubin, cholylglycine,
alkaline phosphatase
, AST and prothrombin time as an index of the severity of hepatic damage. Decrease in plasma B12 to normal titres implies a decrease in the severity of alcoholic liver disease, whereas increased plasma B12 levels relate to increased severity and mortality.
...
PMID:Plasma vitamin B12 titres as indicators of disease severity and mortality of patients with alcoholic hepatitis. 359 79
We examined clinical and laboratory data and the liver pathology of 48 patients in whom porphyria cutanea tarda was related to alcohol ingestion, estrogen use and pregnancy, or was idiopathic. Biochemical test results, when abnormal, tended to be mild in most cases, with less than two-fold elevations of serum aminotransferases and
alkaline phosphatase
and mild hyperbilirubinemia. Fatty change, liver cell and Kupffer cell hemosiderosis and glycogenation of hepatocyte nuclei were frequent histologic findings in the 58 liver specimens studied.
Alcoholic hepatitis
, chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis were uncommon. Granuloma-like lobular aggregates consisting of iron- and ceroid-laden Kupffer cells, chronic inflammatory cells and fat droplets ("lobular lesions of porphyria cutanea tarda") were found in nearly two-thirds of specimens and appeared to be the most characteristic form of parenchymal damage in this form of porphyria. These lesions may be associated with pericentral fibrosis in alcoholic as well as estrogen-treated patients and may remit following therapeutic phlebotomy.
...
PMID:Hepatic pathology in porphyria cutanea tarda. 619 67
An outbreak of non-A, non-B hepatitis (NANBH) in a hemodialysis unit was prospectively studied and the clinical, biochemical, and serologic events were correlated with an experimental immunodiffusion assay for serum antigen and antibody. One hundred sixteen subjects (76 dialysis patients and 40 staff members) were studied over an 8-month period. Hepatitis was defined as two consecutive SGPT levels greater than two times the upper limit of normal occurring in two separate samples drawn greater than 7 days apart in the absence of other likely causes of liver disease. Weekly serum specimens were obtained and tested for SGPT, SGOT,
alkaline phosphatase
, bilirubin HBsAg, anti-HBc, anti-HBs, total anti-HAV, and anti-HAV IgM by commercial reagents, and for antigen and antibody by agar gel diffusion using reference reagents previously obtained from well-documented posttransfusion NANBH patients. Clinical evaluations were performed three times per week. Thirty patients and none of the staff developed NANBH. The NANBH patients were asymptomatic, except for two patients with jaundice. Fifteen of the 30 patients were positive for antigen which was detectable in at least one serum collected during the acute phase. Six patients and 10 staff without clinical NANBH or abnormal serology had antigen. Antigenemia was also observed in three patients with acute hepatitis B, with chronic hepatitis B in one patient and with
alcoholic hepatitis
in one patient. Thus, an antigen was detected in a high proportion of patients during the acute phase of NANBH, and it was also found in exposed patients who had other liver diseases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Non-A, non-B hepatitis: a prospective study of a hemodialysis outbreak with evaluation of a serologic marker in patients and staff. 641 48
This immunohistochemical study was designed to investigate the possible contribution to and topographical distribution of some important cytokines, such as tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha) and interleukins, in acute alcoholic hepatitis. The well-known inductive capacity of these cytokines with respect to the expression and/or up-regulation of adhesion molecules, such as intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) and endothelial leukocyte adhesion molecule-1 (ELAM-1), was a further point to be studied. Moreover, the proposed induction of adhesion molecules might also be associated with the activation and attraction of a special population of inflammatory cells characteristic for
alcoholic hepatitis
. Frozen liver samples from patients who died with signs of acute alcoholic hepatitis were evaluated using the
alkaline phosphatase
anti-
alkaline phosphatase
immunostaining technique and also single and double indirect immunofluorescence. In acute alcoholic hepatitis TNF alpha could be detected predominantly in ballooned hepatocytes, which often contained alcoholic hyalin (Mallory bodies). Moreover, TNF alpha showed a co-distribution with ICAM-1 expressed in the membranes of hepatocytes and with the occurrence of CD11b positive polymorphonuclear leukocytes (neutrophils) suggesting a possible major role of the beta 2-integrin Mac-1 as a ligand for ICAM-1. No induction of ELAM-1 could be found. In
alcoholic hepatitis
cytokines may be responsible for the induction of the adhesion molecule ICAM-1 on hepatocytic membranes and activate a defined population of inflammatory cells, thus contributing to the characteristic histological picture of acute alcoholic hepatitis with its concentration of neutrophils especially in areas with ballooned Mallory body-containing hepatocytes. Our results are in line with clinical findings showing high levels of TNF alpha and interleukin-1 in sera of patients with
alcoholic hepatitis
and with the already reported expression of ICAM-1 on hepatocytes.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical detection of tumor necrosis factor-alpha, other cytokines and adhesion molecules in human livers with alcoholic hepatitis. 769 22
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