Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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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)
A patient with liver abscess in association with regional enteritis is reported. Liver abscess should be suspected in patients with regional enteritis who present with fever, elevated serum
alkaline phosphatase
, liver tenderness,
right upper quadrant pain
or hepatomegaly.
...
PMID:Liver abscess. A complication of regional enteritis. 50 33
From 1968-1985 a series of thirty-seven patients with primary hepatocellular carcinoma was collected from the tumor registry of the Fairfax County Hospital, in the metropolitan Washington, D.C. area. These patients were found to have a mean age at diagnosis of sixty-two (males) to sixty-six (females). Thirty per cent of patients were previously cirrhotic and nineteen per cent had a history of viral hepatitis. There were no patients with documented birth control pill or steroid use. The most common presenting symptoms were anorexia and
right upper quadrant pain
. Liver-spleen scan was the most commonly used diagnostic study, but by the 1980's CT scanning was usually diagnostic. Both
alkaline phosphatase
and serum glutamyloxalotransferase were reliably elevated in twenty-six of twenty-eight and twenty-one of twenty-four patients respectively. Forty-eight per cent of patients with tumor histology reported had multicentric tumors, thirty-eight per cent had nodular tumors, and fourteen per cent had diffuse disease. Survival was as dismal in this as in other studies with a mean of seventy-nine days. No significant difference was noted between cirrhotic and non-cirrhotic patients. Chemotherapy and radiation therapy did not significantly impact upon survival. Finally, a cohort analysis was done and a possibly significant peak in incidence of primary hepatocellular carcinoma was seen in men born from about 1911 through 1920. The authors noted that these males were in the group of draft eligible persons for World War II and questioned a link between veteran status and later development of HCC.
...
PMID:Primary hepatocellular carcinoma: hospital based epidemiologic study. 196 92
Amebic liver abscess is increasingly common in the United States, particularly in the West and Southwest, due to increased immigration from Southeast Asia, Mexico, and Central America. The presentation, course, and treatment of 50 patients treated for amebic liver abscess at a county-community hospital in San Jose, California, between 1974 and 1988 is reviewed. The typical patient is an immigrant, usually a Hispanic male, 20-40 yr old, who presents with fever,
right upper quadrant pain
, leukocytosis, abnormal serum transaminases and
alkaline phosphatase
, and a defect on hepatic imaging study. Available serologic testing (i.e., indirect hemagglutinin antibody) is sensitive and confirms the diagnosis. Most patients respond rapidly and completely to oral metronidazole. The data, compared with other studies, indicate no major change in presentation or management, except for decreasing need to aspirate the abscess for diagnosis.
...
PMID:Amebic liver abscess: a 15-year experience. 203 92
The medical records of 222 patients with liver abscess at Siriraj Hospital from 1978 to 1985 were analysed. Amoebic abscess was three times more prevalent than pyogenic abscess. In both groups middle aged males were affected more often than others. The main clinical manifestations were fever,
right upper quadrant pain
and hepatomegaly. History of colitis in the past, marked leukocytosis, elevation of
alkaline phosphatase
and a single abscess confined to the right lobe were suggestive of amoebic liver abscess. The presence of concurrent abdominal infection, marked anemia and jaundice were associated with pyogenic abscess. Patients with pyogenic abscess developed complications more often and the case fatality rate was greater than patients with amoebic abscess. Most of the patients were successfully treated with a combination of antimicrobials and drainage.
...
PMID:Liver abscess: a clinical study of 222 patients. 221 15
Seventy-two patients with pyogenic liver abscess treated from Jan. 1986 through June 1988 were reviewed retrospectively. The average age was 55 years with a male to female ratio of 1.4:1. Most patients presented with the typical fever, chills and
RUQ pain
, but unusual signs and symptoms were also common. The right lobe was more commonly involved than left lobe. Biliary tract stone was the most frequent etiology (44.4%) and association with DM was common (37.5%). An elevated
alkaline phosphatase
and leukocytosis were useful clues to a liver abscess, but diagnosis depended on imaging of an abscess cavity either by echo or CT scan. The average time from onset of Symptoms to diagnosis was 9.3 days and a delay in diagnosis by the doctors was common. The most common complication was septicemia and factors with poor prognosis were old age (greater than or equal to 60 yrs), septicemia, cancer, peritonitis, and serum bilirubin greater than or equal to 5 mg/dl. The overall mortality was 29% with no difference between the group with surgical drains (28.5%) and the group with percutaneous transhepatic aspiration or drains (29.4%).
...
PMID:[Pyogenic liver abscess--report of 72 cases]. 237 3
We report two cases of acalculous cholecystitis due to infection with cytomegalovirus (CMV) and cryptosporidium. Both involved homosexual men who presented with
right upper quadrant pain
and elevations of serum
alkaline phosphatase
and bilirubin. Cholecystectomy specimens showed a thickened gallbladder wall and ulcerated mucosa. There were no stones. CMV inclusion bodies were found in granulation tissue at the base of ulcers and intact mucosa surrounding ulcers. Cryptosporidia were aligned along the luminal surface of intact mucosal epithelial cells. Both organisms have a patchy distribution; hence the diagnosis requires a high degree of suspicion. The prognosis is poor. Following cholecystectomy, both patients pursued a downhill course with development of pancreatitis and cholangitis. Both patients are now dead.
...
PMID:Cytomegaloviral and cryptosporidial cholecystitis in two patients with AIDS. 253 76
A 37-year-old man had fever, weight loss, malaise,
right upper quadrant pain
, lymphadenopathy, and a twofold elevation of serum
alkaline phosphatase
, transaminases, and gamma glutamyl transpeptidase. Granulomas were found on liver biopsy after 2 1/2 months of illness. Treatment with isoniazid and rifampin for 2 months did not lead to improvement in fever or symptoms, but prednisone caused a prompt resolution. Positive IgM antibodies to the viral capsule antigen followed by marked elevation of the IgG fraction suggest chronic Epstein-Barr virus infection to be the etiology. The patient was asymptomatic without treatment 14 months after onset of the illness.
...
PMID:Chronic Epstein-Barr virus infection: a cause of granulomatous hepatitis? 254 90
Sclerosing cholangitis, an inflammatory disease of the biliary tree that occurs infrequently in childhood, has been recognized in combination with papillary stenosis in adults with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. A 10-yr-old child with a familial immunodeficiency syndrome characterized by defective T-cell function and deficiencies of immunoglobulins A and G developed papillary stenosis and sclerosing cholangitis associated with cryptosporidium enteritis. The patient presented with fever, jaundice,
right upper quadrant pain
, and elevated serum concentrations of transaminases and
alkaline phosphatase
. The pain and jaundice resolved after endoscopic sphincterotomy, but the biochemical abnormalities persisted. This case demonstrates that the combination of papillary stenosis and sclerosing cholangitis can occur in children as well as adults and may be associated with immunodeficiency syndromes other than the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Endoscopic sphincterotomy can provide symptomatic treatment for papillary stenosis in children with this condition, although the effect of sphincterotomy on the natural history of the sclerosing cholangitis is uncertain.
...
PMID:Papillary stenosis and sclerosing cholangitis in an immunodeficient child. 271 83
Differential diagnosis of viral hepatitis begins with a check for darkened urine and bile in the urine. These hallmarks of conjugated hyperbilirubinemia immediately rule out prehepatic liver disease. Next, studies are done for the elevated transaminase levels that are characteristic of hepatitis infection, and a thorough history is taken to rule out drug- and toxin-induced hepatitis that may mimic acute viral hepatitis. Elevated
alkaline phosphatase
is a good marker of cholestasis. Ultrasonography can clarify this diagnosis. The classic presenting symptoms of viral hepatitis are jaundice, nausea, vomiting, malaise, anorexia, and dull
right upper quadrant pain
. However, serologic studies are needed to detect the presence of specific viral agents.
...
PMID:Viral hepatitis. The alphabet game. 305 Sep 28
The development of peritonitis in hospitalized patients, especially those with significant associated illness, can be a difficult and delayed diagnosis. To ascertain the clinical presentation of acute cholecystitis in this group, a retrospective analysis was performed. Over a 10-year period 18 patients were identified who developed either posttraumatic or postoperative acute cholecystitis. The condition occurred in 12 patients admitted for some form of trauma and in six patients after elective surgery. Fever and
right upper quadrant pain
and tenderness were present in most. These physical findings were generally accompanied by leukocytosis (average = 16,200), hyperbilirubinemia (average = 4.2), and elevated
alkaline phosphatase
(average = 214). At laparotomy gangrenous cholecystitis was found in the majority, reflecting delayed diagnosis. Eleven patients had acalculous disease, and seven patients calculous cholecystitis. Three patients died, yielding a 17 per cent mortality. The majority with acalculous disease had significant underlying illness. Shock, multiple transfusions, or infection preceded acute cholecystitis in this group. Those with calculous cholecystitis were usually not as ill prior to its development. The morbidity of acute cholecystitis in previously hospitalized patients can be reduced by an awareness of the predisposing factors in those with acalculous disease. Emphasis should be placed on signs and symptoms rather than laboratory values to ensure early diagnosis and treatment of acute cholecystitis in hospitalized patients regardless of the presence or absence of gallstones.
...
PMID:Posttraumatic and postoperative acute cholecystitis. 395 69
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