Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0015695 (
fatty liver
)
13,941
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A survey of routine mortality was carried out on six different broiler sites. A total of 535 individual post mortem examinations was carried out. The chief cause of mortality on all six sites was colisepticaemia.
Fatty liver
and kidney syndrome caused significant loss on three of the six sites and on three of them a low incidence of an oedema syndrome was of interest. Salmonella senftenberg was isolated during the first four weeks from the intestines of chickens from five of the six sites but on none of them was this occurrence associated with any manifestations of disease. The vaccination procedures against Newcastle disease and infectious bronchitis were not producing adequate immunity against a possible challenge by a virulent virus of either although the administration of the vaccines appeared to be causing stress sufficiently severe to be one of the factors predisposing to a high incidence of colisepticaemia.
Vet
Rec
1977 Sep 17
PMID:A survey of "normal" broiler mortality in East Anglia. 33 32
The overall rate of inactive ovaries diagnosed by two consecutive rectal examinations was 8.5 per cent for 7751 lactations. Inactive ovaries had an inverse association with increasing parity and were directly associated with twinning, retained placenta, primary metritis and high milk yield after calving in heifers. No independent associations were established with stillbirth, a low milk yield in the last 120 days before calving, a long dry period, ketonuria or a high serum glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase activity in the first week after calving. The presence of inactive ovaries in the previous lactation was a significant predictor of the trait. Cows with either metritis or inactive ovaries were at a greater independent risk of not conceiving within 150 days after calving and the combined risk associated with both factors was higher than their sum. It is concluded that while damage to the uterus repeatability and an energy shortage after calving are responsible for ovarian inactivity, this trait was not associated with
fatty liver
. Such an association could be due to an indirect causal relationship, the outcome of post parturient uterine diseases which are associated independently with overfeeding before calving and inactive ovaries.
Vet
Rec
1987 Aug 15
PMID:Inactive ovaries in high-yielding dairy cows before service: aetiology and effect on conception. 366 May 46
Thirty-five merlins (Falco columbarius) were examined post mortem and 13 clinically. Eleven of the latter were captive birds. In eight of the cases examined post mortem no diagnosis could be made but another eight died of a
fatty liver
-kidney syndrome. Other causes of death included enteritis/proventriculitis (three birds), coccidiosis (three) and septicaemia (two). A variety of incidental findings was noted, for example, parasites and non-fatal lesions. Of the 13 clinical cases, five had bumblefoot and two each had fractures and reproductive failure. There were individual instances of other diseases. The merlin is declining in numbers in Britain and little is known of its susceptibility to disease or causes of mortality. Data on captive birds can provide valuable information in this respect.
Vet
Rec
1986 Mar 01
PMID:Studies on morbidity and mortality in the merlin (Falco columbarius). 370 12
Eleven cows with a wide range of liver fat (5.7 to 51.4 per cent) at seven days post partum were experimentally infected in a single quarter with a capsular Escherichia coli at 10 days post partum. The results suggested that a
fatty liver
in itself does not influence the severity of mastitis. All animals had clinical mastitis 10 hours after infection but no animals became severely ill and no treatment was given. Four out of five animals in the group with less than 20.2 per cent liver fat had bacteria in their milk at 10 hours after infection but these bacteria were eliminated by 12 hours. The six animals in the group with more than 28.3 per cent fat in their liver retained viable bacteria in the udder for much longer; with two animals bacteria were shed and abnormal milk was secreted for up to four months despite antibiotic therapy.
Vet
Rec
1985 Nov 23
PMID:Influence of liver fat on experimental Escherichia coli mastitis in periparturient cows. 390 15
The fat cow syndrome developed over a two year period in a 100 cow dairy herd following overfeeding in late lactation and the dry period. It was characterised clinically by a high incidence of parturient paresis and chronic unresponsive ketosis in early lactation. The reproductive performance of the herd was poor throughout this period, with extended calving indices confirming a suggested link between
fatty liver
and infertility.
Vet
Rec
1983 Nov 12
PMID:Fat cow syndrome in a British dairy herd. 664 84
Cows from three different herds were used to investigate the relationship between plasma D(-)-3-hydroxybutyrate, serum free fatty acid and blood glucose concentrations and the amount of fat present in the liver in the week after calving. The study was particularly concerned with the diagnostic value of D(-)-3-hydroxybutyrate estimations. These estimations did not make a significant contribution to diagnosis of
fatty liver
nor did they reflect accurately the nutritional status of the cows.
Vet
Rec
1983 Jul 16
PMID:Blood composition and liver fat in post parturient dairy cows. 668 51
A survey of the incidence and severity of post-parturient
fatty liver
in high yielding dairy cows was carried out on 151 cows and 46 heifers from four Friesian herds and one Guernsey herd. In Friesian and Guernsey cows from the second lactation onwards fat occupied a significant proportion (15 to 32 per cent) of the hepatic parenchyma at one week after calving but decreased to low values at eight weeks after calving.
Fatty liver
was insignificant in heifers of either breed. When the
fatty liver
was classified according to the amount of fat at one week after calving, 66 per cent of Friesian cows and 33 per cent of Guernsey cows had a moderate or severe
fatty liver
. The severity of the
fatty liver
was related to the loss of condition score after calving but not the condition score at calving.
Vet
Rec
1980 Sep 20
PMID:Incidence and severity of fatty liver in dairy cows. 721 Apr 22
High yielding dairy cows undergo a period of energy deficit in early lactation and mobilise body reserves for milk production. In this period a high proportion of cows develop moderate or severe
fatty liver
. Fat is deposited in other tissues at the same time, particularly skeletal muscle. The relationship between measurements of fat mobilisation and fat deposition in liver and muscle has been investigated in a group of 19 cows in the post calving period. Cows with higher levels of indices of mobilisation, namely plasma free fatty acid and D(--) -3- hydroxybutyrate concentration and subcutaneous adipose tissue loss, had higher indices of fat deposition in liver and skeletal muscle. Statistical analysis of the data indicated that
fatty liver
was part of a more general fat mobilisation syndrome which was not specific to any one organ or tissue.
Vet
Rec
1981 Jan 03
PMID:A fat mobilisation syndrome in dairy cows in early lactation. 723 78
A Jersey herd was investigated following a decrease in milk yields. The cattle were permanently housed and fed a complete diet in four groups on the basis of yield. They were generally healthy, but the dry cows and many of the milking cows were over fat. The plasma concentrations of beta-hydroxybutyrate and glucose were normal, but the activities of aspartate aminotransferase and glutamate dehydrogenase and the concentration of non-esterified fatty acids were high.
Fatty liver
syndrome was diagnosed. All the dry cows were condition scored and placed into one of three dietary groups according to their score. They were exercised in an outdoor paddock and entered the pre-calving feeding group at least two weeks before calving; 75 per cent of them achieved a condition score of less than 3, and most of them produced normal milk yields. Thirty cows which had developed signs of
fatty liver
syndrome were paired and one of each pair received an injection of 640 mg of recombinant bovine somatotrophin. The yield of the treated cows was significantly higher (P < 0.05) for the first two weeks after the injection. The treated cows had higher plasma concentrations of beta-hydroxybutyrate and non-esterified fatty acids and lower plasma urea concentrations seven days after the injection. No other biochemical parameters were affected.
Vet
Rec
1998 Jan 10
PMID:Control of fatty liver syndrome in a Jersey herd by a change of diet and the use of recombinant bovine somatotrophin. 948 26
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), the most common cause of steatosis, is associated with visceral obesity and insulin resistance. With more severe risk factors (obesity, type 2 diabetes [T2D], metabolic syndrome), steatosis may be complicated by hepatocellular injury and liver inflammation (steatohepatitis or NASH). NASH can lead to perisinusoidal fibrosis and cirrhosis. Fat-laden hepatocytes are swollen, and in steatohepatitis, further swelling occurs due to hydropic change (ballooning) of hepatocytes to cause sinusoidal distortion, as visualized by in vivo microscopy, reducing intrasinusoidal volume and microvascular blood flow. Involvement of other cell types (sinusoidal endothelial cells, Kupffer cells, stellate cells) and recruitment of inflammatory cells and platelets lead to dysregulation of microvascular blood flow. In animal models, the net effect of such changes is a marked reduction of sinusoidal space (approximately 50% of control), and a decrease in the number of normally perfused sinusoids. Such microvascular damage could accentuate further liver injury and disease progression in NASH. The
fatty liver
is also exquisitely sensitive to ischemia-reperfusion injury, at least partly due to the propensity of unsaturated fatty acids to undergo lipid peroxidation in the face of reactive oxygen species (ROS). This has important clinical consequences, particularly limiting the use of fatty donor livers for transplantation. In this review, we discuss available data about the effects of steatosis and steatohepatitis on the hepatic microvascular structure and sinusoidal blood flow, highlighting areas for future investigation.
Anat
Rec
(Hoboken) 2008 Jun
PMID:Hepatic microcirculation in fatty liver disease. 1848 15
1
2
Next >>