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)
The prevalence of anti-HCV antibodies in Chinese patients with HBsAg-negative chronic liver diseases was studied retrospectively. Anti-HCV was detected by two different ELISAs. In 97 patients with HBsAg-negative chronic liver disease, 26 (27%) were anti-HCV positive. Of 157 control subjects, only 1 (0.6%) was anti-HCV positive (P less than 0.001). Anti-HCV was detected in 18 of 27 (67%) patients with post-transfusion non-A, non-B (PTNANB) chronic hepatitis or cirrhosis, 5 of 25 (20%) patients with cryptogenic chronic hepatitis or cirrhosis, 2 of 33 (6%) patients with alcoholic liver disease, 1 of 5 (20%) patients with autoimmune chronic active hepatitis (AICAH), none of 4 patients with
primary biliary cirrhosis
(
PBC
), and none of 3 patients with
fatty liver
. The prevalence in this group of patients was lower when compared to reports from other countries. The addition of a urea washing step reduced false-positivity in alcoholic and AICAH groups. The ELISA that employs three recombinant HCV antigens confirmed all positive results by another ELISA with the exception of one weakly positive result in the AICAH group and one in the alcoholic group. One patient in the PTNANB group was detected in addition by the second generation assay. In conclusion, ELISA with a urea wash proved to be useful in reducing false-positivity, and the second generation assay proved to be a sensitive and specific test for anti-HCV antibody.
...
PMID:Prevalence of antibody to hepatitis C virus in HBsAg-negative chronic liver disease in Hong Kong using different assays. 132 Dec 25
Immunological factors are important in the pathogenesis of a spectrum of hepatobiliary diseases. To characterize the nature of specific immunological responses in liver disease, we determined lymphocyte changes in liver tissue and in blood using flow cytometry. A total of 113 liver biopsy specimens was collected from patients with the following diseases: 19 chronic hepatitis B; 39 chronic non-A, non-B hepatitis; 27 alcoholic liver disease; 10 hepatic malignancy; 8 autoimmune hepatitis; 6
fatty liver
and 4
primary biliary cirrhosis
. The lymphocytes were isolated from the liver biopsy specimens by mechanical and enzymatic methods. The lymphocyte yield was 7,901 +/- 575 cells/mg of liver tissue. The viability of lymphocytes was 97.7% +/- 0.3%. Lymphocytes were stained with four pairs of two-color mixed fluorescein-conjugated monoclonal antibodies, including T4-T8 (CD4/CD8), T11-B1 (CD2-CD20), NKH1-T8 (CD56-CD8), IL-2R1-T11 (CD25-CD2), and the ratios were determined by an Epics Profile flow cytometer. Immunophenotyping of lymphocytes in whole blood samples was simultaneously analyzed. Variability in lymphocyte yield and different patterns of lymphocyte subsets were found in the liver biopsy specimens. The yields of lymphocytes from patients with chronic non-A, non-B and autoimmune hepatitis were highest, and the lowest yield was from patients with
fatty liver
. Patients with
primary biliary cirrhosis
,
fatty liver
and hepatic malignancy had relatively high ratios of CD4/CD8, CD56/CD8 and CD25/CD2; whereas patients with chronic hepatitis B, autoimmune hepatitis and non-A, non-B hepatitis had lower ratios of CD4/CD8, CD56/CD8 and CD25/CD2. No difference in lymphocyte ratios between the patients with cirrhotic and noncirrhotic alcoholic liver disease was found.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Immunophenotyping of lymphocytes in liver tissue of patients with chronic liver diseases by flow cytometry. 171 36
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
Autonomic neuropathy has been evaluated by various cardiovascular bedside tests in 99 patients with chronic alcoholism (33 alcoholics without liver disease, 33 patients with
fatty liver
and 33 with cirrhosis), in 10 patients with
primary biliary cirrhosis
, in 12 patients with cirrhosis of other origin, and in 40 healthy controls. Parasympathetic integrity was evaluated by beat-to-beat variation during deep breathing (6 min), Valsalva manouver and standing up, sympathetic function by blood pressure response to standing up and to sustained handgrip test. Autonomic reflex damage was found in all groups examined. Patients with alcoholic cirrhosis exhibited the most severe alterations. Our results suggest, that chronic hepatopathy itself presents a pathogenetic factor of autonomic neuropathy. Autonomic failure has to be considered as a possible cause of symptoms in liver diseases with all its prognostic consequences.
...
PMID:[Autonomic neuropathy in chronic liver diseases]. 209 74
We investigated lipopolysaccharide-induced tumor necrosis factor production in vitro by peripheral blood monocytes from patients with various liver diseases. Tumor necrosis factor production was found to be significantly reduced in patients with chronic hepatitis B (n = 17; 135 +/- 30 pg tumor necrosis factor/ml; mean +/- S.E.M.) and patients with chronic non-A, non-B hepatitis (n = 15; 212 +/- 22 pg tumor necrosis factor/ml) compared with healthy control individuals (n = 47; 411 +/- 40 pg tumor necrosis factor/ml; p less than 0.0005 and p less than 0.01, respectively). This reduced tumor necrosis factor production was not only seen with an optimal stimulating concentration of lipopolysaccharide (100 ng/ml) but also with suboptimal concentrations (0.1 ng/ml). In contrast to patients with chronic viral hepatitis, monocytes from patients with alcohol-induced cirrhosis (n = 26; 444 +/- 49 pg tumor necrosis factor/ml),
primary biliary cirrhosis
(n = 7; 412 +/- 81 pg tumor necrosis factor/ml) and alcohol-induced
fatty liver
changes (n = 5; 401 +/- 62 pg tumor necrosis factor/ml) produced normal amounts of tumor necrosis factor when stimulated with an optimal concentration of lipopolysaccharide. Lipopolysaccharide (0.1 ng lipopolysaccharide/ml)-stimulated peripheral blood monocytes of patients with chronic hepatitis B (n = 15; 102 +/- 32 pg/ml) or non-A, non-B hepatitis (n = 13; 97+/- 16 pg/ml) could not be induced to produce more tumor necrosis factor either when prestimulated with gamma-interferon (170 +/- 45 pg/ml and 149 +/- 32 pg/ml, respectively), a lymphokine known to activate monocytes, or with the cyclooxygenase inhibitor indomethacin to reduce the suppressive effect of prostaglandin E2 (148 +/- 40 pg/ml and 153 +/- 45 pg/ml, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Impaired lipopolysaccharide-inducible tumor necrosis factor production in vitro by peripheral blood monocytes of patients with viral hepatitis. 212 37
Diagnostic judgement is usually based on recognition of patterns. Unfortunately more than three quantitative data cannot be judged simultaneously without help of mathematical methods. Working on laboratory reports, a clinician usually goes linearly through the columns and reduces quantitative to qualitative data. Therefore the medical decision process should be improved if data reduction is performed with the aid of mathematical methods for pattern recognition. A total of 191 consecutive outpatients with a tentative or proven diagnosis of hepatobiliary disease were examined clinically, clinically chemically and partly histologically. Nineteen clinical chemical parameters were determined. Prior to pattern cognition, a principal component analysis was performed. Using six factors, accounting for 72.4% of total variance, cluster analysis was done, applying a hierarchical algorithm for ascertaining a starting partition, followed by the k-means algorithm. The validity of the solution was scrutinized, and a stable structure was found with nine clusters. Patients with a rejected suspect of liver disease were mainly located in clusters 1, 6 and 7. Cluster 1 also contains patients with compensated cirrhosis without inflammation, idiopathic hyperbilirubinaemia, focal nodular hyperplasia and haemangioma of the liver. In contrast, one third of cirrhoses, all with inflammatory activity were assigned to cluster 5. Patients with primary biliary disease were distributed among clusters 2, 3 and 4. All malignant neoplasias were assigned to cluster 9. More than 50% of fatty livers were classified to cluster 7. Cluster 2 and 8 contain only one patient with
primary biliary cirrhosis
(cluster 2) and
fatty liver
hepatitis (cluster 8). The follow-up of 66 patients also showed clinically meaningful changes of cluster assignment.
...
PMID:The use of cluster analysis in clinical chemical diagnosis of liver diseases. 221 56
Hepatocytes and bile duct epithelium express several types of cytokeratins, the characteristic intermediate-filament proteins of epithelial cells. The cytokeratin antigen expression was studied in normal and diseased livers, intrahepatic cholangiocarcinomas, and hepatocellular carcinomas by immunohistochemical methods using a panel of polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies to cytokeratins. Ten percent formaldehyde solution-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections obtained from ten patients without liver disease, 18 patients without liver disease, 18 patients with different stages of
primary biliary cirrhosis
, 14 patients with alcoholic hepatitis, ten patients with
fatty liver
hepatitis secondary to diabetes mellitus or morbid obesity, five patients with hepatocellular carcinomas, and five patients with cholangiocarcinomas were examined. The results suggested that hepatocytes and bile duct epithelium retain their distinct cytokeratin profiles in liver disease, including malignant transformation. Therefore, demonstration of cytokeratins in the liver is useful in establishing the cellular origin of neoplasms and understanding the pathogenesis of liver diseases.
...
PMID:Expression of cytokeratins in normal and diseased livers and in primary liver carcinomas. 246 75
From June, 1969 to February, 1987, distal splenorenal shunt was carried out on 78 patients with esophagogastric varices. The operations were urgent in 9, elective in 40, and prophylactic in 29 patients. There were 52 males and 26 females. Age ranged from 16 to 76 years with an average of 53 years. Thirty-seven patients were alcoholics. Hepatitis B surface antigen was positive in only 15.5%. The causes of portal hypertension were cirrhosis of the liver in 67, chronic hepatitis in 5, idiopathic portal hypertension in 4,
primary biliary cirrhosis
in 1, and
fatty liver
in 1 patient. Fifty-two patients were in Child's class A, 18 in class B, and 8 in class C. Emergency shunts were performed only when conservative therapy had failed to stop variceal bleeding. Prophylactic operations were done in patients having Child's class A or class B liver disease and risky varices, in varices larger than 5 mm in diameter and/or varices with red color signs such as cherry red spots. Forty-two patients underwent the original Warren shunt, but the remaining 36 had modified distal splenorenal shunt with expanded polytetrafluoroethylene interposition. The operative mortality rates were 11.1% in the emergency group, 2.5% in the elective group, and 3.4% in the prophylactic group. The overall operative and hospital death rates were 3.8% and 7.7%, respectively. The patency rate was 94.1% and the incidence of rebleeding from esophageal varices was 3.8%. Hepatic encephalopathy, although mild to moderate in degree, was observed in 14.7% of 75 patients excluding 3 operative deaths.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Appraisal of distal splenorenal shunt in the treatment of esophageal varices: an analysis of prophylactic, emergency, and elective shunts. 278 85
The present study was undertaken to evaluate the clinical usefulness of determining the plasma disappearance of 14C-glycocholic acid in the diagnosis of hepatic disease. This test was compared with the sulfobromophthalein test in 8 control subjects and 46 patients with abnormal liver histology (15 with
fatty liver
, 20 with alcoholic liver cirrhosis, 6 with
primary biliary cirrhosis
, and 5 with chronic hepatitis). The best distinction between controls and patients with liver disease was obtained by using the ratio between the plasma radioactivities at 45 and 2 min. However, even then, the 14C-glycocholic acid test had a very low sensitivity for the four groups of patients (0, 60, 50, and 40%, respectively) compared with the sulfobromophthalein test (73%, 90%, 67%, and 100% respectively). The lower sensitivity of the 14C-glycocholic acid test may be explained by the assumption that the clearance of a radioactive tracer dose is more dependent on liver blood flow than on liver function. This test is thus of little clinical value in separating patients with and without normal hepatic histology.
...
PMID:Plasma disappearance of 14C-glycocholic acid as a test of liver dysfunction. Relation to liver histology. 399 74
Three patterns of hepatocyte injury in man, direct, immunological, and cholestatic, are described. The characteristics of the direct pattern are predominantly mitochondrial damage, central (zone 3) necrosis, and, usually, fatty change. It can be subdivided into the alcohol type (also seen with obesity, in diabetes, as a reaction to perhexiline, in Wilson's disease, and in Indian childhood cirrhosis) and the Reye's syndrome type (also seen with tetracycline toxicity,
fatty liver
of pregnancy, and cytotoxic drugs). Reactive drug metabolites, metal poisoning, and anoxia are also associated with the direct pattern of hepatocyte injury. The immunological pattern is characterised by damage to cell membranes with piecemeal necrosis of periportal (zone 1) hepatocytes and mononuclear-cell infiltration. Examples include chronic active hepatitis,
primary biliary cirrhosis
, and drug reactions such as those to halothane. In the cholestatic pattern there is disturbance of the bile-secretory mechanism with retention of bile within the hepatocytes. Cholestatic liver injury may be intrahepatic, as in sex-hormone cholestasis, or extrahepatic, as in choledocholithiasis or carcinoma of the bile ducts. Identification of the type of hepatocyte injury is valuable in diagnosis, in assessing prognosis, and in selecting treatment.
...
PMID:Patterns of hepatocyte injury in man. 612 Dec 33
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Next >>