Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0015695 (fatty liver)
13,941 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

General views concerning bed rest, diet and working capability in liver disease have changed during the last years. Rigorous bed rest in acute viral hepatitis is necessary only for short periods of time; it is necessary in chronic liver disease only in rare cases and during the terminal stage, respectively. A liver diet does not exist. Normal palatable nutrition is completely adequate in liver disease. Restriction of protein and sodium chloride intake is indicated only in cases with incumbent coma or with ascites. Patients suffering from acute viral hepatitis are incapable of working; however, they can go back to work a few weeks after the acute stage. Estimation of disability to work in patients with chronic liver disease may be difficult; no general rules can be given; in chronic active hepatitis disability is proportional to the activity of the disease and may range from 20-100%. Fatty liver without inflammatory changes does not influence working capability.
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PMID:[Bed rest, diet and working capability in liver disease (author's transl)]. 92 79

The activities of serum cholinesterases were determined in parallel with acetyl-, butyryl- and propionyl-thiocholiniodide in healthy persons and patients with acute and chronic hepatitis, cirrhosis of the liver, fatty liver, cholestasis, intoxication and malignant tumors. The following normal values were obtained: See Article. The correlations between the various methods, especially between butyryl- and propionylthiocholiniodide are statistically significant. Compared to healthy persons, the activity of serum-cholinesterases, determined with the three substrates, decreased significantly in patients with acute and chronic hepatitis, cirrhosis of the liver, intoxication and malignant tumors. A change of specificity of serum-cholinesterases towards acetyl-, butyryl- and propionylthiocholiniodide in normal persons and patients with endogenous or exogenous coma of the liver was not observed. In all cases a parallel decrease of activity in sera was determined.
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PMID:[Comparative methods for the determination of the activity of serumcholinesterases (acylcholin-acyl-hydrolase E.C. 3.1.1.8) and their diagnostical value (author's transl)]. 124 30

Siblings, aged 9 and 7 years, had simultaneous onset of vomiting, disorientation, ataxia, and coma. Both children had prodromal symptoms of upper respiratory tract infections, and had been treated with large doses of aspirin. Laboratory data showed evidence of hepatocellular dysfunction, with an elevated serum ammonia level in one patient; salicylate levels were 50 and 44 mg/100 ml. The child who died had autopsy evidence of cerebral edema and fatty liver. The difficulty in clinically differentiating Reye syndrome from salicylate intoxication is discussed.
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PMID:Acute encephalopathy in siblings. Reye syndrome vs salicylate intoxication. 125 38

A 33-year-old gravida 6, para 5, developed acute fatty liver of pregnancy at 35 weeks' gestation. This clinical picture was seen after caesarean section and delivery of a healthy infant. Post partum hepatic dystrophy associated with coma hepatica, acute renal failure and disseminated, intravascular coagulation was successfully treated with three large-volume plasmaphereses using FFP exchange plasma in combination with haemodialysis. The patient survived and her liver function was restored to normal.
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PMID:[The treatment of acute fatty liver of pregnancy using plasma exchange]. 177 18

In Japan, acute encephalopathy with hepatic steatosis resembling Reye's syndrome has been reported to occur after treatment with the pantothenic acid antagonist, calcium hopantenate. We studied the causal relationship and the pathogenesis in dogs. The agent was administered to seven dogs at increasing doses over a period of 8 weeks. Anorexia, vomiting, and diarrhea were common clinical findings. In four dogs, coma suddenly developed after the appearance of gastrointestinal signs. Three animals died during periods when they were not under direct observation. The effects of the agent appear to be related to dose. Laboratory findings representing significant changes at the time of coma included hypoglycemia, leukocytosis, hyperammonemia, hyperlactatemia, and elevated levels of serum transaminases. Microvesicular hepatic steatosis and mitochondrial abnormalities were consistent pathological findings. The hepatic mitochondria were enlarged and characterized by an increased number of cristae and the presence of crystalloid inclusions. In a second group of four dogs, pantothenic acid was given in addition to and in the same amount as calcium hopantenate at increasing doses over a period of 8 weeks. All four dogs survived the 8 weeks and only one developed mild anorexia. No significant biochemical changes were found and neither hepatic steatosis nor mitochondrial abnormalities were observed. The addition of pantothenic acid prevented the development of the disorder in the four animals. These results show that calcium hopantenate produces acute encephalopathy with hepatic steatosis in dogs, by inducing a deficiency of pantothenic acid. The hepatic mitochondrial changes of this reaction differ from those of Reye's syndrome.
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PMID:Acute encephalopathy with hepatic steatosis induced by pantothenic acid antagonist, calcium hopantenate, in dogs. 188 58

A four-year-old and a three-year-old boy with somnolence, coma and hypoglycaemia were found to have a defect in the beta-oxidation of medium-chain fatty acids (medium-chain acyl CoA dehydrogenase [MCAD] defect). The brother of one of them had died aged 16 months of an acute disease resembling Reye's syndrome (coma, fatty liver, cerebral oedema). The other two boys have no symptoms now under daily treatment with 100 mg/kg carnitine and frequent carbohydrate-high, fat-poor meals. The MCAD defect is inherited as an autosomal recessive trait and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of unexplained loss of consciousness in children with non-ketotic hypoglycaemia or with Reye's syndrome, as well as in families with sudden infant death.
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PMID:[Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase defect. Acute cerebral episodes and nonketotic hypoglycemia in children]. 238 17

There are now nine inherited diseases that have been identified in the pathway of mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation, including LCAD, MCAD, SCAD, and HMG-CoA lyase deficiencies, two forms each of CPT and MAD deficiencies and an incompletely characterized disorder of primary carnitine deficiency. The varied range of clinical manifestations in this new group of diseases should attract the attention not only of general pediatricians (coma, hypoglycemia) but also of pediatric subspecialists in neurology (myopathy), cardiology (cardiomyopathy), and gastroenterology (fatty liver), as well as genetics and metabolism. The presenting features of the genetic defects in fatty acid oxidation fit well with the concept that fatty acid oxidation plays a major role in energy production during prolonged fasting and in working cardiac and skeletal muscle. Life-threatening episodes of coma and hypoglycemia induced by fasting are a common presenting feature in most of the fatty acid oxidation disorders (MCAD, LCAD, and HMG-CoA lyase deficiencies, the infantile form of CPT deficiency, the mild form of MAD deficiency, and in some cases of primary carnitine deficiency). The hypoglycemia in these disorders is most easily explained by the inability of affected patients to use fatty acids as a fuel as a substitute for glucose. It should be stressed, however, that the coma in these disorders may occur from direct toxic effects of fatty acids or fatty acid intermediates before plasma glucose concentrations reach hypoglycemic levels. Severe disturbances of muscle function are a feature in several of the disorders; hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and chronic skeletal muscle weakness occur in both the mild and severe forms of MAD deficiency, in primary carnitine deficiency, and in some patients with LCAD deficiency. In contrast, patients with the adult form of CPT deficiency have normal muscle strength but are prone to episodes of painful rhabdomyolysis induced by prolonged exercise. These manifestations presumably reflect the requirement of working cardiac and skeletal muscle for energy supplied from fatty acid oxidation. In two of the disorders, SCAD deficiency and the severe form of MAD deficiency, chronic CNS toxicity is a dominant feature. The severe effects on the brain in these two disorders may reflect the fact that short-chain fatty acids more readily cross the blood-brain barrier than longer-chain fatty acids.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:New genetic defects in mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation and carnitine deficiency. 331 4

The authors analyse 115 cases of acute fatty liver of pregnancy, proven histologically. Characteristics of the condition is the finding of central nuclei in the hepatocytes containing microvesicular droplets. The disease occurs more frequently in primiparous women (54 per cent) and usually occurs in the third trimester of the pregnancy. A pre-icteric phase usually precedes the jaundice and during that time there is usually vomiting and/or nausa with abdominal pain or anarexia. In 92 per cent of case there is transient loss of consciousness with hepatic encephalopathy. Further tests show that there is more defective liver function than would be expected from the extent of cell lysis; and there is defective renal function. The worst complications are intestinal haemorrhages (48 per cent of cases)--genital bleeding (43 per cent of cases)--shock--diffuse intravascular coagulation and complications associated with coma. Maternal mortality at present runs at 25 per cent and fetal mortality at 60 per cent. The condition does not recur. Early evacuation of the uterus is recommended by most authors and does probably improve the outlook. The various hypotheses concerning the aetiology are discussed.
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PMID:[Acute fatty liver of pregnancy]. 354 2

Reye's syndrome (RS) is generally considered a childhood disease. We report our experience with RS in adults in the metropolitan Milwaukee area. Reye's syndrome was diagnosed in seven 18- to 46-year-old adults. The diagnostic criteria were as follows: viral prodrome followed by vomiting and encephalopathy without focal neurological signs, normal cerebrospinal fluid values, increased levels of serum aminotransferases (transaminase), prolonged prothrombin time, elevated blood ammonia levels, and characteristic microvesicular fatty liver and mitochondrial changes. None of the patients was hypoglycemic. The diagnosis of RS was entertained in 22 but confirmed in only seven patients. In cases of non-Reye's encephalopathy, drug ingestion presented as one of the most difficult differential diagnostic problems, which also included alcohol abuse, collagen vascular disease, and hepatitis B surface antigenemia. Clinical jaundice, distinctly uncommon in RS, was present in only one patient who presented to us in stage V coma. In adults, RS is more difficult to diagnose and should be suspected more frequently in patients with unexplained altered behavior following a viral illness and vomiting. Liver biopsy can be performed safely and is usually mandatory in adults. Patients with RS diagnosed during stage I or II coma and treated experienced an uneventful recovery.
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PMID:Reye's syndrome in adults. Diagnostic considerations. 380 May 31

The progression of neurological abnormalities through four or five clinically distinguishable levels of deepening coma and the development of a fatty liver are the hallmarks of Reye syndrome. A number of animal models have been described that result in fatty liver formation with minimal, static, or catastrophic neurological changes. In this study, we attempted to produce neurological features in rabbits that reflected a rostral-caudal progression of abnormalities that could be categorized into clinically distinguishable levels reminiscent of Reye syndrome. This was accomplished by the intracisternal administration of 0.5-25 mg of 11,14-icosadienoic acid (20:2 omega 6) suspended in a mixture of rabbit serum and isotonic saline solution. A reproducible, dose-titratable spectrum of at least four levels of deepening coma could be produced at will. Increases in serum glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase and creatine kinase and changes in serum glucose resulted 1-2 hr after the neurological abnormalities were evoked. Other unsaturated fatty acids produced similar responses. Those tested included 18:1 omega 9, 18:2 omega 6, 18:3 omega 3, 20:3 omega 6, 20:4 omega 6, and 22:4 omega 6 fatty acids. Saturated fatty acids, including 6:0, 8:0, 16:0, 18:0, and 20:0, failed to elicit these effects. The abnormalities were sustained for 30-120 min after a single dose. Full recovery was observed in some animals that had not reached the fourth level of our grading system for coma. Pretreatment of the rabbits with aspirin modulated the neurological abnormalities. Twenty micrograms of bee venom melittin, which activates endogenous phospholipase A2, administered intracisternally into rabbits also produced signs of level 3 (our grading system) coma for several hours. These findings suggest a possible role for polyunsaturated fatty acids in the development of Reye syndrome and offer a means of producing the neurological components of that syndrome in a laboratory animal.
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PMID:Development of encephalopathic features similar to Reye syndrome in rabbits. 659 8


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