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)

The earliest and most reproduceable lesion associated with chronic alcohol abuse is fatty liver. In some alcoholics this may be superseded by alcoholic hepatitis, which may represent the link between the early lesion and cirrhosis. Alcoholic cirrhosis usually begins as a regular, monolobular variety, but is eventually transformed into an irregular, multilobular type. All stages of alcoholic liver injury have now been produced in the baboon, despite high protein and vitamin supplemented diets. Alcohol may therefore now be regarded as a direct hepatotoxin. Epidemiological studies have indicated that alcoholic liver injury begins with an intake of more than 80 g ethanol a day, and that cirrhosis is generally not seen with an intake of less than 160 g per day. The development of cirrhosis correlates with the total duration and amount of alcohol ingested. Complications of alcoholic cirrhosis include iron overload and primary hepatic carcinoma.
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PMID:Relation of alcoholic liver injury to cirrhosis. 4 93

Monooxygenase enzymes are involved in the biotransformation of drugs and of environmental carcinogens. The activity of 7-ethoxycoumarin 0-deethylase and associated NADPH-cytochrome c reductase was determined in 9000 g supernatant from bioptically obtained liver specimens from patients with various liver diseases in order to study in vitro drug metabolising capacity. Monooxygenase and reductase activity was significantly higher in the livers of 21 patients with alcoholic liver disease (fatty liver, alcoholic hepatitis, cirrhosis of the liver) than in 22 normal controls or in six patients with chronic active hepatitis. The raised activity of drug-metabolising enzymes obtained from alcoholics with liver damage differs from normal values found in five alcoholics without liver disease. Both groups were comparable in respect to the amount of alcohol consumed and duration of abuse. A strikingly low monooxygenase activity was observed in eight patients with cirrhosis of the liver and ascites, with, however, no apparent effect on reductase activity. The results show that alcoholic liver disease is associated with enhanced monooxygenase and reductase activity, but alcoholism, per se, is not. This rise of drug-metabolising enzyme activity could lead to selectively increased rates of biotransformation in patients with alcoholic liver damage.
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PMID:Monooxygenase enzyme activity in alcoholics with varying degrees of liver damage. 11 58

The results of liver scans performed with 99mTc-sulphur colloid in 169 patients suffering from diffuse liver diseases and in 48 normal controls were evaluated. The patients with reactive hepatitis, acute hepatitis, chronic persistent hepatitis, fatty liver and fibrosis of the liver show only minimal deviations from the scintigraphic pattern. On the contrary, highly increased colloid uptake in the spleen is found in cases of chronic aggressive hepatitis, whilst the intrahepatic distribution of the colloid is approximately normal. In cases of liver cirrhosis, increased colloid uptake is found in the left lobe of the liver as well as in the spleen and in the bone marrow. Either normal findings or cirrhosis-like changes of the colloid distribution are observed in patients with alcoholic hepatitis.
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PMID:[Liver scanning in diffuse liver disease (author's transl)]. 12 69

Alcoholic steatosis was associated with sclerosis around the terminal hepatic venules in liver biopsies of 40% of chronic alcoholics but not in those of moderate drinkers. To determine whether this sclerosis could be a precursor lesion of cirrhosis, controlled studies were performed in animal models. In the alcohol-fed baboons that developed fibrosis or cirrhosis, progressive perivenular sclerosis invariably started at the fatty liver stage before or even more commonly in the absence of alcoholic hepatitis. No sclerosis occurred in controls or in alcohol-fed baboons and rats that did not progress beyond the fatty liver stage. The clinical and experimental data indicate that sclerosis around the terminal venules, a common but often overlooked complication of alcoholic fatty liver, reflects heavy prolonged drinking, and may identify those patients who are susceptible to develop the more advanced lesions of alcoholic liver injury upon continued drinking.
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PMID:Early perivenular sclerosis in alcoholic fatty liver: an index of progressive liver injury. 40 18

Ninety patients with chronic diffuse liver disease were evaluated with free hepatic venography, wedge hepatic venography, hepatic vein pressure measurements, and liver biopsy. Free hepatic venograms were normal and minimally pruned in patients with hepatic sarcoidosis and fatty liver due to alcohol, and their biopsies showed little or no fibrosis. Pruning of hepatic vein branches on free hepatic venography correlated well with the corrected wedged hepatic vein pressure and with the degree of fibrosis in patients with alcoholic hepatitis, alcoholic cirrhosis, and postnecrotic cirrhosis. Free hepatic venography correlated better with hemodynamic measurements and fibrosis than did wedge hepatic venography. Free hepatic venography is a reliable predictor of the presence and degree of hepatic fibrosis and may be a useful alternative to liver biopsy in patients with clotting disorders.
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PMID:Hepatic venography and wedge hepatic vein pressure measurements in diffuse liver disease. 40 97

Sampling variability of liver biopsy was determined in three consecutive biopsy specimens obtained from each of 118 patients immediately prior to autopsy. No sampling variability was found for fatty liver, alcoholic hepatitis, nonspecific hepatitis, fulminant hepatitis, leukemic infiltrate, and venous congestion. Cirrhosis was diagnosed in 80% of cases at the first biopsy but in all cases after three biopsies. Chronic aggressive and chronic persistent hepatitis were diagnosed correctly in two of three cases each at the first biopsy, and in all cases after three biopsies. Metastatic carcinoma was detected in 46% of cases at the first biopsy and in 69% after three biopsies. Granulomas were missed once on the first biopsy, but found on a subsequent biopsy. The amounts of fat and fibrosis in the biopsy specimens often were not representative of the amounts present at autopsy.
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PMID:Sampling variability on percutaneous liver biopsy. 44 70

Chronic hepatitis is one of liver diseases with arguments from the clinical and histopathological aspects. Histopathological examinations were made on 687 biopsy cases clinically diagnosed as chronic hepatitis. Histopathological classification was based on our own criteria by referring to discussions in the series of Inuyama symposia on hepattis and others. The correlation between histological diagnosis and clinical data was also examined. Histopathological diagnoses made of the 687 cases were classified as follows; normal liver or liver with no pathognomonic changes of 77 cases (11.2%), non-specific reactive hepatitis of 56 cases (8.0%), viral hepatitis of 488 cases (71.0%), alcoholic hepatitis of 25 cases (3.6%), fatty liver of 23 cases (3.3%), massive liver necrosis of 3 cases, liver fibrosis of 2 cases, congestive liver of 1 case, and unclassified 12 cases due to inadequate specimens or other reasons. Among 488 viral hepatitis cases, histological stages were as follows; acute hepatitis (38 cases, 7.8%), persistent hepatitis (23 cases, 4.7%), chronic inactive hepatitis (142 cases, 29.1%), chronic active hepatitis (165 cases, 33.8%), chronic hepatitis with subloblar necrosis (33 cases, 6.8%), precirrhosis (51 cases, 10.5%), cirrhosis (27 cases, 5.5%). The relationship between histological aspects and clinical features was discussed by sex, age, and others. Of 41 follow up cases, significant values of histological type, presence of HB ag., or alcoholic were discussed as for the causative factors evolving liver cirrhosis.
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PMID:[Chronic hepatitis--clinicopathological studies of 687 cases (author's transl)]. 46 98

The authors investigated electron microscopically the biopsy material of 48 chronic alcoholic liver patients. On the basis of clinical and histological criteria 5 stages were differentiated: fatty liver, fatty liver with increased mesenchymal activity, acute alcoholic hepatitis, chronic alcoholic hepatitis, alcoholic cirrhosis. In each group changes of liver cell organelles and mesenchymal cells were compared. In this investigation it was demonstrated that liver cell damage--except for acute alcoholic hepatitis was not parallel with the severity of the clinical picture. On the contrary, the proliveration of mesenchymal cells, signs of its secretory activity and fibre forming, were in correlation with the progression of liver disease. The authors suggest that an intermediate stage must be taken into account between acute alcoholic hepatitis and alcoholic cirrhosis: the chronic progressive alcoholic hepatitis. It reminds morphologically to a great extent of the active chronic hepatitis and it is characterized not by severity of the injury of liver cell organelles, but by great proliferation of mesenchymal cells and lymphoid infiltration.
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PMID:Electron microscopic study of alcoholic liver disease with special attention to the changes of mesenchymal cells of the liver. 59 64

The role of liver size in drug metabolism was investigated in 34 chronic alcoholics and 28 controls by comparing antipyrine half-life with biopsy content and total amount of hepatic cytochrome P-450 (P-450) and liver weight. Liver size was significantly greater in alcoholics than in controls. Total P-450 was increased and antipyrine metabolism was enhanced in alcoholics with normal histology of the liver. In subjects with alcoholic hepatitis or cirrhosis, the antipyrine half-life was prolonged and P-450 was decreased. Alcoholics with fatty liver had a reduced P-450 content, but the total amount of P-450 and the antipyrine half-life were normal. The results demonstrate in alcoholics that an enlarged liver of normal histological appearance is associated with enhanced drug metabolism. In subjects with fatty liver the drug metabolizing capacity per unit weight of liver is often impaired, but the increase in liver size leads to undisturbed total oxidizing capacity and normal in vivo metabolism. In alcoholic hepatitis drug metabolism is impaired in spite of hepatomegaly. In cirrhosis the enlargement of the liver appears to compensate for the decreased P-450 content resulting in only slightly decreased total P-450, and the severly impaired in vivo drug metabolism may be due to derangement of blood flow.
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PMID:Liver size and indices of drug metabolism in alcoholics. 63 35

Among 2 952 non-selected liver biopsies of adults in the 5-years-period 1970-1974 506 cases (17%) of clinically proved chronic alcoholics were found. Most of the patients are males, and even young men at an age of less than twenty years are taken with. The number of 31 professional drivers within this group is remarkable and alarming, too. The histomorphological picture may be divided into liver changes without any abnormal state (39%), fatty liver (40%), alcoholic hepatitis (18%) and cirrhosis (3%). Chronic alcoholism can be considered as one of the most important causes of the fatty liver. Clinical and pathological aspects of alcoholic liver changes are discussed.
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PMID:[Liver biopsy changes in chronic alcoholism]. 64 47


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