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Query: UMLS:C0015695 (fatty liver)
13,941 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The sequential pattern of lipid accumulation and associated biochemical changes were studied in two commonly used experimental models of nutritional fatty liver in rats. Female rats were maintained for 8 weeks on high fat, low protein diets containing adequate methionine and choline, and drinking water ad libitum (Diet 1), or deficient in methionine and choline and containing 20% ethanol as a substitute for drinking water (Diet 2). Histologically, there was a progressive increase in liver lipids, mainly in the periportal areas. Occasional foci of liver cell necrosis with lipogranuloma formation occurred in areas of severe fatty change. These changes appeared earlier and were more marked in rats maintained on Diet 2. Electron micrographs revealed large lipid droplets in the liver cells, which sometimes contained myelin figures. The mitochondria were enlarged, distorted and appeared as amorphous structures with disorientated cristae in rats on Diet 1, whereas they had a condensed conformation in rats maintained on Diet 2. Rough endoplasmic reticulum was fragmented and degranulated particularly in rats on Diet 1, and smooth endoplasmic reticulum showed hyperplasia and vesiculation in rats on Diet 2. There was a progressive increase in the total liver lipids and triglycerides in both the groups of rats. This fatty change was accompanied by a significant increase in hepatic 3-hydroxybutyrate, acetoacetate, malate, 2-oxoglutarate, citrate, lactate, ammonia, glutamate, alanine and aspartate, and a significant decrease in oxaloacetate, urea and glucose concentrations. The mass action ratios for alanine aminotransferase, aspartate amino transferase, and glutamate dehydrogenase, generally moved in a parallel direction. Hepatic ATP content was considerably reduced accompanied by a decrease in [ATP]/[ADP] ratios and a significant increased in [lactate]/[pyruvate] and [3-hydroxybutyrate]/[acetoacetate] ratios. There was a corresponding decrease in the [NAD+]/[NADH] ratios both in the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial compartments. These biochemical changes were particularly severe in rats maintained on Diet 1 and Diet 2 for 8 weeks. There was a very good relationship between impaired mitochondrial and endoplasmic reticulum functions, redox and phosphorylation states, and the relevance of their changes to the fate of fatty liver cells.
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PMID:Lipid accumulation in the rat liver: a histological and biochemical study. 23

Sexually mature, male and female Sprague-Dawley rats were housed in large communal breeding cages or in smaller paired breeding cages. Virgin control rats of the same age were housed similarly but segregated by sex. Breeders became obese, developed a fatty liver, and showed elevated levels of triglycerides, free fatty acids, and cholesterol. Breeders had high blood pressure, enlarged hearts, hyperglycemia, and islet beta cell degranulation. Serum enzymes, creatine phosphokinase, serum glutamic oxalo-pyruvic transaminase, serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase, lactate dehydrogenase, and blood urea nitrogen levels were elevated in breeder rats. The adrenal glands of male breeders appeared hyperactive; the adrenal glands of female breeders were thrombosed and appeared to be hypoactive. Male breeder rats developed microscopic aortic lesions only; female breeders developed advanced calcific aortic sclerosis. Male breeders kept in active stud service manifested the most abnormal metabolic and pathophysiological changes. Female breeders developed similar pathophysiological changes after four pregnancies, irrespective of their paired or communal breeding environment. Virgin rats were normal regardless of housing conditions. Our findings suggest that repeated breeding in male and female rats causes resetting of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal-gonadal axis. This may lead to disturbed hormonal and metabolic changes which culminate with the development of accelerated cardiovascular degenerative changes.
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PMID:Pathophysiological differences between paired and communal breeding of male and female Sprague-Dawley rats. 33 92

Two patients presenting with acute fatty liver of pregnancy were studied. Because of similarities between acute fatty liver of pregnancy and Reye's syndrome, we investigated hepatic ultrastructure, urea-cycle enzyme activities, and plasma amino acids. Initial liver biopsies obtained 12 and 21 days after the onset of illness demonstrated microvesicular fat deposition and mitochondrial ultrastructural changes, including pleomorphism and abundant crystalline inclusions. In both biopsies, activity of the mitochondrial urea-cycle enzyme OTC was markedly below normal limits. Activity of the other mitochondrial urea-cycle enzyme, CPS, was low in one patient. Abnormalities of these enzymes persisted in second biopsies obtained at 9 and 28 weeks, respectively. By 44 weeks all urea-cycle enzyme activities had returned to normal in one patient. However, in the other patient OTC activity was still reduced at 52 weeks, although it had doubled in comparison to previous biopsies. Morphological changes of the mitochondria generally improved in parallel with the urea-cycle enzymes. Plasma amino acids, obtained at the time of the initial biopsies, demonstrated a generalized hypoaminoacidemia with the exception of glutamate. Serial observations in patients with this rare disease indicate that there are similarities with Reye's syndrome, in particular, reduced activity of the mitochondrial urea-cycle enzymes. But there are important differences. (1) Enzymatic and ultrastructural abnormalities of mitochondria persist for a longer period of time than in Reye's syndrome. (2) Mitochondrial ultrastructure is different. (3) Plasma amino acid profiles are different.
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PMID:Abnormalities of hepatic mitochondrial urea-cycle enzyme activities and hepatic ultrastructure in acute fatty liver of pregnancy. 46 76

Three bears were studied under conditions of (1) no food but access to water for 2 weeks and (2) no food or water for 3 weeks. During starvation in summer, the bears could not inhibit the net production of urea but used lean body mass; when denied access to water as well, the bears became dehydrated and azotemic. Urea was continuously formed and degraded in the winter. Arginase activity in liver increased in winter sleep; hepatic steatosis and inflammatory reactions were also noted. The urinary bladder readsorbed labeled urea and D20 in winter; the rate of absorption of urea was equal to the rate of excretion of it into the bladder. The ability to preserve lean body mass during winter sleep apparently is a special mechanism associated with the induction of winter sleep. Bears cannot duplicate this feat during summertime starvation. In winter sleep, urea is formed and degraded but the nitrogen produced is conserved in some manner that maintains the total nitrogen pool constant. The urinary bladder plays a central role in maintaining the state of winter sleep by absorbing water and solute at a rate equal to their entry into the urinary bladder.
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PMID:Nitrogen metabolism in bears: urea metabolism in summer starvation and in winter sleep and role of urinary bladder in water and nitrogen conservation. 111 61

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.
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PMID:Prevalence of antibody to hepatitis C virus in HBsAg-negative chronic liver disease in Hong Kong using different assays. 132 Dec 25

Previous studies in our laboratories have revealed that juvenile visceral steatosis mice show suppressed transcription of urea cycle enzyme genes during development and are systemically deficient in carnitine. It has not yet been explained, however, how this carnitine deficiency relates to the abnormal gene expression. We investigated the effect of carnitine on abnormal gene expression, growth retardation, and fatty liver. Carnitine administration relieved the suppression of the developmental induction of two urea cycle enzymes examined, carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase and argininosuccinate synthase, and kept the activities of enzymes normal. However, carnitine did not reduce accumulated lipid in the liver to the normal level. These results suggest that carnitine deficiency plays an important role in the abnormal expression of urea cycle enzyme genes and that the abnormal expression of the genes is not directly caused by lipid accumulation in the liver.
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PMID:Carnitine administration to juvenile visceral steatosis mice corrects the suppressed expression of urea cycle enzymes by normalizing their transcription. 154 87

The complex distribution of polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) isomers and congeners amongst plasma fractions of the pigeon suggests that the lipid and apolipoprotein components of lipoproteins, as well as plasma proteins, may be important in transporting PCBs to tissues (Borlakoglu et al., Biochem. Pharmac. 40, 265 (1990]. Pigeons were injected with the commercial PCB mixture Aroclor 1254 (1.5 mmol/kg body weight). After 120 hr triacylglycerol-like droplets accumulated in hepatocytes ('fatty liver syndrome'), there was proliferation of the hepatic smooth endoplasmic reticulum, and plasma concentrations of triacylglycerol and total cholesterol increased. This was accompanied by significant decreases in plasma concentrations of total protein, total apolipoproteins of the low density lipoprotein (LDL) and the high density lipoprotein (HDL) fractions, and albumin and by a significant increase in that of urea, indicating increased protein breakdown. These results suggest that Aroclor 1254 increased hepatic lipid synthesis, but decreased hepatic production of albumin and apolipoproteins. This would explain the accumulation of triacylglycerol in the liver and the increase in the proportion of triacylglycerol to apolipoprotein in the total lipoproteins. From the evidence presented, a model is proposed based on the association of PCBs with hydrophobic domains of lipids and proteins for the transport of PCBs by plasma fractions, their uptake into cells and intracellular metabolism, and their accumulation in adipose tissue.
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PMID:Transport and cellular uptake of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)--II. Changes in vivo in plasma lipoproteins and proteins of pigeons in response to PCBs, and a proposed model for the transport and cellular uptake of PCBs. 211 78

The term "microvesicular steatosis of the liver" refers to a variant form of hepatic fat accumulation whose histologic features contrast with the much more common macrovesicular steatosis. Microvesicular steatosis of the liver was originally described in association with conditions who share a number of biochemical and a limited number of clinical features: acute fatty liver of pregnancy, Reye's syndrome, Jamaican vomiting sickness, sodium valproate toxicity, high-dose tetracycline toxicity and certain congenital defects of urea cycle enzymes; they were thought to constitute an entity of "microvesicular fat diseases". In recent years the disease has been described in a wide variety of conditions: alcoholism, toxicity of several medications, delta hepatitis in South America and Central Africa, sudden childhood death, congenital defects of fatty acid beta oxidation, cholesterol ester storage disease, Wolman disease and Alpers syndrome. Not much is known regarding the pathogenesis of microvesicular steatosis but in many instances the primary defect could be a mitochondrial lesion, and inhibition of the mitochondrial beta oxidation of fatty acids has been the most frequently implicated defect. The different conditions associated with microvesicular steatosis are heterogenous in many aspects. Maintaining the concept of "microvesicular fat diseases" as a unique entity seems no longer justified.
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PMID:Microvesicular steatosis of the liver. 217

To produce an animal model of Reye's syndrome (RS), 20 adult male Wistar rats were given 10 repeated i.p. injections of 50 mg/kg 4-pentenoic acid (PA) each separated by an 8-h interval. Then, 90 min after the tenth dose, they were given a final i.p. injection of 150 mg/kg PA. Thirteen control animals were injected with vehicle only using the same time schedule. More than half the animals in each group were fed a common diet, but the others were fasted during the terminal 10-h stage. All rats were sacrificed 30 min after the last injection. At the terminal stage, in comparison with the vehicle-injected controls, hypolipemia, hypoglycemia and high titers of serum ammonia and urea N were estimated significantly in the PA-treated rats fed throughout the whole period. Hypolipemia and hypoglycemia were more prominent in the terminally fasted group than the group fed continuously. Only in the PA-treated rats fed throughout the whole period moderate morphological signs of microvesicular fatty liver were exhibited. Ultracytochemical findings and biochemical determinations showed that the major lipids in the microvesicular fatty livers were triglycerides. Morphometric analysis revealed distinct hepatic mitochondrial swelling in the PA-treated rats. Therefore, the above treatment with PA was able to induce microvesicular fatty liver in rats with resembling RS, which were fed throughout the treatment procedure, but not in the terminally fasted rats.
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PMID:Microvesicular fatty liver in rats with resembling Reye's syndrome induced by 4-pentenoic acid. 226 Apr 72

The activities of pathways for the biosynthesis of hippurate, urea and pyrimidines in hepatocytes isolated from lean livers were compared with those from three sources of fatty liver: a) the genetically obese Zucker rat, b) Sprague-Dawley rats fed a diet deficient in choline and inositol, and c) Sprague-Dawley rats fed a diet supplemented with orotic acid. The capacity for hippurate synthesis was not significantly affected by fat accumulation, but ureagenesis from saturating ammonia and ornithine was diminished about 50% in all models when fat content rose above 12% wet wt of liver. Pyrimidine biosynthesis under these conditions was similarly diminished with fat accumulation. Ureagenesis was inhibited by sodium benzoate in hepatocytes from lean livers, but not in hepatocytes from fatty livers. Other results suggest that higher rates of ureagenesis than could be achieved with the fatty liver are required in order to demonstrate inhibition by benzoate. Incorporation of [14C]NaHCO3 into orotate was also inhibited by sodium benzoate, but in hepatocytes from fatty as well as lean livers. The metabolic basis for impairment of ureagenesis and pyrimidine biosynthesis in the fatty liver requires further study. That the capacity for hippurate synthesis was not significantly affected suggests a pathway-specific mechanism.
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PMID:Biosynthesis of hippurate, urea and pyrimidines in the fatty liver: studies with rats fed orotic acid or a diet deficient in choline and inositol, and with genetically obese (Zucker) rats. 291 1


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