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

To clarify the effect of the pathological state of the liver on ultrasonic attenuation, we produced two experimental rabbit models. The influence of fat on ultrasonic attenuation was examined using a fatty liver model without liver fibrosis, and that of fibrosis on attenuation using a liver fibrosis model without fatty infiltration. Ultrasonic data were obtained in vivo directly from the liver, and an acoustic attenuation coefficient slope was obtained by the spectral difference method. Tissue components of the liver, namely the total lipid, hydroxyproline and water contents, were measured precisely by quantitative methods. We revealed that ultrasonic attenuation depends mainly on fatty infiltration of the liver and to a lesser extent on fibrosis, but not on the water content.
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PMID:Dependence of ultrasonic attenuation of liver on pathologic fat and fibrosis: examination with experimental fatty liver and liver fibrosis models. 144 Sep 87

In vitro animal and human models were used to evaluate the potential of chemical shift magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for assessing fatty liver. Phantoms of varying fat content were created from mayonnaise-agar preparations. Fatty liver was induced in eight rats by feeding them ethanol for three to six weeks (36% of total calories), whereas eight control rats were fed a normal diet. T1-weighted in-phase and opposed-phase MR images were obtained of the phantoms animals, and 28 human subjects. Additional images obtained in animals included long TR images with in-phase and opposed-phase technique, and hybrid chemical shift water and fat suppression. The rats were killed and histologic status was graded blindly by a hepatopathologist as normal, mild, moderate, or severe fatty change, for correlation with MR grading. Quantitative analysis of MR images included fat signal fraction for animals, and relative signal decrease between in-phase and opposed-phase images for phantom and human data. Phantom in-phase signal increased linearly with respect to fat content, whereas opposed-phase signal decreased linearly. MRI and histologic grading of rat livers were highly correlated, especially when based on water suppression images (r = 0.91, P = .0001). Opposed-phase images were also highly correlated, while fat suppression images were less effective. There was no overlap between MR-derived fat fractions for control (2.6%-5.7%) versus ethanol-fed rats (7.7%-17.9%, P = .0002). Human liver considered to be fatty by visual inspection (n = 8) had higher relative signal decrease than nonfatty liver (n = 22) (P less than .001). Phantom, animal, and human data demonstrate that comparison of T1-weighted in-phase and opposed-phase images is both practical and sensitive in the detection and grading of fatty liver.
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PMID:Fatty liver. Chemical shift phase-difference and suppression magnetic resonance imaging techniques in animals, phantoms, and humans. 176 36

Rats fed an elemental, enteral diet (STD) developed pancreatic atrophy and hepatic steatosis following 60% jejunoileal intestinal resection. An isonitrogenous, isocaloric 2 g/100 ml glutamine-supplemented diet (GLN) significantly attenuated the development of pancreatic atrophy and hepatic steatosis associated with elemental feeding. Pancreatic weight, DNA, and protein were 27, 22, and 40% increased, respectively, in GLN animals. The pancreata of all animals appeared normal by light and electron microscopic examination. GLN animals had 12% less total liver wet weight, 3% less hepatic water content, and 47% less hepatic fat relative to STD rats. Histologic examination of the liver revealed extensive centrilobular fatty vacuolization in STD animals whereas GLN rats had normal looking hepatic parenchyma. Glutamine should be viewed as an important nutrient in elemental diets with trophic effects on the pancreas and protective effects against the development of hepatic steatosis.
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PMID:Glutamine prevents pancreatic atrophy and fatty liver during elemental feeding. 197 Oct 31

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and spectroscopy (MRS) were used to follow the time course of ethanol-induced fatty liver in a group of 10 rats fed a diet containing 12% alcohol (ethanol) over a 5-week period. The MR data consisted of T1-weighted images, in vivo 1H spectra, and in vivo T1 relaxation measurements. Changes in short TR images as a result of fatty accumulation were noted only as a slight increase in liver intensity relative to surrounding muscle. A poorly correlated (r = 0.54) increase in water T1 with time was observed. No statistically significant changes in lipid T1 were found. MRS derived lipid content was compared with biochemically derived total lipids and histology. MRS determined liver lipids were found to increase linearly with time (r = 0.91). Biochemically derived lipid content also increased with prolonged exposure to ethanol (r = 0.96). The averages of MRS derived lipid content agreed well with the average changes in biochemically determined total lipid concentration. Histologic examination revealed slight to moderate changes in fatty accumulation with significant variation in the group at the end of the study. On an individual basis the MRS and histologic evaluation were highly correlated (r = 0.94).
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PMID:In vivo NMR, biochemical, and histologic evaluation of alcohol-induced fatty liver in rat and a comparison with CCl4 hepatotoxicity. 204 27

Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is associated with cholestasis and hepatic steatosis, which can be lethal in infants who cannot be fed orally. It was determined that route of administration was not the critical variable in the development of hepatic steatosis. Two groups of young rats received equivalent amounts of a standard TPN solution either orally or intravenously for an 8- to 10-day period during which they received no other nutrition. Both groups gained equivalent weight and developed marked hepatic steatosis. To test whether the solution was toxic or deficient, three groups of rats were given TPN solution orally and a fraction of their usual daily intake of rat chow. Rats receiving less than 10% of their usual chow intake developed steatosis; rats receiving more than that did not. To determine the solubility of the protective material in chow, two groups of rats were given TPN solution orally and chow that been extracted with either water or the organic solvent chloroform. Rats eating the water-extracted chow developed steatosis, rats eating chloroform-extracted chow did not. Although the protective component in chow was apparently water soluble, addition of a water soluble extract of chow to the TPN solution fed another two groups of rats did not prevent steatosis at 0.1 mg/mL and only partially, if at all, at 10 mg/mL. TPN-related hepatic dysfunction, as measured by the development of hepatic steatosis in this model, may be due to a deficiency in the TPN solution. The missing constituent(s) appears to be present in rat chow and can be extracted with water, but not with an organic solvent.
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PMID:A proposed cause for the hepatic dysfunction associated with parenteral nutrition. 211 78

Fluid therapy is practical and beneficial when properly administered to cattle. Mature cattle are more frequently alkalotic than acidotic, so nonalkalizing solutions are usually indicated. Exceptions include cattle with choke, carbohydrate engorgement, diabetes mellitus, and, occasionally, renal disease, diarrhea, and fatty liver/ketosis. Most dehydrated cattle need supplemental potassium and calcium as well as sodium, chloride, and water. Intravenous administration is indicated in patients with obstructive gastrointestinal disease and those with severe dehydration. Oral or intraruminal administration is less expensive and often very effective.
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PMID:Fluid therapy in mature cattle. 217 37

Statistical pattern recognition procedures allow a quantitative description of ultrasound-B-scan image texture. According to well-established animal models, different types of fatty liver disease were induced in female Wistar rats. For the correlation of the computerized ultrasound image with its underlying histology a variable tissue model based on histomorphological data, texture analysis of the histological image and biochemical measurements of total lipid, water and hydroxyproline content was created. Whereas a regional arrangement of large fat deposits leads to a significant increase in the "mean grey level" (measure of image brightness) of the ultrasound-B-scan image, there is no difference in image brightness between normal liver tissue and liver steatosis for the tissue model with diffuse homogeneous fatty infiltration. It is demonstrated by multiple linear regression analysis that the "mean grey level" of the ultrasound-B-scan image depends not only on total lipid content but even more on the histomorphological fat deposit distribution.
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PMID:Computerized ultrasound B-scan texture analysis of experimental fatty liver disease: influence of total lipid content and fat deposit distribution. 219 40

The possibility that postprandial hyperinsulinemia could play a role in the development of hepatic lipid disturbances during convalescence from influenza B infection was explored in the ferret as a possible model of the steatosis of Reye's syndrome. Postprandial hyperinsulinemia was produced by feeding young ferrets glucose/water and a regular diet (glucose-treated group), as reflected by the mean serum insulin levels attained, which were 57 and 135 microU/ml during control and postinfluenza periods, respectively. By comparison, ferrets fed water and a regular diet (untreated group) had mean insulin levels of 19 and 22 microU/ml, while postprandial glucose levels were comparable in the two groups of animals for each period. In contrast to untreated animals, grossly visible fatty livers were found in glucose-treated ferrets during convalescence. The total lipid content of these livers had doubled compared with preinfection samples and compared with livers of untreated ferrets. By electron microscopy hepatic mitochondria showed striking changes with diminution of matrix density and reduction in cristae surface area only in convalescent samples from glucose-treated animals. Serum free fatty acid (FFA) levels were considerably higher in the glucose-treated animals during fasting before influenza and also after feeding during convalescence. Serum triglyceride (TG) levels were also high during convalescence in the glucose-treated group. Adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase activities were similar between groups, but hormone-sensitive lipase activity was twelvefold higher in glucose-treated ferrets before and after influenza B. These findings indicate that for a given stimulus, glucose-treated ferrets would mobilize more FFA than untreated ferrets. The total capacity for beta-oxidation of FA by the mitochondrial pathway was identical in all groups of animals. Total carnitine palmitoyl transferase (CPT) activity was the same in both control groups, but was significantly diminished in glucose-treated animals during convalescence. As CPT regulates the entry of FA into the mitochondrial matrix, its reduction in response to higher insulin concentrations would limit the oxidation of FA and stimulate TG accumulation. Therefore, the accumulation of lipid in the liver in this model is regarded to have been caused by the simultaneous occurrence of increased lipolysis and increased hepatic TG synthesis owing, in part, to diversion of activated FA by CPT, which is reduced in activity due to the regulatory action of insulin. These findings may have pathophysiologic relevance for the lipid changes that occur in Reye's syndrome and to fatty liver formation in hyperinsulinemic states.
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PMID:Hepatic steatosis during convalescence from influenza B infection in ferrets with postprandial hyperinsulinemia. 220 96

Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, localized in vivo proton spectroscopy, and T1 relaxation measurements were obtained from the livers of rats treated chronically with carbon tetrachloride and phospholipase D. The MR data correlated well with lipid changes measured biochemically and histologically. MR images appeared generally hyperintense during fatty infiltration, changing to hypointense mottling during cirrhosis. Water T1 relaxation times showed no statistically significant change at any time during the experiments from the control value of 908 ms (SE = 42 ms). Minor changes in lipid T1 values with time were noted. The average lipid T1 curve demonstrated a linear relation with time (r = 0.81), increasing from the control value of 283 ms (+/- 16 ms) to 365 ms (+/- 53 ms) at the end of the third week and decreasing slightly through the end of the experiment. Water-suppressed in vivo spectra showed quantitative changes in liver lipids which correlated well with the biochemical and histologic analysis. From the MR images and spectroscopy results it was possible to distinguish early fatty liver from more advanced cirrhosis.
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PMID:Chronic carbon tetrachloride and phospholipase D hepatotoxicity in rat: in vivo 1H magnetic resonance, total lipid analysis, and histology. 239 47

In this study special care was taken to discriminate between the direct effect of ethanol on hepatocarcinogenesis and secondary effects such as choline deficiency or fatty liver. Rats were divided into 2 groups, D and N. Group D was initiated using 3'-Me-DAB, while the control group N was not initiated. Groups N and D were divided into 4 sub-groups. Each subgroup was given, in the drinking water, one of the following ethanol solutions: 0, 5, 10 or 15% for 45 weeks. Liver tumors were induced only in D groups. Evidence obtained indicates that: (a) in the N group, ethanol did not cause any apparent disorders in histology and lipid metabolism, and (b) in the D group no significant differences were observed in the incidence of HCCs and other liver lesions. Ethanol thus does not appear to enhance hepatocarcinogenesis, at least in the absence of liver injury.
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PMID:Effect of ethanol on hepatocarcinogenesis initiated in rats with 3'-methyl-4-dimethylaminoazobenzene in the absence of liver injuries. 250 54


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