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

Irregular fatty infiltration of the liver is an entity that may be confused with liver metastasis. Since ultrasonography and computed tomography of the liver are frequently performed, it seems to be a relatively commonly encountered lesion. The features of this syndrome are described herein in six patients in whom a liver biopsy confirmed diagnosis. Clinical and biological findings were non-specific. In 3 cases ultrasound examination of the liver showed increased echogenic areas. In 3 cases of large lesions, the remaining normal liver was seen as areas of decreased echogenicity and the fatty infiltration was considered falsely normal. The scanographic features of this entity were much more typical than those seen on ultrasonography. With CT, irregular fatty liver usually has a distinctive appearance characterized by a non-spherical shape, absence of mass effect and a density close to water (3 cases). When the fatty lesions are focal (3 cases) and less characteristic on CT, liver biopsy should be performed to confirm the diagnosis. Repeated CT examinations can demonstrate partial or total resolution of the lesions when conditions known to be associated with fatty liver have been treated.
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PMID:[Irregular hepatic steatosis. Clinical and imaging study of 6 cases]. 351 48

Sodium nitrite administered in the drinking water to Long-Evans rats during pregnancy and lactation severely affected erythropoietic development, growth, and mortality in their offspring. Pregnant rats were maintained throughout gestation on 0.5, 1, 2, or 3 g NaNO2/liter. There were no significant differences between treated and control litters at birth. Thereafter, pups of treated dams on 2 and 3 g NaNO2/liter gained less weight, progressively became severely anemic, and began to die by the third week postpartum. By the second week postpartum, hemoglobin levels, RBC counts, and mean corpuscular volumes of these pups were all drastically reduced compared to controls. Blood smears showed marked anisocytosis and hypochromasia. Gross chylous serum lipemia and fatty liver degeneration were noted. Histopathology demonstrated cytoplasmic vacuolization of centrilobular hepatocytes and decreased hematopoiesis in bone marrow and spleen. Administration of 1 g NaNO2/liter resulted in hematological effects but did not affect growth or mortality. NaNO2 (0.5 g/liter) was at or near the no observed effect level. Cross-fostering indicated that treatment during the lactational period was more instrumental in producing lesions than treatment during the gestational period. The data presented are consistent with the lactational induction of severe iron deficiency in the neonate.
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PMID:Evaluation of the developmental toxicity of sodium nitrite in Long-Evans rats. 369 23

Protection against the toxic effects of chronic alcohol consumption was observed in male guinea pigs maintained on a high-ascorbic-acid diet (vitamin C-deficient chow plus 2.0 mg ascorbic acid/ml drinking water) as compared to animals on a low-ascorbic-acid diet (vitamin C-deficient chow and from 0.025 to 0.050 mg ascorbic acid/ml drinking water). Alcohol was orally administered to the guinea pigs at a dose of 2.5 g/kg for up to 14 weeks. Levels of serum aspartate aminotransferase and serum alanine aminotransferase were significantly elevated in animals on the low-ascorbic-acid diet that received alcohol, 120 and 250%, respectively. In contrast, in animals on the high-ascorbic-acid diet that received alcohol, levels of alanine aminotransferase were not significantly elevated and levels of aspartate aminotransferase were elevated 50%. In addition, some of the animals on the low-ascorbic-acid diet that received alcohol for 12 to 14 weeks developed hepatic steatosis and necrosis, whereas none of the animals on the high-ascorbic-acid diet that received alcohol for the same length of time manifested these changes.
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PMID:Ascorbic acid chronic alcohol consumption in the guinea pig. 371 80

The acoustic nonlinearity parameter B/A and sound speed c have been determined for excised normal and abnormal human livers at 20-37 degrees C. These values are compared with analytic measurements of fat and water content of tissues. The results show that normal liver containing 71.0% water and 2.9% fat by weight has a B/A value of 6.75 and sound speed of 1592 m/s at 37 degrees C. Both these parameters increase at an average rate of 0.026 degrees C and 1.5 m/s/degrees C, respectively, as the temperature is raised from 20 to 37 degrees C. Fatty liver (24% fat by weight) exhibits highest B/A (9.12) and lowest c (1522 m/s) of all the livers studied. In contrast to normal livers sound speed in such a liver was found to decrease with temperature. Based on the acoustic and composition measurements, quantitative correlations of B/A and c with fat-water composition have been developed. Inversion of these relationships provide a simple method to determine composition of a tissue sample from B/A and c measurements.
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PMID:Measurement and use of acoustic nonlinearity and sound speed to estimate composition of excised livers. 381 Sep 81

The degree of hepatic steatosis and percentage total nitrogen content were evaluated simultaneously in a group of obese patients and after bypass surgery for obesity. The straight line relationship between sample weight and gas chromatographic response integrals shows that samples had the same water content. The higher concentration of total nitrogen in patients with higher levels of steatosis and the inverse correlation between degree of adipose infiltration and degree of total nitrogen, when water content is the same, suggest that the total liver parenchyma nitrogen concentration closely reflects the structural protein content.
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PMID:[Total nitrogen concentration in human liver tissue. Correlations between morphological and microanalytical data]. 394 13

To determine if NMR techniques might be used to detect hepatic steatosis secondary to protein malnutrition, the T1 and T2 relaxation times of liver tissue from rats subjected to long-term protein malnutrition were measured in vitro. The liver tissue from rats fed a protein-deficient rat chow (PD) for 37 days (N = 9) was characterized by increased proportion of fat (P less than 0.001) but decreased water and nitrogen contents (P less than 0.001) relative to controls (N = 9). Mean T1 times were significantly shorter and T2 times significantly longer in liver tissue from protein-depleted animals (P less than 0.001). There was no overlap of T2 times between the protein-depleted and control animals. The consistent changes in T2 that occur with fatty infiltration of the liver should be detectable by current NMR imagers.
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PMID:In vitro detection of fatty liver infiltration in protein-depleted rats using proton nuclear magnetic resonance. 401 Feb 73

Nile red is a phenoxazone dye that fluoresces intensely, and in varying color, in organic solvents and hydrophobic lipids. However, the fluorescence is fully quenched in water. The dye acts, therefore, as a fluorescent hydrophobic probe. We utilized this novel property of nile red to develop a sensitive fluorescent histochemical stain for tissue lipids. Nile red was prepared by boiling Nile blue A under reflux for 2 hr in 0.5% H2SO4, and extracting the product into xylene. For staining, the purified dye is dissolved in 75% glycerol (1-5 micrograms/ml) and applied to frozen tissue sections. Tissue lipids then fluoresce yellow-gold to red, depending on their relative hydrophobicity. Using sections of liver and aorta from a cholesterol-fed rabbit, we assessed the value of Nile red as a stain for neutral lipids by comparing the staining pattern obtained with that produced by oil red O, a commonly used dye for tissue cholesteryl esters and triacylglycerols. In the cholesterol fatty liver, Nile red staining was comparable to that of oil red O. In contrast, Nile red staining of rabbit aortic atheroma revealed ubiquitous lipid deposits not observed with oil red O staining. These latter results suggest that Nile red can detect neutral lipid deposits, presumably unesterified cholesterol, not usually seen with oil red O or other traditional fat stains.
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PMID:Application of Nile red, a fluorescent hydrophobic probe, for the detection of neutral lipid deposits in tissue sections: comparison with oil red O. 402 99

The effects of late pregnancy on metabolic fuels, liver composition, gluconeogenesis, and nitrogen metabolism have been examined in fed and fasted rats. Plasma free fatty acid (FFA) and immunoreactive insulin (IRI) are greater and glucose and ketones are lower in fed 19-day pregnant than they are in agematched virgin rats. A 48 hr fast elicits greater increases in FFA and ketones and more profound reductions in glucose in the pregnant rats and obliterates the differences in IRI. Fetal weight is not modified by such fasting but maternal weight losses exceed that of the nongravid rats. Livers from rats 19 days pregnant contain more and larger hepatocytes. Per mumole hepatic deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)-phosphorus, water and protein are more abundant, whereas glycogen is unaffected. Livers from fed pregnant rats contain more lipid phosphorus and less neutral lipid fatty acid. After a 48 hr fast, hepatic steatosis supervenes in gravid animals due to accumulated neutral fat. The contents of hepatic acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA) and citric acid are not different in fed pregnant and virgin rats but are greater in the pregnant rats after fasting. Formation of glucose-(14)C and glycogen-(14)C from administered pyruvate-(14)C are the same in fed pregnant and virgin rats, but greater in the pregnant ones after a 24 or 48 hr fast. Pregnancy does not affect creatinine excretion, and urinary urea is not different in fed pregnant, virgin, and postpartum animals. Contrariwise, more nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorus are excreted by the pregnant animals during a 2 day fast. The increment in urinary nitrogen is due largely to urea on the 1st day, whereas heightened ammonia accounts for half the increase on the 2nd and correlates with the enhanced ketonuria. Muscle catabolism, gluconeogenesis, and diversion to fat are activated more rapidly and to a greater degree when food is withheld during late gestation in the rat. These catabolic propensities are restrained in the fed state. The capacity for "accelerated starvation" may confer survival benefit upon an intermittently eating mother in the presence of a continuously feeding fetus.
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PMID:Carbohydrate metabolism in pregnancy. VI. Plasma fuels, insulin, liver composition, gluconeogenesis, and nitrogen metabolism during late gestation in the fed and fasted rat. 535 39

The effects on lipid metabolism of long-term feeding of large amounts of ethanol or glucose differed from those that have been reported in short-term experiments. Three groups of male rats were investigated. The first was fed lab chow and 15% (v/v) ethanol ad lib.; the second was pair-fed with the first and given isocaloric amounts of glucose in lieu of ethanol; the third was fed lab chow and water ad lib. All three groups consumed nearly the same number of calories, and about 30% of the calories in the first group were derived from ethanol. Neither glucose nor ethanol added to a nutritionally adequate diet promoted the development of a fatty liver, although both stimulated acetate-(14)C utilization for hepatic lipid synthesis. In all three groups more than 80% of the label in hepatic lipid was found in fatty acids, and the distribution of label amongst the fatty acids of different chain lengths was virtually the same. Ethanol decreased while glucose increased the quantity of lipid in fat depots, and each altered the fatty acid composition of the lipids in adipose tissue, kidney, liver, and hepatic subcellular fractions in a different manner. The most striking of these changes was the relative increase in monounsaturated fatty acids and the decrease in essential fatty acids produced by glucose.
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PMID:Effects of prolonged ingestion of glucose or ethanol on tissue lipid composition and lipid biosynthesis in rat. 594 32

Two normal volunteers and three patients with CT evidence of fatty infiltration of the liver (two nonuniform, one diffuse) were studied to determine whether magnetic resonance imaging using a pulse sequence designed to differentiate fat and water could be used to detect fatty infiltration of the liver in human beings. The magnetic resonance technique used a modified spin echo technique (simple proton spectroscopic imaging) that was designed specifically to exploit the difference in the rate of precession between the protons in a water molecule and the protons in a fatty acid molecule. Images were obtained using in-phase and opposed techniques and were added or subtracted in order to obtain pure water and pure fat images. Quantitative data showed that fatty liver can be separated from normal liver using the spin echo technique, and that the opposed image of the proton spectroscopic technique is more sensitive to small changes in hepatic fatty content than in-phase images with any echo time.
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PMID:Fatty infiltration of the liver: demonstration by proton spectroscopic imaging. Preliminary observations. 608 64


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