Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is the most important single infectious complication of organ transplantation, affecting more than 70% of transplant recipients. Its emergence as a major pathogen has coincided with the use of cytotoxic therapy. Manifestations of serious CMV disease include: pneumonia, hepatitis, gastrointestinal disease, leukopenia and chorioretinitis. CMV is associated with superinfection with opportunistic organisms, graft failure and increased mortality. Serious infection most frequently occurs with primary CMV infection in which latently infected cells from CMV-positive donors are given to seronegative recipients. Pediatric patients who have a lower pre-transplant rate of CMV seropositivity are at particularly high risk of developing serious CMV disease. Preventative efforts range from the ideal but impractical use of only CMV-negative donors (organ and blood products), to the use of CMV hyperimmune globulin and antiviral chemotherapy. Data support the use of prophylactic hyperimmune globulin and preliminary information supports the use of prophylactic high-dose acyclovir in renal transplant patients. Prophylactic gancyclovir alone or with hyperimmune globulin and pre-transplant vaccination with live-attenuated Towne strain CMV vaccine remain investigational.
...
PMID:Prevention of cytomegalovirus infection in the pediatric renal transplant recipient. 185 Oct 31

Gyromitra esculenta (Pers.: Fr.) Fr. and a few other mushrooms have caused severe poisonings and even deaths in humans. Clinical data are characterized primarily by vomiting and diarrhoea, followed by jaundice, convulsions and coma. Gastrointestinal disorders distinguish this poisoning. Frequent consumption can cause hepatitis and neurological diseases. The species of concern are mainly G. esculenta and G. gigas (Kromb.) Cooke (non Phill.). Nevertheless, recent advances in chromatography, biochemistry and toxicology have established that other Ascomycetes species also may prove toxic. Gyromitrin (acetaldehyde methylformylhydrazone, G) and its homologues are toxic compounds that convert in vivo into N-methyl-N-formylhydrazine (MFH), and then into N-methylhydrazine (MH). The toxicity of these chemicals, which are chiefly hepatotoxic and even carcinogenic, has been established through in vivo and in vitro experiments using animals, cell cultures and biochemical systems. When we consider the chemical nature and the reactivity of these natural compounds, we suggest that chemical and biochemical mechanisms may explain their intrinsic biological activity.
...
PMID:Poisoning by Gyromitra esculenta--a review. 193 97

Leukotriene synthesis is influenced by several drugs currently in use for the treatment of alimentary disease, including the corticosteroids, sulphasalazine and mesalazine. However, the use of selective lipoxygenase inhibitors in human gastrointestinal disease has not been investigated. The complexity of eicosanoid metabolism, and the incomplete knowledge of roles played by each metabolite in each tissue and disease condition, make rational pharmacological manipulation of arachidonate metabolism difficult. However, lipoxygenase inhibitors show promise in animal models of inflammation, including hepatitis, and studies in vitro suggest that therapeutic benefits may be achieved using inhibitors of leukotriene synthesis in other inflammatory disorders.
...
PMID:Review: lipoxygenase inhibitors and the gut. 297 71

Viral antibody studies were done on laboratory dogs in an epizootic of gastrointestinal disease. Increased hemagglutination-inhibition antibody titers to a parvovirus (PV) antigenically related to feline panleukopenia virus were found in convalescent serum specimens of 78% (20/26) of the affected dogs and in 83% (5/6) of apparently healthy dogs. With one exception, all dogs tested had significant levels of hemagglutination-inhibition antibody to this PV. Similar increased antibody titers were found to feline panleukopenia virus. Also, neutralizing antibody responses were detected to the canine coronavirus in 24% (6/25) and canine herpesvirus in 45% (10/22) of the affected dogs. However, antibody titers did not increase to canine distemper virus, infectious canine hepatitis virus, canine parainfluenza virus, or minute virus of canines. Subsequent serotesting of the colony provided evidence that additional PV infections occurred in pups from each of 8 litters born 3 to 8 months after the epizootic. These findings indicated the continued presence of the PV for more than 1 year in the infected colony. Of 19 laboratory personnel who worked with the affected dogs, none, including 4 with a concurrent diarrheal disease, developed or had antibodies to the PV or canine coronavirus.
...
PMID:Viral antibody studies of laboratory dogs with diarrheal disease. 627 46

Human cytomegalovirus, HCMV, infects most of the population by adulthood; The primary infection is often accompanied by transient neutropenia and thrombocytopenia, and is followed by a period asymtomatic viral latency. In the setting of bone marrow transplantation, however, the immunosuppressed state of the recipient enables HCMV to re-activate or to infect the individual and cause serious sequelae. These range from hepatitis and gastrointestinal disease to interstitial pneumonia and hematologic abnormalities, which are more common in the allograft. Little is currently known about the mechanisms by which HCMV causes these hematologic abnormalities. In this review, we discuss experimental models which are helping investigators understand the immunology and pathology of CMV infection. We also summarize the vivo studies of the effects of HCMV on human hematopoiesis. Several possible mechanisms that could explain the deleterious effect of HCMV on human hematopoietic function include: 1) alteration of accessory cell function by inducing the production of inhibitory cytokines; 2) perturbation of stromal cell function resulting in a decreased production of hematopoietic factors or by altering cell surface adhesion molecule expression; 3) by direct infection of the hematopoietic stem or progenitor cells. It is likely that the pathogenesis of this syndrome is multifactorial therefore requiring a broad therapeutic approach. This would include the use of the antiviral agents, hematopoietic growth factors and donor derived HCMV specific cytolytic cells.
...
PMID:Cytomegalovirus as a cause of pancytopenia. 872 2

Oxidative stress appears to play a role in the pathogenesis of a number of gastrointestinal disease states, including pancreatitis; gastric and duodenal ulcer disease; IBD; gastric, esophageal, and colon cancers; and hepatic injury secondary to alcohol, metal storage disorders, hepatitis, and ischemia/reperfusion injury. The nutritional antioxidants are attractive potential therapeutic and chemopreventive agents because they are inexpensive and have a relatively low toxicity profile. A word of caution should be noted: Some antioxidants, such as vitamin C, can be prooxidant under certain conditions, and systemically altering the redox state may have untoward effects on the inflammatory response in certain disease states. Thus, at the current time, antioxidant therapy should be restricted to randomized, controlled clinical trials, in which treatment effects can be closely monitored, and therapeutic efficacy can be determined with scientific accuracy.
...
PMID:Nutrient antioxidants in gastrointestinal diseases. 965 24

Glucocorticoid excess causes insulin resistance i.e. a reduced effectiveness of insulin to suppress hepatic glucose production and to increase glucose uptake in muscle and fat tissue. Persons who cannot compensate for the resulting additional insulin need develop overt diabetes during glucocorticoid therapy. In the field of gastroenterology, glucocorticoids are mainly employed for the therapy of chronic inflammatory bowel diseases, alcoholic and autoimmune hepatitis, and after liver transplantation. The risk of developing steroid diabetes depends among other things on the genetic predisposition, the body composition, the underlying gastrointestinal disease, the age, and the steroid dose. The treatment of glucocorticoid-induced diabetes resembles essentially the treatment of type 2-diabetes. In addition to dietary measures, oral antihypoglycemic drugs and/or insulin are applied. If oral antihypoglycemic drugs are used, specific problems that might result from the gastrointestinal diseases need to be observed. In the short and medium term, the prognosis of glucocorticoid-induced diabetes is good since it is well treatable. If glucocorticoid treatment is continued for a long time, the alterations of glucose metabolism and the resulting hyperinsulinemia may lead to increased cardiovascular risk.
...
PMID:[Glucocorticoid-induced diabetes mellitus in gastrointestinal diseases]. 1044 14

The gut and the liver are the key organs in nutrient absorption and metabolism. Bile acids, drugs, and toxins undergo extensive enterohepatic circulation. Bile acids play a major role in several hepatic and intestinal diseases. Endotoxins deriving from intestinal Gram-negative bacteria are important in the pathogenesis of liver and systemic diseases. Chronic liver diseases can influence gastrointestinal motility, which together with other factors may contribute to bacterial overgrowth and in patients with ascites to an increased risk of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. Patients with end-stage liver disease frequently develop portal hypertension leading to varices, gastric vascular ectasia, and portal hypertensive gastroenteropathy. Several liver and biliary abnormalities are observed in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (primary sclerosing cholangitis, autoimmune hepatitis, cholelithiasis). The primary defect in hemochromatosis is located in the intestine, causing an inappropriate increase in iron absorption, and the liver is the site of earliest and heaviest iron deposition. Elevated transaminases are observed in many patients with celiac disease, and steatohepatitis frequently develops in patients with jejunoileal bypass and short bowel syndrome. Furthermore, the liver is the primary organ for metastasis of intestinal cancer. Many viral, bacterial, fungal, and parasitic diseases affect the intestine as well as the liver and the biliary tract.
...
PMID:Gut-liver axis. 1085 47

In Varanasi, India, an estimated 200 million liters daily or more of untreated human sewage is discharged into the Ganges River. River water monitoring over the past 12 years has demonstrated faecal coliform counts up to 10(8) MPN (most probable number) per 100 ml and biological oxygen demand levels averaging over 40 mg/l in the most polluted part of the river in Varanasi. A questionnaire-based survey was used to estimate water-borne and enteric disease incidence and study river use among resident users of the Ganges River in Varanasi. The overall rate of water-borne/enteric disease incidence, including acute gastrointestinal disease, cholera, dysentery, hepatitis-A, and typhoid, was estimated to be about 66% during the one-year period prior to the survey. Logistic regression analysis revealed significant associations between water-borne/enteric disease occurrence and the use of the river for bathing, laundry, washing eating utensils, and brushing teeth. Thirty-three cases of cholera were identified among families exposed to washing clothing or bathing in the Ganges while no cholera cases occurred in unexposed families. Other exposure factors such as lack of sewerage and toilets at residence, children defecating outdoors, poor sanitation, low income and low education levels also showed significant associations with enteric disease outcome. This study provides an estimate of water-borne/enteric disease incidence and identifies possible risk factors for residents who live by and use the Ganges River in Varanasi.
...
PMID:The role of water use patterns and sewage pollution in incidence of water-borne/enteric diseases along the Ganges river in Varanasi, India. 1654 5

There is a well-established association between Streptococcus bovis bacteremia (SBB) and colorectal cancer. However, SBB is also frequently associated with chronic liver disease and has been described with other gastrointestinal disorders. The aim of the study was to evaluate the prevalence of gastrointestinal disease in patients with SBB. Retrospective analysis of the microbiology database at Jackson Memorial Medical Center, Miami, Florida, between 1992 and 2002, was performed. Patients' clinical records were reviewed, with special focus on underlying gastrointestinal disease or other major comorbidities. Thirty-eight patients (83%) were adults and eight (17%) were pediatric patients. Nineteen patients presented with gastrointestinal disorders associated with SBB (41%). Nine adult patients (19%) had end-stage liver disease (five female). Six patients had alcohol-induced liver disease (one with concomitant chronic hepatitis C), with the remaining three cases related to autoimmune hepatitis, primary biliary cirrhosis, and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis. Colonic neoplasms (adenocarcinoma in 3 and adenomatous polyps in 3) were found in 6 of 10 adult patients in whom colonoscopic evaluation was performed. Seven adult patients had acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) (18%). Mortality in the patients with AIDS and SBB was high (71%). No significant association with gastrointestinal diseases was found in the pediatric population. Bacteremia due to S. bovis in adults is frequently associated with hepatic dysfunction (1:4), colonic neoplasms (1:6), and AIDS (1:6). This association was valid for our adult population only. SBB is an early clue to the likely presence of these serious underlying conditions and warrants rigorous investigation when recognized.
...
PMID:The association of Streptococcus bovis bacteremia and gastrointestinal diseases: a retrospective analysis. 1661 96


1 2 Next >>