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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Disulone (dapsone + ferrous oxalate) is a sulphone marketed in France since 1958 and authorized in P. Carinii prophylaxis in HIV+ cotrimoxazole intolerant patients, bullous dermatosis, leprosy and polychondritis. Between 1983 and 1998, 249 adverse reactions were reported to French pharmacovigilance centres and Aventis, the manufacturer. Every side-effect was reviewed and the causal relationship was assessed on the basis of the French method for causality assessment. Main side-effects were divided as follows: 117 blood dyscrasias (generally neutropenia and agranulocytosis, rarely methaemoglobinaemia, haemolysis, macrocytosis, anaemia, aplastic anaemia,
haemochromatosis
and sulphaemoglobinaemia); 29 hypersensitivity syndrome; 39 cutaneous reactions, generally rash; 27 liver injuries (cholestatic, cytolytic and mixed
hepatitis
); 27 neurological and psychiatric side-effects including 7 axonal neuropathy; 10 gastrointestinal effects, generally nausea and vomiting. Five deaths were reported (4 septicaemia including one case not due to dapsone and 1 digestive bleeding due to underlying disease). In the other cases the outcome was favourable. The results were compared with the published references. It would seem to be important to reinforce information to prescribers about the possible serious adverse reactions with dapsone, particularly hypersensitivity syndrome and agranulocytosis, that can cause death if the drug is not stopped in time.
...
PMID:[Adverse effects of Disulone; results of the France pharmacovigilance inquiry. Regional Centers of Pharmacovigilance]. 1147 11
Neonatal haemochromatosis (NH) is a severe and newly recognised syndrome of uncertain aetiology, characterised by congenital cirrhosis or fulminant
hepatitis
and widespread tissue iron deposition. NH occurs in the context of maternal disease including viral infection, as a complication of metabolic disease in the fetus, and sporadically or recurrently, without overt cause, in sibs. Although an underlying genetic basis for NH has been suspected, no test is available for predictive analysis in at risk pregnancies. As a first step towards an understanding of the putative genetic basis for neonatal
haemochromatosis
, we have conducted a systematic study of the mode of transmission of this disorder in a total of 40 infants born to 27 families. We have moreover carried out a molecular analysis of candidate genes (beta(2)-microglobulin, HFE, and haem oxygenases 1 and 2) implicated in iron metabolism. No pathogenic mutations in these genes were identified that segregate consistently with the disease phenotype in multiplex pedigrees. However, excluding four pedigrees with clear evidence of maternal infection associated with NH, a pedigree showing transmission of maternal antinuclear factor and ribonucleoprotein antibodies to the affected infants, and two families with possible matrilineal inheritance of disease in maternal half sibs, a large subgroup of the affected pedigrees point to the inheritance of an autosomal recessive trait. This included 14 pedigrees with affected and unaffected infants and a single pedigree where all four affected infants were the sole offspring of consanguineous but otherwise healthy parents. We thus report three distinct patterns of disease transmission in neonatal
haemochromatosis
. In the differentiation of a large subgroup showing transmission of disease in a manner suggesting autosomal recessive inheritance, we also provide the basis for further genome wide studies to define chromosomal determinants of
iron storage disease
in the newborn.
...
PMID:Classification and genetic features of neonatal haemochromatosis: a study of 27 affected pedigrees and molecular analysis of genes implicated in iron metabolism. 1154 28
Genetic factors play a privotal role in the pathogenesis of several liver diseases. A review is devoted to discussing the genetics of autoimmune
hepatitis
, chronic viral hepatitis B and C, cholestatic and alcoholic liver diseases, UDP-glucuronyl transferase deficiency, alpha, antitripsin deficiency, hereditary
haemochromatosis
, Wilson's disease and hepatocellular carcinoma.
...
PMID:[Genetic aspects of liver diseases]. 1181 76
Ethanol toxicity on liver is a function of duration of alcoholism, amount of daily intake of alcohol and patient's nutrition. The threshold of alcohol toxicity on the liver is about 40 g of ethanol daily in men and 20-30 g in women, however liver cirrhosis develops in no more than 8-20% of patients exceeding this values. Ethanol is oxidized in the liver to acetaldehyde--a compound considerably more toxic than ethanol itself. Despite small amount of alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) found in gastric mucosa, the metabolism of ethanol in this site may have an important hepatoprotective effect. The oxidation of ethanol is associated with a change of hepatocyte redox homeostasis, which leads to a number of metabolic disorders such as lactic acidosis, hyperlipidaemia and hyperuricaemia. Chronic ethanol consumption does not influence ADH activity, but has a profound stimulatory effect on microsomal enzymes, in particular cytochrome CYP2E1. This fact is responsible for development in alcoholic liver associated with rise of oxygen consumption, excessive production of free radicals and increased metabolism of ethanol, vitamin A and testosterone. Ethanol and acetaldehyde have a deleterious effect, both the direct and indirect, on hepatocytes e.g., generating radical oxygen species and damaging intestinal mucosal barrier. Cellular oxidative stress that is caused by both an excess of free radicals and the antioxidatives' deficiency (glutathion, vitamin E, phosphatidylcholine), may be the principal factor responsible for progression of alcoholic liver disease. Among other factors accelerating alcohol-related liver lesion there are certain drugs, high fat diet, infection with HCV and genetic factors (female sex, enzymatic polymorphic forms of ADH and ALDH,
hemochromatosis
). Great importance in pathogenesis of necrotic and inflammatory hepatic events is being attributed to portal endotoxaemia and cytokines induced within the liver, in particular TNF-alpha and interleukin 8. These cytokines play a key role in development of alcoholic hepatitis, which clinical severity ranges from subclinical to fatal forms. Apart from abstinence, the treatment of alcohol liver disease is based on hyperalimentation, since alcoholism is generally associated with protein malnutrition. In severe forms of alcohol
hepatitis
corticosteroids are recommended.
...
PMID:[Alcoholic liver disease]. 1290 Dec 71
A haemagglutination test using day-old chick erythrocytes was applied to the sera of 210 patients with hepato-biliary disease and to those of 31 with other diseases.Thirty-six per cent of 58 patients with infective
hepatitis
gave positive results and this increased to 60% when sera taken during the first 14 days of symptoms were examined. Three of eight patients with infective mononucleosis gave positive titres. Results were consistently negative in 12 patients with acute obstructive jaundice and a raised titre excludes this condition. Positive results were seen in four of 14 patients with cirrhosis of the alcoholic, in 10 of 43 with non-alcoholic cirrhosis, in one of 11 with acute juvenile cirrhosis, in two of four with
haemochromatosis
, and in two of 18 with primary biliary cirrhosis. Five of 19 patients with rheumatoid arthritis gave raised titres.
...
PMID:Haemagglutination in acute hepatitis and other diseases. 1399 7
A possible link is suggested between hepatic diseases and rheumatic disease. Polyarthralgia and polyarthritis may be seen during the prodromal period of acute viral hepatitis, especially in hepatitis B virus (HBV). The symptoms of arthritis, mild, localized or generalized, mostly involve the small joints of hands. Joint symptoms frequently precede the onset of jaundice, no residual joint deformities. Circulating immune complexes are believed to play a causative role in the development of vasculitis and arthritis.
Hemochromatosis
is an antosomal recessive disorder of iron. About 43%-81% of patients with
hemochromatosis
have arthritis. The common extrahepatic manifestations of autoimmune
hepatitis
are arthralgia and skin rash. The reported prevalence of symptomatic inflammatory arthropathy in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis ranges from 4% to 50%. Skeletal involvement with Wilson's disease is common. Such patients may complain of pain and stiffness, mainly in the knee, wrist, or other large joints. Shwachman's syndrome is a disorder of pancreatic exocrine. Symmetric bone lesions have been reported in 10% to 15% of patients. They are involved predominantly at the femoral neck. Rheumatic symptoms are seen in one third of adult patients with cystic fibrosis and arthritis in 2.5% to 12% of patients. The arthritis caused by pancreatic panniculitis is usually symmetrical and involves the small joints of the hand, wrist, and feet, but may involve such larger joints as the elbow, ankle, and knee.
...
PMID:Rheumatologic manifestations of hepatic diseases. 1459 26
Increased oxidative stress and lipid peroxidation (LPO) are implicated in multistage carcinogenesis. Recent studies have shown that LPO-derived reactive hydroxyalkenals can form promutagenic exocyclic etheno-DNA adducts in vivo. Such DNA damage was found to be increased in the liver of patients with metal storage diseases and in colon adenomas of familial adenomatous polyposis patients. We now have investigated the levels of 1,N(6)-ethenodeoxyadenosine (epsilon dA) in human liver samples obtained from a group of patients diagnosed with
hepatitis
, fatty liver, fibrosis and cirrhosis, primary
hemochromatosis
and Wilson's disease. Using an immunohistochemical method, the relative mean pixel intensity of randomly selected nuclei was measured by imaging software; positively stained cell nuclei (arbitrary mean pixel intensity > or =0.5) were counted. Prevalence of epsilon dA (%) was calculated from the ratio of a number of positively stained cell nuclei over a total number of cells counted. When compared with normal livers (3.1%), the percent prevalence (means) was significantly higher in specimens of alcoholic fatty liver (15%) and fibrosis patients (50%) but not in samples with
hepatitis
(induced by various factors) (6.2%). The percent prevalence in alcohol fibrosis was as high as in the liver from Wilson's disease (50.7%) and
hemochromatosis
(33%) patients. This is the first demonstration of increased epsilon dA in human liver diseases due to alcohol abuse. We conclude that excessive hepatic DNA damage, as assessed by miscoding etheno-DNA adduct in the nuclei of liver biopsies, is probably caused by alcohol-induced oxidative stress and LPO. In cancer-prone liver diseases (fatty liver, cirrhosis/fibrosis) such damage may act as a driving force towards malignancy.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical detection of 1,N6-ethenodeoxyadenosine in nuclei of human liver affected by diseases predisposing to hepato-carcinogenesis. 1474 17
Several types of aggressive cancers, including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), often arise as a multifocal primary tumor. This suggests a high rate of premalignant changes in noncancerous tissue before the formation of a solitary tumor. Examination of the messenger RNA expression profiles of tissue samples derived from patients with cirrhosis of various etiologies by complementary DNA (cDNA) microarray indicated that they can be grossly separated into two main groups. One group included hepatitis B and C virus infections,
hemochromatosis
, and Wilson's disease. The other group contained mainly alcoholic liver disease, autoimmune
hepatitis
, and primary biliary cirrhosis. Analysis of these two groups by the cross-validated leave-one-out machine-learning algorithms revealed a molecular signature containing 556 discriminative genes (P <.001). It is noteworthy that 273 genes in this signature (49%) were also significantly altered in HCC (P <.001). Many genes were previously known to be related to HCC. The 273-gene signature was validated as cancer-associated genes by matching this set to additional independent tumor tissue samples from 163 patients with HCC, 56 patients with lung carcinoma, and 38 patients with breast carcinoma. From this signature, 30 genes were altered most significantly in tissue samples from high-risk individuals with cirrhosis and from patients with HCC. Among them, 12 genes encoded secretory proteins found in sera. In conclusion, we identified a unique gene signature in the tissue samples of patients with cirrhosis, which may be used as candidate markers for diagnosing the early onset of HCC in high-risk populations and may guide new strategies for chemoprevention. Supplementary material for this article can be found on the HEPATOLOGY website (http://interscience.wiley.com/jpages/0270-9139/suppmat/index.html).
...
PMID:Cancer-associated molecular signature in the tissue samples of patients with cirrhosis. 1476 6
The availability of serum blood chemistries for screening both symptomatic and asymptomatic patients has resulted in a marked increase in the number of abnormal liver chemistry tests that must be interpreted by physicians. Usually the first step in the evaluation of a patient with elevated liver enzymes is to repeat the test to confirm the result. If the result is still abnormal, it seems wise to differentiate between a predominant "necrotic pattern" of liver chemistry, as indicated by an elevation of ALT- or AST-activity or a predominant "cholestatic pattern", as indicated by elevated activities of g-GT and alkaline phosphatase. In patients with elevated serum amino transferases hepatic diseases should be excluded primarily with non-invasive serologic tests. The most common causes of elevated amino transferase levels are chronic hepatitis B and C, autoimmunhepatitis, non-alcoholic steatohepatitis,
hemochromatosis
, Wilson-disease and (only recently recognized) celiac sprue. In the case of a dominant "cholestatic pattern", primary biliary cirrhosis, primary sclerosing cholangitis, but also drugs and granulomatose
hepatitis
must be excluded. If non-invasive serologic studies remain inconclusive, ultrasound, mini-laparoscopy and liver biopsy will help to establish the final diagnoses.
...
PMID:[The patient with slightly increased liver function tests]. 1574 78
A 45-year-old patient was sent to our department because of highly elevated transaminases and elevated lactate dehydrogenase. His medical history was unremarkable and he took no medication on regular basis. Physical examination did not detect any abnormalities. There was no evidence for viral hepatitis, Epstein-Barr virus or cytomegalovirus, autoimmune
hepatitis
, Budd-Chiari syndrome,
haemochromatosis
or Wilson's disease. During the interview he admitted that for 'prophylactic reasons' he had been drinking the juice of Noni (Morinda citrifolia), a Polynesian herbal remedy made from a tropical fruit, during the preceding 3 weeks. This gave rise to the suspicion of herbal toxicity, which was confirmed by a liver biopsy. After ceasing the ingestion of Noni, transaminase levels normalized quickly and were within normal ranges 1 month after the first presentation. To our knowledge, this is the first report of hepatotoxicity caused by this herbal remedy, which has been highly praised in the tabloid press.
...
PMID:Herbal hepatotoxicity: acute hepatitis caused by a Noni preparation (Morinda citrifolia). 1660 61
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