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

We describe three men and two women, aged 18-50, with an occasional finding of increased aspartate and alanine aminotransferase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase levels in the absence of any drug treatment and past or current alcohol abuse. Two patients were overweight (body mass index 29 and 32, respectively) and physical examination was normal in all but one case. Tests for hepatitis A, B and C, Epstein-Barr virus, cytomegalovirus, toxoplasma and autoimmune hepatitis were negative and metabolic diseases (Wilson's disease, haemochromatosis, alpha-l-antitrypsin deficiency) were excluded by specific tests. Ultrasound liver scan revealed massive steatosis in all patients. Liver histology showed diffuse steatosis and parenchymal inflammation in all cases, with concomitant fibrosis and Mallory bodies in three of them. Findings were consistent with non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, a rare condition with potential progression to cirrhosis in a minority of cases. This disease, for which no treatment is currently available, must be considered in all subjects with elevated aminotransferases, in the absence of known causes of liver damage.
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PMID:Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis. Report of five cases and review of the literature. 878 33

Asymptomatic patients with abnormal results on liver function test pose a diagnostic challenge. In general, determinations of routinely ordered tests of liver function are neither sensitive nor specific for liver disease. Fatty liver, alcohol-related liver damage and chronic viral hepatitis are the most common causes of abnormal liver function test results in asymptomatic patients. Causes of asymptomatic liver disease include hemochromatosis, Wilson's disease, drug toxicity, chronic autoimmune hepatitis, biliary cirrhosis, sclerosing cholangitis, alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency and sarcoidosis. The most efficient screening tests for liver damage are alanine transaminase, alkaline phosphatase and bilirubin. Repeat testing when results are abnormal, and use of ancillary tests, such as creatine phosphokinase or gamma-glutamyl-transferase, may confirm liver damage. Imaging studies help exclude biliary obstruction or neoplasm. Treatable illnesses should be ruled out. Three to six months of observation for progressive symptoms and liver dysfunction may follow. After the period of observation, further laboratory tests, a diagnostic liver biopsy and/or referral to gastroenterologist may be needed.
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PMID:Evaluating asymptomatic patients with abnormal liver function test results. 862 23

Trientine dihydrochloride (trientine) is an alternative medicinal copper chelating agent for patients with Wilson's disease of penicillamine intolerance. We examined the effects of trientine on the spontaneous development of hepatitis and hepatic tumors, by its short-term and long-term administration to Long-Evans cinnamon (LEC) rats with an accumulation of copper in the liver, as animal models of Wilson's disease. Male rats were given trientine in their drinking water at 1500 ppm for 18 weeks, from 6 weeks to 24 weeks of age in short-term experiment, and 1500 ppm for 27 weeks then 750 ppm for 52 weeks, from 8 to 87 weeks of age in the long-term experiment. Development of hepatitis was observed in the control LEC rats at 18 weeks of age. They had high levels of plasma transaminases (glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase [GOT], glutamic pyruvic transaminase [GPT]), and on pathological examination, hepatocyte destruction was observed. Histological findings revealed that short-term administration of trientine inhibited the development of hepatitis remarkably. The plasma GOT and GPT levels of treated animals were only slightly higher than those of normal LEA (Long-Evans with agouti coat color) rats, a sibling line of LEC rats. Copper levels in the liver were decreased by a maximum of 50 percent. In the long-term administration of trientine, the incidence of hepatic cell carcinoma (HCC) in the treated rats was 67 percent that of the untreated LEC rats, and the number of HCCs per rat in the treated group was 0.7 +/- 0.5, being significantly lower as compared with 4.7 +/- 3.5 in the untreated rats. Additionally, the development of cholangiofibrosis in LEC rats was completely prevented by long-term administration of the agent. The copper level in the liver of treated rats was reduced by 33 percent at 87 weeks of age. Development of HCC in LEC rats might be partly, but not totally, because of copper accumulation. No effects on the levels of copper, iron, or zinc in the liver of LEA rats was detected, and no adverse effects were detected in either LEC or LEA rats after both short- and long-term administration of trientine in drinking water.
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PMID:Inhibition of hereditary hepatitis and liver tumor development in Long-Evans cinnamon rats by the copper-chelating agent trientine dihydrochloride. 866 30

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most common cancers in the world. The majority of patients who develop HCC have underlying cirrhosis, which suggests that cirrhosis itself represents a preneoplastic condition. Nevertheless, whereas patients with cirrhosis of any origin are at increased risk of developing HCC, those with chronic hepatitis B or C infection seem to be at greatest risk. Patients with cirrhosis resulting from chronic alcohol use, hemochromatosis, autoimmune hepatitis, or alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency have less risk of developing this cancer, and some hepatic diseases, such as primary biliary cirrhosis and Wilson's disease, do not predispose affected persons to an appreciable risk of developing HCC. Certain histological features, such as liver cell dysplasia and macroregenerative nodules, may represent preneoplastic alterations of hepatocytes, but these changes do not seem to be a necessary step in the evolution of liver cancer. The pathogenesis of HCC is unclear, but seems to involve several steps. Hepatitis B virus infection may result in the malignant transformation of hepatocytes by some directly oncogenic mechanism, whereas other necroinflammatory conditions probably predispose to the development of HCC through the introduction of genetic alterations coupled with a reduction of genetic repair functions. Screening patients at risk for the development of HCC using alpha fetoprotein measurements and ultrasonography is widely practiced despite inconclusive evidence of efficacy. If screening is performed, the program used should be tailored to the perceived risk for a particular patient.
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PMID:Preneoplastic conditions of the liver. 870 61

The LEC rat is a mutant strain displaying hereditary hepatitis, and shows abnormal accumulation of copper (Cu) similar to that occurring in Wilson's disease. We prepared a multicellular spheroid composed of LEC rat liver cells to investigate the mechanism for abnormal accumulation of Cu. These multicellular spheroids were prepared by detaching the monolayer on the collagen-conjugated thermo-responsive polymer coated culture dish at a temperature below the critical solution temperature and culturing on the non-adhesive substratum. Long-term cultured spheroids of LEC rat liver cells as well as SD rat liver cells were attempted. Non-parenchymal cells obtained by collagenase perfusion from the LEC liver were fewer than those from the SD liver. Cells from the LEC rat, over 11 weeks of age, did not form a cell sheet; however, a mixture of parenchymal cells from LEC rats over aged 11 weeks and non-parenchymal cells from SD rats of any age yielded intact spheroids. We examined the toxicity, the accumulation and distribution of Cu in spheroids. The accumulation of Cu in LEC spheroids was higher than that in SD spheroids. Results suggest that spheroids consisting of LEC liver cells are useful as an alternative model to in vivo tests to investigate the mechanism for abnormal accumulation of Cu in liver.
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PMID:Abnormal hepatic copper accumulation of spheroid composed of liver cells from LEC rats in vitro. 874 89

Several clinical studies have suggested that excess hepatic iron accumulation is a progressive factor in some liver diseases including chronic viral hepatitis and hemochromatosis. However, it is not known whether iron-induced hepatotoxicity may be directly involved in hepatitis, cirrhosis, and liver cancer. The Long-Evans Cinnamon (LEC) rat, which accumulates excess copper in the liver as in patients with Wilson's disease, is of a mutant strain displaying spontaneous hemolysis, hepatitis, and liver cancer. We found previously that LEC rats harbored an additional abnormality: accumulation of as much iron as copper in the liver. In the present study, we compared the occurrence of hepatitis and liver cancer in LEC rats fed an iron-deficient diet (ID) with those in rats fed a regular diet (RD). The RD group showed rapid increments of hepatic iron concentrations as the result of hemolysis, characteristics of fulminant hepatitis showing apoptosis, and a 53% mortality rate. However, no rats in the ID group died of fulminant hepatitis. Hepatic iron, especially "free" iron concentration and the extent of hepatic fibrosis in the ID group were far less than those of the RD group. At week 65, all rats in the RD group developed liver cancer, whereas none did in the ID group. These results suggest that the accumulation of iron, possibly by virtue of synergistic radical formation with copper, plays an essential role in the development of fulminant hepatitis, hepatic fibrosis, and subsequent hepatocarcinogenesis in LEC rats.
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PMID:Hepatic iron deprivation prevents spontaneous development of fulminant hepatitis and liver cancer in Long-Evans Cinnamon rats. 877 Aug 63

The Long-Evans Cinnamon (LEC) rat is characterized by the spontaneous onset of acute and chronic hepatitis, followed by occurrence of liver cancer, and is thus able to provide a unique experimental model for human genetical liver disease, Wilson's disease. Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) is a potent hepatotrophic factor in liver regeneration, and its expression is up-regulated in response to liver injuries. We found that the plasma HGF level in LEC rats rose markedly during the fulminant hepatitis phase, fell during the phase of chronic/cholangiofibrosis, and fluctuated during the hepatoma phase. Immunohistological staining of the liver revealed that the number of HGF-positive cells increased remarkably during the fulminant hepatitis phase, and that many of these cells were localized at the portal triads. Fewer HGF-positive cells were observed during the phase of chronic hepatitis. The surface of the hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells and the cytoplasm of the nonepithelial cells in cancerous liver tissues were HGF-positive. The HGF-messenger RNA (mRNA) level in the liver rose in the fulminant hepatitis phase, fell in the chronic hepatitis phase, and was intermediate or high during the hepatoma phase. The expression of c-met mRNA was strong in the tissues of LEC rats with fulminant hepatitis and, especially, in the cholangiofibrosis tissues. c-met mRNA was also detected in HCCs. These results suggest that the HGF-c-met system may play an important role in the regeneration of hepatocytes as well as in the development of HCC in paracrine or autocrine mechanisms.
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PMID:Hepatocyte growth factor and c-met expression in Long-Evans Cinnamon rats with spontaneous hepatitis and hepatoma. 878 31

The aetiological agents responsible for, and the outcome of, acute liver failure were investigated prospectively in 44 children (29 males, 15 females) attending a tertiary health care facility in India. The children were between the ages of 2 months and 13 years. Studies for viral infections and other etiologies could be carried out in 40 patients. Specific aetiological labels were possible in 35 (87.5%) patients. Thirty (75%) had evidence of acute viral hepatitis. Acute hepatitis E virus (HEV) infection was found in a total of 18 children, with hepatitis A (HAV) in 16, hepatitis B in 5, and C in 1. Seven had isolated infection with hepatitis E, five with A, and four with B. Nine had both E and A infection. Superinfection of HEV was observed in a child with Indian childhood cirrhosis (ICC). Acute HEV infection was confirmed by immunoblot assay in all the patients and in eight of these, HEV-RNA was also detected in the serum. HAV was involved in 37.5% of cases with isolated infection in 10% (4 of 40). The aetiological factors associated with acute liver failure, apart from HAV and HEV, were other hepatotropic viruses (22.5%), Wilson's disease (5%), ICC (5%), and hepatotoxic drugs (7.5%). In five patients, no serological evidence of acute viral hepatitis could be found, neither did the metabolic screen yield any result. It was observed that enterically transmitted hepatitis viruses (HAV and HEV) were associated with 60% of acute hepatic failure in children. Mixed infection of HAV and HEV formed the single largest aetiological subgroup. In developing countries, where hepatitis A and E infections are endemic, severe complications can arise in the case of mixed infection. This may contribute to most of the mortality from acute liver failure during childhood.
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PMID:Acute viral hepatitis types E, A, and B singly and in combination in acute liver failure in children in north India. 880 Dec 80

Wilson's disease (WD) is an inherited disorder of copper metabolism, characterized by copper accumulation in different organs. The clinical presentation of WD is variable: juvenile cirrhosis, with or without neurological symptoms, fulminant hepatitis, acute intravascular hemolysis or late onset with neurological or psychiatric symptoms. The histological picture, the histochemical stains and the ultrastructural findings of the liver are variable in WD. The recent cloning of the WD gene and the report of several mutations (at least 25) of the WD gene suggest the hypothesis that the clinical and pathological variability of this disease is related to a genetic polymorphism. These data may explain why the diagnosis of WD is often extremely difficult for the pathologist, since histochemical stains for copper may be highly variable or negative, despite increased levels of tissue copper concentrations. The most important pathological data are: 1) the evaluation of liver architecture, relevant in the staging of liver disease in three stages; 2) histochemistry for copper, which is variable and needs the use of multiple methods: Timm's method is probably the most useful one, since it shows copper deposits even in the first stage of WD, when liver changes are often reversible; 3) the determination of copper concentration may be crucial in WD diagnosis; copper levels exceeding 250 ug/g of dry tissue are considered diagnostic for the disease; 4) transmission electron microscopy shows, mainly in youngsters, mitochondrial changes considered typical of WD; the ultrastructural picture may be diagnostic for WD in cases with not specific histology and negative histochemical stains; 5) scanning electron microscopy after osmic maceration may be a new useful tool in the study of this liver disease: this technique may give both panoramic and high-power enlargements and allows the localization in the acinar zones of the intracellular hepatocytic changes. Finally, only the optimal approach to liver biopsy, obtaining the highest number of histological, histochemical, quantitative and ultrastructural data, may allow the pathologist to an early diagnosis of WD.
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PMID:[The role of the pathologist in the diagnosis and monitoring of Wilson's disease]. 892 44

One hundred eighty-one consecutive patients with fulminant hepatic failure (FHF) presenting in a 2-year period were reviewed. In this cohort we examined the impact of pretransplant renal failure on mortality and morbidity following orthotopic liver transplantation (OLTx). Twenty-seven patients (18 female, 9 male) with a median age of 43.5 years (range 19-65 years) underwent OLTx. FHF was due to idiosyncratic drug reaction (n = 4), paracetamol overdose (n = 3), seronegative hepatitis (n = 17), hepatitis B (n = 1), veno-occlusive disease (n = 1), and Wilson's disease (n = 1). Renal failure was present in 14 patients, 7 of whom died (whereas there was 100% survival in patients without renal failure). Pretransplant renal failure was associated with prolonged mechanical ventilation (13 days vs 6 days, P = 0.05), prolonged intensive care stay (17 days vs 8 days, P = 0.01) and prolonged hospital stay (27 vs 21 days, P = NS). Pretransplant renal failure did not predict renal dysfunction at 1 year after OLTx. We conclude that the survival of patients transplanted for FHF is inferior to that of patients transplanted for chronic liver disease (67% vs 88% 1-year survival in Birmingham). For patients with FHF undergoing transplantation, pretransplant renal failure strongly predicts poor outcome with significantly greater consumption of resources.
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PMID:Liver transplantation for fulminant hepatic failure: importance of renal failure. 900 53


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