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)

Tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) levels in plasma or serum were studied in 416 patients with liver diseases: acute hepatitis (AH, n = 30); fulminant hepatitis (FH, n = 36); chronic inactive hepatitis (CIH, n = 57); chronic active hepatitis (CAH, n = 39); compensated liver cirrhosis (cLC, n = 78); decompensated liver cirrhosis (dLC, n = 84); hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC, n = 64); advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (aHCC, n = 28); and compared with that of a control group (n = 106) of healthy subjects. The t-PA levels showed significant increase in patients with AH, FH, CAH, cLC, dLC and HCC, compared with normal controls. The abnormal rates in t-PA levels (higher than 8.3 ng/ml) for each type of liver diseases were 86.1% in FH, 46.2% in CAH, 50% in cLC, 85.7% in dLC, 67.2% in HCC, and 89.3% in aHCC. t-PA levels tended to be higher in more advanced liver diseases. t-PA levels significantly correlated positively with plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1) in AH, cLC, dLC, HCC and aHCC, and negatively with plasmin alpha 1-plasmin inhibitor complex (PIC), plasminogen (Plg), FDP, AT III and alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor (alpha 2-PI) in dLC, prothrombin time (PT) and fibrinogen (Fbg) in HCC. t-PA levels in patients with FH, CAH and dLC were significantly higher than those in patients with AH, CIH and cLC, respectively. Moreover, the changes of t-PA levels in the clinical courses of various liver diseases revealed that t-PA levels increased sensitively with progression of liver diseases or in advanced liver diseases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Clinical evaluation of tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) levels in patients with liver diseases. 131 84

Clinical, animal, and epidemiologic evidence indicates that exogenous steroids influence the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and a recent study suggested that parity also may increase the risk of this tumor in women. The latter hypothesis was evaluated in the data from a case-control study which was carried out in Athens and covered 166 male and 19 female cases of HCC, and 381 male and 51 female hospital controls. Among males, there was no association between the number of liveborn children and risk of HCC, whereas among women, there was a suggestive positive association. Compared with women with one or two children, the relative risk for HCC was 0.6 among nulliparous women, 1.3 among those with three or four children and 1.7 among those with five or more children. The association of parity with risk of HCC was limited to women who were positive for hepatitis-B surface antigen (HBsAg) and was not confounded by hepatitis-C virus infection or tobacco smoking. The small number of HCC cases does not permit firm conclusions. If confirmed, however, these results would provide the foundation for a practical preventive advice that could be given to women who are positive for HBsAg.
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PMID:Liveborn children and risk of hepatocellular carcinoma. 131 8

The presence of antibody to the hepatitis C virus was determined in 254 alcoholic patients with non-B chronic hepatitis and a titre of antinuclear antibodies of 1/40 or lower. Alcoholic hepatitis was present in 12 patients, steatohepatitis in 20, active chronic hepatitis in 22, cirrhosis in 181, and hepatocarcinoma in 19. Twenty patients had previously received blood transfusion alone or during surgery, 49 had undergone previous surgery without transfusion, a clinical episode of hepatitis could be traced in 14, 4 patients were drug addicts, 41 had received blood transfusion after the diagnosis was made, and 128 presented with alcoholism alone. Anti-hepatitis C antibody was found in 20 out of 2,000 blood donors (1%) in our hospital. Anti-hepatitis C antibody was found in 87 patients (34.2%) in our series, a figure unaltered by past medical history. Patients with anti-HC antibody had higher levels of AST, ALT, total proteins, gamma-globulin, and IgG. The incidence of active chronic hepatitis was higher among patients with anti-HC antibody, whereas the incidence of steatohepatitis was higher among patients without anti-HC. Regarding findings on liver biopsy, the incidence of anti-HC was significantly higher (p less than 0.001) among patients with active chronic hepatitis (72.7%) than in any other group; no significant differences were found between patients with cirrhosis (33.3%), hepatocarcinoma (31.5%), steatohepatitis (15%), or alcoholic hepatitis (16.7%). Among HBsAg-negative patients, the incidence of anti-HC was similar between those with (39.7%) and without other serum markers of HB (32.9%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Prevalence and significance of the C virus antibody in chronic hepatopathy not related to B virus in alcoholics]. 131 33

The presence of antibody to hepatitis C virus was determined in 316 HBsAg-negative patients with non-alcoholic chronic hepatitis who did not receive any blood transfusion once the diagnosis was made. A titre of antinuclear antibodies of 1/40 or lower was found in 18 patients. Persistent chronic hepatitis was present in 21 patients, active chronic hepatitis in 145, hepatic cirrhosis in 128, and hepatocarcinoma in 22 patients. One hundred and three patients had previously received blood transfusion, 76 had undergone previous surgery without transfusion, a clinical episode of hepatitis could be traced in 14, 13 patients were drug addicts (all of them HIV negative), 1 patient had received multiples injections, another had been treated with acupuncture, and 108 patients were free of any of the above. Anti-HCV was present in 76.6% of patients; a significantly higher proportion (87.4%) was found among patients who had received blood transfusion than in patients with previous surgery (72.4%) (p = 0.012), clinical hepatitis (57.1%), or without previous hepatic disease (70.3%) (p = 0.003). The incidence of anti-HCV was lower among cirrhotics (70.3%) than in patients with active chronic hepatitis (84.1%) (p = 0.006); in contrast, previous blood transfusion was significantly higher (p = 0.001) among the latter (40.7%) than in cirrhotics (21.9%). The incidence of anti-HCV was similar among patients with (78.6%) and without (75.8%) type B infection. Our results suggest that infection with virus C may account for a high proportion of non-alcoholic non-B chronic hepatitis.
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PMID:[Prevalence of hepatitis C virus antibody in chronic HBsAg-negative non alcoholic hepatopathy]. 131 34

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a multifactorial disease which requires multiple strategies for its prevention, including immunization against hepatitis type B. Given the link between chronic HBV infection and HCC, vaccination against hepatitis B preventing an initial infection and the development of chronic carrier state is also likely to prevent HCC. The percentage of HCC cases attributable to HBV, which depends on both relative risk for HCC associated with the HBsAg carrier state and prevalence of HBsAg carriers in a particular population, is much higher in HBV hyperendemic countries than in those at low endemicity. Thus prevention of HCC by hepatitis B vaccination should have the highest benefit in areas at high level of endemicity. Unfortunately, the poor health-care resources make the establishment of mass-immunization campaigns against HBV difficult in most of these countries.
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PMID:Hepatitis B vaccination: an important method of preventing HBV-related hepatocellular carcinoma. 131 89

Copper (Cu), iron (Fe), zinc (Zn) and manganese (Mn) levels in organs of LEC rats (Long-Evans rats with a cinnamon-like coat color), which develop spontaneous jaundice with hereditary hepatitis, were determined by instrumental neutron activation analysis method. Unusual accumulations of Cu in the liver of LEC rats were found, depending on the age of the animals, the metal concentration being more than approximately 20-40 times those of normal LEA rats (Long-Evans rats with an agouti coat color). Fe and Zn were also accumulated, in addition to Cu, significantly in the LEC rats. The unusual Cu accumulations in the liver of LEC rats were associated with the induction of metallothionein, estimated by radioimmunoassay method, in the liver of LEC rats, rather than that of superoxide dismutase, estimated by electron spin resonance -spin trapping method. These findings suggest that the unusual Cu accumulation in LEC rats is involved in the development of jaundice, hepatic injury and hepatocellular carcinoma.
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PMID:Unusual accumulation of copper related to induction of metallothionein in the liver of LEC rats. 131 72

Sera from 103 patients were tested for hepatitis C virus RNA by nested polymerase chain reaction assay. Using primers from the highly conserved 5'-untranslated region, we detected hepatitis C virus RNA in 67 (88.2%) of 76 patients positive for antibody to hepatitis C virus by both second-generation and neutralization enzyme immunoassays. Hepatitis C virus RNA was detected in 93% of patients who had been infected for 10 yr or less and in 89% of those who had been infected for longer than 10 yr. Hepatitis C virus RNA was detected in all patients with chronic hepatitis, active cirrhosis or hepatocellular carcinoma and in 50% of those with nonspecific reactive hepatitis or inactive cirrhosis. Hepatitis C virus RNA was not detected in sera from 22 patients negative for antibody to hepatitis C virus or in 5 patients positive for antibody to hepatitis C virus by second-generation but not by neutralization enzyme immunoassay. Using primers from the less conserved nonstructural region 4, we detected hepatitis C virus RNA at a lower frequency, in 66% of patients who were positive for antibody to hepatitis C virus by both second-generation and neutralization enzyme immunoassays. The detection rate was higher in patients with frequent parenteral exposure. Our study showed that hepatitis C viremia can be detected in most patients with hepatitis C virus infection, including those with long-standing infection or advanced liver disease.
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PMID:Hepatitis C viremia in patients with hepatitis C virus infection. 131 37

Woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV) is a small, partially double-stranded DNA virus. Like the related human hepatitis B virus (HBV), WHV induces acute and chronic hepatitis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in its natural host. WHV DNA integration into c-myc and N-myc, resulting in deregulated expression of these genes, has been described previously in woodchuck HCC. We have analysed a woodchuck liver tumour in which WHV DNA was integrated in the c-myc gene. The virus insertion provoked multiple alterations in one c-myc allele, probably involving secondary deletions and mutations. Integrated viral DNA, including promotor and enhancer sequences, acted as an insertional mutagen, leading to enhanced expression of heterogenous c-myc transcripts ranging from 7.2 to 14 kb in size, strikingly longer than normal 2.3-kb c-myc RNA. These results provide an additional example in which the oncogenic activation of a myc gene by cis-acting effect of WHV insertion may play a critical role in virus-induced woodchuck HCC.
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PMID:Multiple rearrangements and activated expression of c-myc induced by woodchuck hepatitis virus integration in a primary liver tumour. 131 4

Our purpose was to ascertain whether alcohol abuse is a risk factor for the development of hepatocellular carcinoma in urban southern Africa blacks and, if so, to relate alcohol consumption to other possible risk factors such as persistent hepatitis-B-virus infection, smoking, male sex, in this subpopulation. A prospective, hospital-based, case-control format involving 101 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and 101 controls was used. The mean age of the patients was 53.7 +/- 1.85 years and the male:female ratio 3.2:1. An increased risk was found, but only in urban men over the age of 40 years who habitually drank more than 80 g of ethanol daily. The risk remained after adjusting for chronic hepatitis-B infection, smoking, and sex (odds ratio 4.4, 95% confidence interval 1.3 to 16.6; p = 0.003). Smoking proved not to be a risk factor, either alone or in concert with alcohol consumption. Hepatitis-B infection was confirmed as a major risk in younger men and in women, but in urban men over the age of 40 years alcohol abuse was a greater risk. Current hepatitis-B infection and alcohol abuse were additive risks.
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PMID:Alcohol consumption as a risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma in urban southern African blacks. 131 67

We report the cloning and sequencing of the putative structural region of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) genome (2229 nucleotides) from an isolate derived from a British case of chronic sporadic non-A, non-B hepatitis. The overall sequence shows a higher similarity with one type of HCV, HCV1 (92%), than with HCV2 (80%), is very highly conserved at the 5' end (99%) preceding the long open reading frame, is well conserved also in the putative core region (90 to 97%), but shows marked variation in the putative envelope region, particularly in the envelope 2/non-structural 1 region (70%). The putative core gene was cloned in pJ3 omega under the early simian virus 40 promoter and expressed in human hepatoma cells. A predominantly cytoplasmic 22K polypeptide was expressed which was antigenically reactive with serum from chronically infected HCV patients.
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PMID:Cloning and sequencing of the structural region and expression of putative core gene of hepatitis C virus from a British case of chronic sporadic hepatitis. 131 44


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