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)

A 36 year old man with panarteriitis nodosa (PAN) presented over a certain period of time meinly with gastrointestinal symptoms. He was HBsAg positive and a "reactive" hepatitis with histologically demonstrated. Arterial microaneurysms and stenoses were detected by angiography in the liver, kidney and small intestine. These findings were confirmed by autopsy. Vascular occlusions had caused infarctions of the small intestine as well as necroses and ulcerations of the large bowel. Chronic ischemia is considered as cause of the patient's malabsorption-syndrome. It is suggested, that cachexia of PAN may be partly due to malabsorption.
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PMID:[Malabsorption caused by HBsAg-positive panareteritis nodosa]. 0 47

Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) is the most potent mitogen for mature hepatocytes and seems to act as a hepatotropic factor that has not been purified over the past 30 years. HGF was first purified from rat platelets in 1986. HGF is a hetrodimer molecule composed of 69-kDa alpha-subunit and 34-beta-subunit. In 1989, cDNAs of both human and rat HGF were cloned and primary structure of HGF was determined. HGF is derived from preproprecursor of of 728 amino acids, which is proteolytically processed to form mature HGF. The alpha-chain contains four kringle domains and it has 38% homology with plasmin. HGF mRNA and HGF activity increase markedly in the liver of rats after various liver injuries such as hepatitis, ischemia, physical crush, and partial hepatectomy. Production of HGF in the liver occurs in Kupffer cells and sinusoidal endothelial cells, but not in parenchymal hepatocytes. HGF mRNA is also markedly increased even in the intact lung, kidney, and spleen after injuries of the liver. Therefore, HGF may act as a trigger for liver regeneration through two mechanisms: a paracrine mechanism and an endocrine mechanism. Moreover, HGF mRNA increases markedly in the kidney after various renal injuries, thus it suggests that HGF may act not only as a hepatotropic factor but also as a renotropic factor. HGF receptor with a Kd of 20 to 30 pM is widely distributed in various epithelial cells including hepatocytes. HGF receptor was recently identified as the product of c-met protooncogene, which encodes a 190-kDa transmembrane protein possessing tyrosine kinase domain. HGF has recently been shown to be a pleiotropic factor. HGF stimulates growth of various epithelial cells, including renal tubular cells (Mitogen). It is worth noting that HGF strongly enhances motility of epithelial cells (Motogen) and induces epithelial tubule formation (Morphogen), while it strongly inhibits growth of several tumor cells. All these findings indicate that HGF may have important roles in organogenesis, morphogenesis, carcinogenesis, as well as in organ regeneration.
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PMID:Hepatocyte growth factor: molecular structure, roles in liver regeneration, and other biological functions. 131 69

In this study we examined multiple serial liver biopsy specimens from liver transplant recipients to determine the pathological features of hepatitis C virus-induced hepatitis. Hepatitis C virus infections acquired after transplantation and previous infections that recurred in patients after transplantation were confirmed by the results of the polymerase chain reaction. Of 43 patients infected with the hepatitis C virus, 18 had a mild form of chronic hepatitis. Four patients had hepatitis that progressed to focal bridging fibrosis or cirrhosis. There were no significant clinical or pathological differences between infections acquired after transplantation and recurrent infections (as determined by polymerase chain reaction) except that acquired infections more often developed into hepatitis. Findings indicative of hepatitis C infection included portal and parenchymal mononuclear infiltrates of varying degrees, acidophilic necrosis and swollen hepatocytes. Other common findings included lymphoid aggregates, bile duct damage and fatty change. Atypical pathological conditions included extensive hepatocyte swelling or acidophilic necrosis with minimal inflammation mimicking ischemia and ductal or ductular damage and proliferation with mixed portal infiltrates mimicking rejection or obstruction. We conclude that in transplant recipients infection by the hepatitis C virus usually produces a mild disease state, but the diagnosis of hepatitis can be difficult to make because indicators of hepatitis may mimic those of rejection, ischemia, obstruction or other hepatic infections. Serial biopsy specimens with persistent pathology and polymerase chain reaction may be necessary to define the presence of a hepatitis C virus lesion.
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PMID:Hepatitis C viral infection in liver transplant recipients. 138 15

The most important complications after open heart surgery are neurological, gastrointestinal (GI), and renal complications. New neurological deficits may occur in 1%, and neuropsychiatric alterations may be observed in 40%. In 6% peripheral neurological damage occurs. Endoscopy in all patients whose clinical history suggests signs of gastric ulcer disease, and perioperative H2-blocking therapy are effective in reducing severe GI bleeding to 1%. Small-bowel ischemia is a rare but high risk complication. Hepatitis due to homologous blood transfusion is as low as 2%-3%. Postoperative renal insufficiency occurs in 1% needing hemodialysis. Good hemodynamic condition during and after surgery reduces the frequency of extracardiac complications as well as the reduction of use of homologous blood transfusions for open heart surgery.
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PMID:[Non-cardiac complications after open heart surgery]. 149 16

It is not known whether the histopathology of the liver allograft can be predicted from biochemical measurements in serum with the same confidence as in the native liver. To answer this question we compared the histopathological diagnoses in 170 biopsy specimens from 70 adult transplant recipients obtained during the first 180 days, with the concentrations of the serum bilirubin and the activities of AST, ALT and alkaline phosphatase measured at the same time. The most frequent diagnosis was cholestasis (n = 45), which was mild, moderate or severe and which may have been complicated by rejection (n = 28) or ischemia (n = 14). Hepatitis (n = 14), ischemia with rejection (n = 6) and spotty focal necrosis (n = 6) were diagnosed less frequently. Fifteen biopsy specimens were reported as histopathologically normal. In general, biochemical measurements discriminated poorly between different histopathological diagnoses. The histopathologically normal liver often showed an abnormal pattern of enzymes and an increase in the serum bilirubin level. As a result histopathologically normal biopsy specimens were indistinguishable biochemically from those with hepatitis. When two pathological conditions were found to coexist (e.g., cholestasis with either rejection or ischemic necrosis, or ischemic necrosis with rejection), the effect on the serum biochemistry was usually not additive and in some instances returned the biochemical abnormalities toward normal. With the exception of the serum bilirubin level, which increased with the severity of uncomplicated cholestasis, we could not identify a specific pattern of biochemical changes corresponding to a given histopathological diagnosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Biochemical and histopathological correlation in liver transplant: the first 180 days. 150 12

In hepatic transplantation, the recipient and the graft must manage a difficult symbiosis. The causes that can unbalance the mutual adaptation are various, but the clinical-biochemical hepatic graft syndromes they produce are not specific. Morphological study of the graft shows a distinct pattern for each type of dysfunction etiopathogeny. Such study may find: (1) immune attack: acute rejection or chronic rejection; (2) technical complications in the biliary tract or in the blood perfusion of the graft; (3) nonspecific cholestasis secondary to graft cold ischemia or preceding development of chronic rejection; (4) recurrence of the previous illness: graft infected by hepatitis virus; (5) opportunistic viral infections (cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus, herpesvirus, adenovirus); (6) reactions to drugs and toxics; and (7) combinations of several etiologies. Morphological knowledge enables the pathologist to collaborate in hepatic transplantation programs: elaborating protocols, selecting patients, diagnosing hepatic graft dysfunction, and assessing program quality.
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PMID:The role of histopathology in hepatic transplantation. 152 58

Ischemic hepatitis is not an uncommon complication of reversible severe hypotension or cardiac failure. The prognosis usually is determined by the cause of the initial hypotension or cardiac failure, rather than the subsequent hepatic dysfunction. We report a retrospective analysis of nine patients with ischemic hepatitis in which previously unreported clinical and biochemical abnormalities are noted. The clinical and biochemical course of the patients were reviewed until recovery or death from ischemic hepatitis. All the patients had a rapid striking elevation of aspartate aminotransferase, and lactic dehydrogenase, with an equally rapid resolution of these parameters. Abnormal serum glucose levels occurred in six patients (none of whom had a prior carbohydrate intolerance). Insulin therapy was given to three patients for a limited period. Renal impairment was manifest in all nine patients, and it resolved spontaneously within 10 days. Altered mental status was detected in six patients; the changes reverted to normal within 7 days of their onset. A preexisting anemia (hemoglobin less than 11.0 g/dl) was noted on admission in four patients, and it did not appear to potentiate the manifestations of the hepatic ischemia. We conclude that ischemic hepatitis should be anticipated in all patients with a recent history of systemic hypotension. It should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients with unexplained hepatitis; the early massive rise in lactic dehydrogenase, the rapid fall in transaminases, and the early mild/moderate renal failure strongly suggest ischemic hepatitis. Patients with ischemic hepatitis can manifest reversible renal failure, mental confusion, and hyperglycemia which may require insulin for its control.
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PMID:Ischemic hepatitis: widening horizons. 848 Jul 56

Although the shock syndrome is recognized as a form of "mediator poisoning", a plethora of details is hardly converging into a coherent concept of chronological and molecular order. As a model for organ failure in septic shock, three alternative experimental approaches with a common pathology are presented: When galactosamine-sensitized mice receive either lipopolysaccharide or leukotriene D4 or tumor necrosis factor alpha they develop fulminant hepatitis within few hours with a lethal outcome within one day. Detailed pharmacological intervention studies allow to conclude that endotoxin-induced leukotriene D4 release induces a transient ischemia by the known vasoconstrictive action of this eicosanoid. A following reperfusion/reoxygenation phase gives rise to superoxide formation which inactivates alpha 1 proteinase inhibitor. Thus a serine protease becomes active which is responsible for the processing of a monocytic tumor necrosis factor alpha precursor to be released into the circulation after proteolytic cleavage. By this sequence the final central mediator of shock and sepsis becomes systematically abundant. The concept arising from these studies reconciles previously known findings and provides a link between the role of reactive oxygen species in inflammation, the balance of proteases and antiproteases in the extracellular space and the release of the cytokine tumor necrosis factor in sepsis and shock.
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PMID:Reactive oxygen species, antiproteases, and cytokines in sepsis. 179 93

Secretory component was assayed in serum and bile from 34 patients within 40 days after a first or a second (three cases) liver transplantation. Levels of serum secretory IgA and IgM and of a serum component referred to as immunoreactive free secretory component, identified by its reactivity with monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies specific to secretory component, were significantly elevated in all posttransplant patients compared with 45 healthy subjects and 10 kidney transplant patients (p less than 0.0001). The highest serum levels of bound secretory component and of immunoreactive free secretory component were observed in patients with acute rejection. The elevation of immunoreactive free secretory component was significantly higher in patients with rejection as compared with patients with a graft ischemia (p = 0.002) or an uncomplicated postoperative evolution (p = 0.01). The highest levels of immunoreactive free secretory component and secretory IgM were observed in a transplant patient with selective IgA deficiency. No significant difference was seen between the levels of serum immunoreactive free secretory component observed in patients with rejection and those of patients with cytomegalovirus hepatitis or sepsis. Immunoreactive free secretory component, secretory IgA and secretory IgM levels measured in the serum of three patients with primary nonfunction were lower than those observed in the other groups. Immunoreactive free secretory component bile/serum ratios calculated from 16 patients were significantly higher in patients with acute rejection than in infected patients. This study provides new insight into the mechanisms of increase of serum immunoreactive free secretory component, secretory IgA and secretory IgM in various types of liver dysfunction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Serum and bile secretory immunoglobulins and secretory component during the early postoperative course after liver transplantation. 195 52

Episodes of graft dysfunction are frequently observed after liver transplantation and can be due to different causes requiring specific therapy. In this study the usefulness and reliability of liver transplant aspiration cytology (TAC) for differential diagnosis of liver graft dysfunction is assessed. Out of more than 1500 TACs performed, 292 TACs, taken during episodes of liver dysfunction due to retrospectively defined causes, were analyzed. Immune activation and parenchymal damage in the aspirates were determined cytologically. In 63 episodes of acute rejection, marked immune activation was present in aspirate but not in blood, with varying degrees of hepatocyte damage and cholestasis. No or only minimal immune activation was observed in 86 cases of toxic, ischemic, or septic liver damage, but considerable parenchymal damage and cholestasis were observed. In 3 cases of hepatitis slight-to-moderate immune activation with large granular lymphocytes was found in the aspirate, while 17 cases of viral infection presented with slight-to-moderate immune activation in aspirate and blood. After successful treatment the cytologic patterns normalized, except when the cause of liver dysfunction persisted. Moreover, typical patterns of parenchymal changes were found for preservation damage of the liver (n = 108), fatty degeneration (n = 3), obstructive cholestasis (n = 5), and acute arterial ischemia (n = 2). One case of moderate subcapsular hematoma was the only complication observed (less than 0.1%). Thus, liver TAC is an easy, safe, and clinically useful method for differential diagnosis of liver graft dysfunction. In particular, differentiation between acute rejection and nonimmunologic causes of dysfunction is very reliable, but hepatitis and viral infections also present distinctive patterns in liver TAC.
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PMID:Differentiation of liver graft dysfunction by transplant aspiration cytology. 201 31


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