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)

The histological features of 24 pancreases obtained from patients who died of causes other than hepatitis, pancreatitis or pancreatic tumors, included a variable degree of autolysis, rare foci of inflammatory reaction but no hemorrhagic fat necrosis or destruction of elastic tissue in vessel walls (elastolysis). Assays of elastase in extracts of these pancreases showed no free enzyme, but varying amounts of proelastase.A review of autopsy findings in 33 patients with fatal liver necrosis attributed to halothane anesthesia, demonstrated changes of acute pancreatitis only in two. On the other hand, a review of 16 cases of fulminant viral hepatitis revealed changes characteristic of acute pancreatitis in seven - interstitial edema, hemorrhagic fat necrosis, inflammatory reaction and frequently elastolysis in vessel walls. Determination of elastase in extracts of one pancreas showed the bulk of the enzyme in free form. Furthermore, assays of urinary amylase in 44 patients with viral hepatitis showed increased levels of this enzyme (2583 +/- 398 mean value +/- standard error, Somogyi units per 100 ml in 13, or 29.5 percent). The evidence suggests that acute pancreatitis may at times complicate viral hepatitis. Although direct proof of viral pancreatic involvement is not feasible at present, a rational hypothesis is advanced which underlines similar mechanisms of tissue involvement in both liver and pancreas that may be brought about by the hepatitis viruses.
...
PMID:The association of viral hepatitis and acute pancreatitis. 507 Jun 94

The reason why similar amounts of alcohol consumption cause different types of organ damage in alcoholics is obscure. Recent studies indicate that hepatitis B virus infection may influence the development of liver cirrhosis in alcoholics. We investigated the prevalence of markers of viruses known to cause hepatitis (HAV, HBV, EBV, CMV) in two groups of patients, one with alcoholic pancreatitis without known liver cirrhosis and one with alcoholic liver cirrhosis without known pancreatitis. We found signs of past infection with HAV and HBV more often in alcoholics with liver cirrhosis than in patients with alcoholic pancreatitis or in age-matched controls.
...
PMID:Prevalence of markers of hepatotrophic viruses in alcoholics with symptomatic liver cirrhosis or pancreatitis. 608 3

Many hepatic lesions, ranging from subcellular alterations to malignant tumors, have been attributed to the use of anabolic steroids (AS) and contraceptive steroids (CS). These lesions that have been attributed to AS and CS are discussed with focus on the following: biochemical changes; subcellular alterations; intrahepatic cholestasis; vascular complications (sinusoidal dilatation, peliosis hepatitis, Budd-Chiari syndrome); hyperplasia and neoplasia (diffuse hyperplasia, nodular transformation, focal nodular hyperplasia, hepatocellular adenoma, hepatocellular carcinoma, and miscellaneous malignant tumors); and miscellaneous effects (effects of preexisting liver disease, cholelithiasis, and pancreatitis). OCs have a number of physiologic effects on the liver. These include decreased bile flow, diminished secretion of organic anions, and decreased synthesis and secretion of bile acids. Retention of bromosulfophthalein has been noted with AS during late pregnancy and in the puerperium. It is well established that the CS can lead to elevations of serum ceruloplasmin and copper levels. Subcellular alterations have been reported in both humans and rats on AS or women on CS and involve multiple organelles of the several systems of the liver. Both AS and CS have been implicated in intrahepatic cholestasis. Jaundice usually develops after 2-5 months of therapy with AS or after 3 months of OC use. The lesions attributed to CS and AS can involve any of the systems of the liver. At times more than 1 system is affected simultaneously. Most of the steroid related lesions resemble similar ones caused by other etiologies. Some, such as peliosis hepatitis, are rarely related to other etiologies, but others can be termed steroid specific. A number of diseases associated with the CS or AS also occur in pregnancy. Acute fatty metamorphosis of pregnancy and the periportal hemorrhagic necrosis characteristic of eclampsia have not been reported in patients on CS. Spontaneous rupture of the liver during pregnancy has not been attributed to the CS.
...
PMID:Hepatic lesions caused by anabolic and contraceptive steroids. 628 45

The autopsies of seven patients with disseminated varicella were reviewed. Six patients had acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and the seventh had Hodgkin's disease. All the patients were on chemotherapy at the time of commencement of their varicella rash, and at autopsy only the patient with Hodgkin's disease had residual tumor. The typical anatomic lesion of varicella was one of focal necrosis (often hemorrhagic) with eosinophilic intranuclear (Cowdry type-A) inclusions. In fatal disseminated varicella the complications most commonly encountered at autopsy were interstitial pneumonitis, hepatitis, necrotizing splenitis and lymphadenitis, esophagitis, enteritis, colitis, and pancreatitis. The most significant of these complications appears to be the interstitial pneumonitis, as the major cause of death is respiratory failure.
...
PMID:Disseminated varicella at autopsy in children with cancer. 632 Oct 8

Side effects of carbamazepine (CBZ), valproate (VPA) and clonazepam (CZP) are rare during long-term use but rather common and usually transient during the early phases of treatment. The usual side effects of CBZ are drowsiness, dizziness, and diplopia, which are dose dependent in long-term use, but CBZ does not seem to cause cognitive disturbances, as do phenobarbital and phenytoin. Other reactions to CBZ may include leukopenia, hyponatremia, disturbances of vitamin D metabolism and fortunately rarely, agranulocytosis and hepatitis. Use of VPA can lead to gastrointestinal discomfort, weight gain, hair loss, tremor and sedation, but these side effects are rather uncommon, mild, and transient during VPA monotherapy. Potentially hazardous reactions such as hepatitis and pancreatitis have occurred in a few patients on VPA, generally with multidrug therapy. Some of the side effects are dose related. They infrequently lead to withdrawal of VPA. Side effects limited to initiation of CZP therapy include drowsiness, ataxia, and behavioral changes; they are usually transient but can lead to dose reduction or even withdrawal of the drug. Except for development of tolerance, CZP seems to be practically free of long-term side effects.
...
PMID:Side effects of carbamazepine, valproate and clonazepam during long-term treatment of epilepsy. 642 98

The precision of CA 19-9 RIA kit was evaluated by recovery, reproducibility and dilution test with very satisfactory results. The CA 19-9 value in sera from 52 healthy individuals and from 224 patients with gastric intestinal cancer and other benign disease, showed an increased positive rate in several cases of gastric intestinal cancer. For example, the positive rate in pancreatic cancer, bile duct cancer, colo-rectal cancer, gastric cancer, esophagus cancer, primary biliary cirrhosis diabetes mellitus, liver cirrhosis and chronic hepatitis was 60%, 75%, 55.6%, 45.6%, 20%, 28.6%, 22.7%, 13.7% and 1.7% respectively. By contrast, values from patients with acute hepatitis, fulminant hepatitis, fatty liver, gastric duodenal ulcer, pancreatitis, and primary liver cancer were within the normal range. In this study, CA 19-9 RIA were found to be significant as an adjunct in the management of patients with gastrointestinal cancer, especially pancreatic cancer, and bile duct cancer.
...
PMID:[Serum determination of CA 19-9 in patients with digestive cancers and its diagnostic evaluation]. 658 10

beta-Galactosidase and associated activities (beta-glucosidase and beta-fucosidase) have been studied in rabbit and bovine liver and rabbit spleen. The physico-chemical (optimal pH, pI, MW) and kinetical (Km, Vmax, Ki) properties were determined for all the activities. Two enzyme forms were separated in rabbit spleen. beta-Galactosidase, beta-fucosidase and beta-glucosidase activities were catalyzed by the same enzyme in rabbit and bovine liver. The enzyme from bovine liver showed nonlinear double-reciprocal plots, suggesting a substrate-activation model, and the presence of more than one binding site in the enzyme. The enzyme activities of several glycosidases were determined in human sera fom control groups and from patients with diabetes mellitus, pancreatitis, hepatitis, cirrhosis, stomach and breast cancer, myocardial infarction and renal failure. The results show significantly different enzyme levels for several glycosidases in all the studied diseases. Experimentally-induced diabetes mellitus, alcoholism and nephrotoxicity in rats showed different glycosidase levels in several tissues, as compared with control groups.
...
PMID:[Glycosidases of mammals: association of activities and changes of levels in some disorders]. 681 36

A patient with nitrofurantoin-induced pancreatitis is described, representing the first patient with this condition to be reported in the literature. The diagnosis of nitrofurantoin-induced pancreatitis was confirmed by rechallenge. The clinical and biochemical picture cleared rapidly after discontinuation of the drug. The conclusion is proffered that nitrofurantoin-induced jaundice is not always due to cholestatic hepatitis, but can result from obstruction of the common bile duct due to edema of the pancreatic head secondary to nitrofurantoin pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Nitrofurantoin-induced pancreatitis: report of a case. 683 55

Perforation of the gallbladder is a life-threatening complication of acute cholecystitis that is often difficult to diagnose at an early stage. Standard radiographic and laboratory tests have not been reliable in identifying patients with this complication. In contrast, biliary sonography correctly diagnosed pericholecystic abscesses preoperatively in three patients with acute cholecystitis. The ultrasonic appearance of acute cholecystitis with a pericholecystic abscess was similar in all three patients. There was an extraluminal fluid collection located contiguous to a thick-walled gallbladder in the fundic region. The fluid collection was constant in location and could be seen in at least two different views. Two of these three patients had acalculous cholecystitis; the initial clinical diagnosis in one was pancreatitis, and in the other alcoholic hepatitis. Biliary sonography, by demonstrating a thickened gallbladder wall in the absence of ascites, strongly suggested that these two patients had acute acalculous cholecystitis, and not hepatitis or pancreatitis. The ultrasonic examination was a critical factor in the decision for prompt surgery instead of continued nonoperative management in these patients. These data suggest that not only can biliary sonography aid in the diagnosis of acute cholecystitis, calculous as well as acalculous, but can also visualize a pericholecystic abscess when it is present.
...
PMID:Ultrasonic detection of acute cholecystitis with pericholecystic abscesses. 701 38

Chronic alcoholism is accompanied by systemic involvement of the internal organs. Clinico-morphological forms of chronic alcoholism are distinguished on the basis of the prevailing organ pathology, Morphological data are presented, and pathogenesis of the lesions of the liver, heart, pancreas, and kidneys in patients with chronic alcoholism is analysed. The hepatic form may present alcoholic dystrophy, hepatitis or cirrhosis which are stages of progressing hepatopathy. The toxic and metabolic effect of ethanol is important in the pathogenesis of liver lesion. The cardiac form is characterized by the development of alcoholic myocardiodystrophy. In addition to the toxic influence of ethanol, hormonal and electrolyte changes and microcirculatory disorders play a role in its pathogenesis. Chronic calcifying pancreatitis in chronic alcoholism is associated with the effect of ethanol on the mediatory system. The renal form any present necronephrosis, hepatorenal syndrome, glomerulonephritis or pyelonephritis. Their pathogenesis is determined by toxicity of ethanol, circulation of immune complexes in the blood, or immunosuppression.
...
PMID:[Morphology and pathogenesis of visceral manifestations of chronic alcoholism]. 711 39


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>