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 clinicopathological study was undertaken in 15 cases of massive hepatic necrosis after shock. The GOT and GPT level exceeded 1000 units in 10 cases. The 15 cases consisted of 3 diagnosed as fulminant hepatitis clinically and 12 diagnosed as disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) or multiple systemic organ failure (MOF) from the unremarkableness of liver dysfunction. It was noteworthy that sepsis and surgery were closely associated with these lesions. The weight of the liver at autopsy ranged from 800 to 2,700 g. Liver necrosis was macroscopically characterized by clear demarcation of the necrotic areas sharply separated from the surrounding liver parenchyma, showing the appearance of so-called "map-like necrosis". Microscopically, the lesions in these subjects showed mainly the pattern of centrilobular necrosis. As observed in the burn shock case (case 12), the shock which provoked in different phases of time seemed to have repeated its attack. These liver necroses were considered to result from severe systemic circulatory disturbance or intrahepatic circulatory disturbance. The possibility is indicated that the generalized or univisceral Shwartzman reaction, and repeated and combined severe shock participated in the pathogenesis. Fibrin thrombi aggrevate tissue perfusion and accelerate anoxia. Heparin therapy seemed effective in these cases if administered at an appropriate time.
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PMID:Fatal hepatic necrosis after shock. 371 91

Up to 25% mortality occurred in goslings between 8 and 28 days of age in three sequential hatches from a closed breeder flock on a single farm. The birds died suddenly with minor ascites, subcutaneous and myocardial hemorrhages, and pale, mottled livers with petechial hemorrhages. Liver necrosis associated with intranuclear inclusion bodies was seen on histology. Virus particles were found on examination of the inclusion bodies with an electron microscope. Liver homogenates caused variable mortality 7 to 17 days postinoculation in goose embryos, some of which had hepatic necrosis and intranuclear inclusion bodies. Experimental goslings inoculated with material from these infected embryos died from hepatitis.
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PMID:Viral hepatitis in domestic geese in Saskatchewan. 609 9

Damage and necrosis of hepatocytes in viral hepatitis C is considered to be immune mediated as in hepatitis B. Hepatocellular necrosis accompanies infiltration of lymphocytes and this feature, called necroinflammation, characterizes all types of viral hepatitis and corresponds to the histological expression of hepatitis. Although the histological features of hepatitis C do not differ fundamentally from those of hepatitis B, there are some quantitative differences. Weak but constant necroinflammation and a strong lymphocytic reaction of the portal tracts appear to be relatively unique to chronic hepatitis C. Nearly all chronic hepatitis C cases do not improve during the natural course of infection; however, in a limited number of cases, interferon treatment can eliminate the virus leading to normalization. The pattern and extent of fibrosis can roughly predict the efficacy of interferon treatment.
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PMID:Pathology of hepatitis C. 752 20

Virus hepatitis and liver cirrhosis are found at high incidence in Asia, and they require not only biochemical examination of blood but also subsequent imaging, because they are often complicated by hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). It is, therefore, very important to know the specific appearances of hepatitis, liver cirrhosis, and HCC when we diagnose these diffuse liver diseases. Liver necrosis due to severe hepatitis is seen as high intensity on T2-weighted spin echo images. Regeneration is seen as low intensity on T2-weighted images. Morphologic and pathologic changes of cirrhotic liver are well demonstrated by MR imaging techniques. Fibrotic septum with inflammatory cell infiltration or rich pseudo bile duct show high intensity on T2-weighted images, and regenerating nodules shows low intensity. Gradient echo images show regenerating nodules with iron deposition as low-intensity nodules due to susceptibility artifact. MRI also has the potential to evaluate function of diffuse liver disease, cirrhosis, and hepatitis. MRI can visualize and diagnose HCC objectively. Dynamic MRI is very useful for diagnosing HCC. It is also applied for evaluation of effect after transcatheter arterial chemoembolization, because it shows enhancement only in the viable region at an arterial phase. MRI is less invasive and is thus an extremely important form of liver imaging.
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PMID:Hepatitis, cirrhosis, and hepatoma. 956 61

Concanavalin A (Con A)-induced hepatitis is a model for human T cell-mediated hepatitis. We evaluated the role of L-selectin and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) in this model by injecting Con A intravenously in mice lacking L-selectin (L-selectin-/-), ICAM-1 (ICAM-1-/-), or both (L-selectin/ICAM-1-/-). Blood and liver samples were collected 0, 8, 24, and 48 h after Con A treatment. Increases in plasma transaminase levels, which peaked 8 h after injection, were reduced significantly in L-selectin-/-, ICAM-1-/-, and L-selectin/ICAM-1-/- mice compared with wild-type mice. Liver necrosis was more strongly inhibited in ICAM-1-/- mice than in L-selectin-/- mice but was most prominently reduced in L-selectin/ICAM-1-/- mice, in parallel with decreased plasma transaminase levels. The reduced severity of hepatitis in the mutant mice correlated with decreases in numbers of liver CD4+ T cells but not numbers of CD8+ T cells or neutrophils. Following Con A treatment, L-selectin deficiency reduced liver mRNA expression of tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and ICAM-1 deficiency reduced expression of interleukin-4. By contrast, reductions in liver macrophage inhibitor protein-1alpha mRNA occurred in all mutant mice. These results indicate that L-selectin and ICAM-1 contribute cooperatively to the development of Con A-induced hepatitis by regulating leukocyte infiltration and subsequent cytokine production.
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PMID:L-selectin and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 regulate the development of Concanavalin A-induced liver injury. 1646 40

Drug-induced hepatotoxicity is a major cause of hepatocellular injury in patients admitting to emergency services with acute liver failure. Hepatic necrosis may be at varying degrees from mild elevations in transaminases to fulminant hepatitis, and even death. The case of a 53-year-old female patient with toxic hepatitis due to levofloxacin and multiple organ failure secondary to toxic hepatitis is presented. Patient suffered itching, redness, and rash after receiving a single dose of 750 mg of levofloxacin tablets for pulmonary infection 10 days ago. Skin lesions had regressed within 3 days, but desquamation formed all over the body. After the fifth day of drug intake, complaints of abdominal pain, vomiting, and yellowing in skin color had started. The patient was referred to our emergency department with these complaints 10 days after drug intake. Patient was thought as a candidate for liver transplant, but cardiopulmonary arrest occurred, and the patient died before she could be referred to a transplant center. This case is important because hepatotoxicity and death due to levofloxacin is uncommon in the literature.
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PMID:Levofloxacin-induced hepatotoxicity and death. 2406 76

Yellow phosphorous (YP) is the toxic form of elemental phosphorous and the chief constituent of firecrackers and rodenticides. In India, the rodenticide paste is frequently used for the suicidal purpose. This study is an autopsy-based observational study which describes the histopathological features of heart, lungs, liver, and kidney of fatal cases of YP poisoning. The most common autopsy features in the viscera were congestion and petechial hemorrhage. The liver histopathology findings were microvesicular steatosis (68%), hepatic necrosis (62%), macrovesicular steatosis (50%), inflammatory cells (46%), sinusoidal congestion (40%), cholestasis (32%), and toxic hepatitis (18%). Hepatic necrosis ranged from being focal to centrizonal in distribution. Congestion was the most common feature observed in the lungs and the kidney. This is the largest autopsy-based study on YP poisoning till date. The histopathological features of liver were consistent with YP poisoning whereas the findings of heart, lungs, and kidney were nonspecific in nature.
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PMID:Histopathological Profile In Fatal Yellow Phosphorous Poisoning. 3031 72