Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The majority of epidemiological studies on the benefits and risks of oral contraceptive (OC) use have been conducted during the late 1960s and early 1970s when OCs had 50 mcg of estrogen. Based on these studies, the risk of death due to OC use for nonsmokers 35-39 years old was lower than using no contraceptive at all (14.1 deaths/100,000 women/year vs. 25.7 deaths/100,000 women/year). In addition to smoking, other contraindications include women with a history of angina, myocardial infarction, blood clots or stroke, estrogen dependent cancer, hypertension, a known
lipid disorder
, and women with
hepatitis
or cirrhosis of the liver. Suitable 35 year old candidates for OC use would be nonsmokers with blood group O, at low risk for cardiovascular disease, and who might receive additional benefits, including those with severe dysmenorrhea or hypermenorrhea and possibly those who have a strong family history of osteoporosis, early menopause, or ovarian cancer. Practitioners should take a thorough history of these women and give a physical examination with a blood pressure check. They should also administer screening tests, such as a PAP test, mammograms, a lipoprotein profile, and a glucose test. After the practitioners have deemed these women to be healthy based on the examination and the results of the screening test, they then should prescribe only a low dose OC containing 50 mcg of estrogen. Today most estrogen based OCs contain 35 mcg and research on their effects have not yet begun. Scientists expect to find that the dose response effects for risks for thromboembolism, myocardial infarction, stroke, and gallbladder disease to be lower in users of the low dose preparations.
...
PMID:Risks and benefits of oral contraceptive use in women over 35. 323 16
Lipid metabolism disorders
related to viral etiology are described in chronic viral hepatitis, independent of age, gender and liver synthetic function. Steatosis is present, especially in chronic hepatitis C but also in chronic hepatitis B. Although liver biopsy is the gold standard in determining presence of steatosis, its presence can be determined by ultrasonographic examination as an initial screening test. Our aim in this study was to evaluate the presence of steatosis in chronic hepatitis B and C, to determine its frequency in both
hepatitis
type, and to explore possible relationships between presence of steatosis, lipid metabolism disorders and viral etiology. Our study lot included 66 patients, 36 subjects with chronic hepatitis C, and 30 with chronic hepatitis B. We only encountered significant levels of steatosis in the chronic hepatitis B sub-group. We found the average age, cholesterol, triglyceride, HDL-C, VLDL-C levels in the group with steatosis to be significantly higher than those in the group without steatosis (p < 0.05). Ultrasound reports of hepatic steatosis were particularly associated with histological inflammation, as well as fibrosis; however, the sensitivity and specificity of steatosis on ultrasound was poor when compared to steatosis on biopsy. Hepatic steatosis was significantly more frequent in chronic hepatitis C than in chronic hepatitis B. Severe inflammation and advanced fibrosis were more frequently found in HCV-infected patients with steatosis than in patients without steatosis.
...
PMID:Steatosis and serum lipid patterns in patients with chronic viral hepatitis: differences related to viral etiology. 2080 28
Because of the absence of the time course of histological nonalcoholic fatty
hepatitis
with subsequent fibrotic progression, the effective approaches available for controlling the onset and progression of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) remain limited. Therefore, we detected the serum and liver tissue related
lipid metabolism disorder
, liver pathology and relative molecular makers alteration dynamically in a high fat-sucrose diet during different time points. High fat-sucrose diet significantly increased the serum lipid level on day 10. The excess lipid accumulation in liver was referred to as simple steatosis after the feeding of a high fat-sucrose diet for 20 days. The high fat-sucrose diet induced a hepatic inflammation response on day 30. Similarly, hepatic fibrosis was also initiated on day 30 and gradually formed from the 30th to the 50th day. Oxidative stress may be related with the process from NASH to liver fibrosis. Insulin resistance was involved in the progression from hepatic steatosis to NASH with hepatic fibrosis from the 20th to the 50th day. In conclusion, we established a high fat-sucrose diet induced nonalcoholic fatty
hepatitis
with liver fibrosis rat model, which presented the time course of histological nonalcoholic steatohepatitis and the initiation and progression change of characteristic molecular makers in the process from steatosis to hepatic fibrosis.
...
PMID:Comprehensive Study of Multiple Stages Progressing to Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis with Subsequent Fibrosis in SD Rats. 2882 Apr 47
The flavonoid dihydromyricetin (DMY) is the main component of
Ampelopsis grossedentata
(Hand-Mazz) W. T. Wang (AG), a daily beverage and folk medicine used in Southern China to treat jaundice
hepatitis
, cold fever, and sore throat. Recently, DMY and AG were shown to have a beneficial effect on
lipid metabolism disorder
. However, the mechanisms of how DMY and AG protect the liver during
lipid metabolism disorder
remain unclear. In this study, we first analyzed the chemical compounds of AG by HPLC-DAD-ESI-IT-TOF-MS
n
. Of the 31 compounds detected, 29 were identified based on previous results. Then, the effects of DMY and AG on high-fat diet hamster livers were studied and the metabolite levels and metabolic pathway activity of the liver were explored by
1
H NMR metabolomics. Compared to the high-fat diet group, supplementation of AG and DMY attenuated the high-fat-induced increase in body weight, liver lipid deposition, serum triglycerides and total cholesterol levels, and normalized endogenous metabolite concentrations. PCA and PLS-DA score plots demonstrated that while the metabolic profiles of hamsters fed a high-fat diet supplemented with DMY or AG were both far from those of hamsters fed a normal diet or a high-fat diet alone, they were similar to each other. Our data suggest that the underlying mechanism of the protective effect of DMY and AG might be related to an attenuation of the deleterious effect of high-fat diet-induced hyperlipidemia on multiple metabolic pathways including amino acid metabolism, ketone body metabolism, energy metabolism, tricarboxylic acid cycle, and enhanced fatty acid oxidation.
...
PMID:Metabolomics of the Protective Effect of
Ampelopsis grossedentata
and Its Major Active Compound Dihydromyricetin on the Liver of High-Fat Diet Hamster. 3207 9