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)

Jaundice develops in many patients with liver metastases from colorectal adenocarcinoma during hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy (HAIC). The usual cause is thought to be hepatotoxicity from the chemotherapeutic agent or biliary obstruction from progressive neoplastic disease. The authors evaluated the abdominal computed tomography and ultrasound examinations performed on 49 patients who were jaundiced during long-term HAIC. In only one patient was diffuse intrahepatic biliary dilatation caused by an obstructing mass in the porta. Two patients had metastatic hepatic lesions causing focal biliary obstruction. Intrahepatic dilatation without an obstructing mass occurred in 20 patients. Percutaneous or endoscopic cholangiograms were commonly interpreted prospectively as showing extrinsic compression by metastases, but no mass was confirmed on imaging studies. Seven patients had focal intrahepatic ductal dilatation from stricture without an associated mass. The remaining 19 patients had normal-caliber ducts; their jaundice was caused by chemical hepatitis. This series suggests that the most common causes of jaundice in these patients are chemical hepatitis and common bile duct stricture, complications of intraarterial chemotherapy, rather than neoplastic obstruction. Stricture formation may be confused with extrinsic compression on direct cholangiograms.
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PMID:Causes of jaundice during hepatic artery infusion chemotherapy. 294 26

Lipid molecules in lipoprotein surfaces exchange with their counterparts in cell plasma membranes. In human or experimental liver disease, plasma lipoprotein surfaces are enriched in cholesterol and deficient in arachidonate; corresponding alterations occur in membrane lipids of erythrocytes. To determine whether similar changes take place in membranes of nucleated cells, the lipid content of plasma and of erythrocyte, liver and kidney membranes was measured in rats with acute (3-day) galactosamine-induced hepatitis or chronic (3-week) biliary obstruction. In both models of liver injury the cholesterol:phospholipid ratio in plasma and in erythrocytes was significantly increased (P less than 0.001). Although this ratio was also elevated in liver and kidney microsomes, only in liver microsomes of obstructed rats was the increase significant (P less than 0.001). However, the cholesterol:phospholipid ratio of kidney brush-border membranes, was significantly higher in bile-duct-ligated rats; presumably, compensating mechanisms limit cholesterol accumulation in intracellular membranes. Kidney brush-border membranes from obstructed rats were deficient in arachidonate as were plasma and erythrocytes. However, arachidonate levels were unchanged in kidney microsomes; renal delta 6-desaturase, the rate-limiting enzyme in the conversion of linoleic acid to arachidonic acid, was increased by 50% (P less than 0.001) and may have counteracted a reduced supply of exogenous lipoprotein arachidonate. We conclude that in experimental liver disease lipoprotein-induced lipid abnormalities can occur in renal membranes, although compensatory mechanisms may operate; the alterations seen, cholesterol accumulation and arachidonate depletion, would be expected to interfere with sodium transport and prostaglandin production, respectively. Our findings support the hypothesis that lipid abnormalities in kidney membranes contribute to the renal dysfunction which is a frequent complication of human liver disease.
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PMID:Membrane lipid changes in erythrocytes, liver and kidney in acute and chronic experimental liver disease in rats. 379 May 85

In a 5-year period, 92 patients with biliary obstruction proximal to the pancreatic segment were evaluated with computed tomography (CT). Seventy-three were judged to have technically optimal studies. Observations of the level of obstruction were compared with data from 50 percutaneous transhepatic cholangiograms; CT data enabled the level of obstruction to be correctly predicted in 46. CT enabled correct prediction of the distribution of obstructing lesions in all 18 patients with intrahepatic obstruction. Forty-four of the 73 patients had pathologic examination of the porta hepatitis. CT findings of obstructing mass and lesser omental nodes resulted in correct prediction of malignancy in 25 (92%) of 27 patients; the absence of such findings enabled correct prediction of benign disease in 13 (77%) of 17 individuals. CT is most valuable as a noninvasive means of planning surgical or radiologic drainage procedures in patients with biliary obstruction.
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PMID:Suprapancreatic biliary obstruction: CT evaluation. 382 56

The pathologic specimens (n = 118) and hospital course pertinent to each of 62 adult liver allograft recipients were reviewed. Biopsies and retransplanted organs were obtained at the discretion of the surgical team on the basis of the postoperative clinical course (less than 1 day to greater than 12 years after transplantation), and final interpretation of the pathologic material was based on a correlation of all available data. Most of the specimens (n = 85) were obtained within the first 2 months, and diagnoses in this time period included rejection, biliary obstruction/cholangitis, vascular injury, herpesvirus and cytomegalovirus hepatitis, graft necrosis, and functional cholestasis. Thereafter, rejection and recurrent or primary viral hepatitis were the major causes of graft dysfunction. Histologically, hepatic rejection is manifested by a cellular mediated injury of hepatocytes and bile ductules and a spectrum of vascular lesions in medium-sized hilar arteries. Morphologic changes of biliary duct obstruction and viral liver disease were at times difficult to differentiate from rejection. Two pretransplant disorders, type B viral hepatitis and the Budd-Chiari syndrome, recurred in grafted organs. Although interpretation of pathologic material may be difficult at times, it frequently is helpful in planning an approach to management of liver allograft recipients.
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PMID:Pathology of hepatic transplantation: A review of 62 adult allograft recipients immunosuppressed with a cyclosporine/steroid regimen. 388 Oct 37

Presenting characteristics, long-term outcome, and techniques used in the diagnosis of 143 infants with suspected biliary obstruction are reviewed. Sixty-nine patients had surgically confirmed extrahepatic disease and 74 had intrahepatic disorders. A disproportionate number of infants with intrahepatic disease were boys (p = 0.013), low birthweight (p = 0.001), or had siblings with liver disease (p = 0.017). An initial total bilirubin of 20 mg/dl or greater was rare except in the intrahepatic disease category of neonatal hepatitis of known cause (p = 0.006). The initial percutaneous liver biopsy correctly predicted the ultimate diagnosis in 94 percent of all 143 patients. A methodological outline to diagnosis is presented, emphasizing early recognition of symptoms and careful follow-up with hepatobiliary imaging, liver biopsy, and surgical exploration, if required, until definitive diagnosis is made. This approach has aided us in reducing the age of diagnosis of biliary atresia from 12.8 +/- SD 7.3 weeks during the period 1971 through 1979 to 6.8 +/- SD 2.6 weeks from 1980 to 1982 (p = 0.0015). Eighteen-month survival has improved from 25 to 60 percent.
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PMID:Guide to early diagnosis of biliary obstruction in infancy. Review of 143 cases. 399 60

An abnormal lipoprotein, containing a high proportion of unesterified cholesterol and phospholipid, has previously been described as occurring in the serum of patients with obstructive jaundice, and has been called lipoprotein X. Using an immunoelectrophoretic method for the detection of lipoprotein X in serum, the sera of 97 patients with liver disease have been screened and the associated biochemical features measured.Lipoprotein X was found in 45% of cases of liver disease with cholestatic features, and was not detected in cases of liver disease without cholestasis. The incidence of lipoprotein X in different causes of cholestatis varied, and while it was commonest in cases of extrahepatic obstruction of recent onset, occurring in 75% of cases, it was also found in primary biliary cirrhosis in 48% of cases, and in cholestatic hepatitis, less commonly.The cause of the appearance of lipoprotein X is unknown, but analysis of associated biochemical features suggested a relationship to physical biliary obstruction rather than a derangement of liver cell function.
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PMID:Occurrence of an abnormal lipoprotein in patients with liver disease. 551 83

Plasma levels of tyrosine were assayed in the fasting state and after oral administration of either tyrosine (tyrosine tolerance test) or phenylalanine (phenlyalanine conversion test) in normal subjects and in patients with hepatitis, biliary obstruction, or cirrhosis. Fasting tyrosine levels tended to be slightly increased in patients with hepatitis and biliary obstruction and markedly increased in patients with cirrhosis. Tyrosine tolerance tests in patients with cirrhosis were characterized by larger than normal increments in tyrosine levels and by delayed returns toward fasting levels. The results of phenylalanine conversion tests were abnormal in approximately one-half of patients with either hepatitis or biliary obstruction and four-fifths of patients with cirrhosis. Abnormalities were characterized by elevated fasting plasma tyrosine levels, or small and delayed increments in tyrosine levels, or both. Abnormal phenylalanine conversion test results in patients with cirrhosis did not correlate closely with any clinical feature of cirrhosis or with the results of any standard liver function test; there was positive correlation only with abnormal ammonia tolerance, a test of portalsystemic shunting. Tests of tyrosine metabolism do not appear to be useful for routine clinical assessment of liver function. Tyrosine tolerance tests and phenylalanine conversion tests done for purposes of diagnosis of other diseases may yield misleading results in patients with liver disease.
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PMID:Tyrosine metabolism in patients with liver disease. 607 4

Early surgical intervention in cases of extrahepatic biliary atresia improves prognosis. The ratio of serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase to SGOT is elevated in infants with infantile obstructive cholangiopathy. This appears to be a sensitive method for distinguishing infants with extrahepatic biliary atresis from those with neonatal hepatitis. This distinction was evident as early as 5 to 14 days of age and was clearly manifest in ten of 12 infants with biliary atresia. The ratio was also elevated in patients with alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency who had bile duct proliferation. We do not claim that the ratio can clearly distinguish extrahepatic biliary atresia from neonatal hepatitis, but we do suggest that an elevation raises a strong presumption of biliary obstruction and invites early consideration of laparotomy and examination of the biliary tree.
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PMID:Elevated GGTP/SGOT ratio. An early indicator of infantile obstructive cholangiopathy. 611 29

A prospective study of 101 Nigerian infants with conjugated hyperbilirubinaemia seen over 6 years shows that extrahepatic biliary tract obstruction, idiopathic hepatitis, and bacterial infections were the common causes. A firm diagnosis was based on clinical, biochemical and histological features when the patient presented early. However, most of the infants presented late and the superimposed features of prolonged cholestasis made differentiation of the probable causes difficult. Erythrocyte peroxide haemolysis test and laparatomy aided diagnosis in these cases. Seventy five per cent of the patients with sepsis treated with antibiotics, and 70% of those with hepatitis treated symptomatically, recovered. Surgery was successful in only 15% of the patients with biliary tract obstruction. These were those who had either diverticulum of the common bile duct, localized atresia or stenosis or in whom biliary obstruction was due to viscid bile.
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PMID:Conjugated hyperbilirubinaemia in Nigerian infants. 628 57

Ninety-six liver biopsies [32 bone marrow transplant (BMT), 7 pre-BMT, and 57 non-BMT] are reviewed for histological evidence of graft versus host disease (GVHD), based on bile duct atypia and related inflammatory changes. In addition, the presence of cholestasis, piecemeal necrosis, and attachment of lymphocytes to vascular endothelium (endothelialitis) are evaluated. The 57 non-BMT biopsies include examples of viral hepatitis (acute and chronic), nonviral chronic hepatitis, extrahepatic biliary obstruction, cytomegalovirus hepatitis, primary biliary cirrhosis, and orthotopic liver transplant rejection. Although the sensitivity of bile duct damage as an indicator of GVHD appears high (only one probable false negative was noted), there is considerable overlap between the changes of GVHD and occasional cases of acute and chronic hepatitis and extrahepatic biliary obstruction. Nine of the 57 non-BMT biopsies (15%) were felt to be consistent with GVHD and represent "false positives". Despite this relative lack of specificity, analysis of several features in combination provided clues to improve accuracy of diagnosis. The findings of extensive bile duct damage with minimal inflammatory changes is characteristic of GVHD. Possibly more predictive is the presence of endothelialitis of portal or central veins, which was seen in only three non-BMT biopsies, being present in eight cases of GVHD.
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PMID:Hepatic graft versus host disease: a study of the predictive value of liver biopsy in diagnosis. 636 48


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