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)

Two sister cases of autoimmune hepatitis are described. Case 1 involved a 49-year-old woman who suffered from bleeding gums and general fatigue. Her laboratory data showed a marked increase in transaminase levels, an elevated IgG level with titers 1:80 or more of both antinuclear and smooth muscle antibodies and thrombocytopenia. Histology of the biopsied liver revealed chronic active hepatitis with a moderate infiltration of mononuclear cells. A complication of idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura was determined based on higher titers of PA-IgG and a normal bone marrow findings. Case 2 involved a 54-year-old woman, an elder sister of case 1, who suffered from general fatigue with jaundice. Her laboratory data showed a severe damage of liver function and an elevated IgG level with positive antibodies to nuclear and smooth muscle antigen. Histology of the biopsied liver revealed chronic active hepatitis. Both patients were negative to markers of hepatotrophic agents. Under diagnosis of autoimmune hepatitis, they have been treated with prednisone followed by a significant clinical improvement. HLA types of two patients were Bw54-DR4 and DR4. Among 4 other siblings, the eldest sister suffered from rheumatoid arthritis. The occurrence of two sister cases of type-1 autoimmune hepatitis has rarely reported and the fact would support a role of enviromental factors besides genetic factors for the onset of this disease.
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PMID:Two sister cases of autoimmune hepatitis. 1009 83

Some patients with autoimmune liver disease present with a clinical and/or histological picture showing characteristic findings of both autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) and primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC). Various names, mostly overlap syndrome, have been used to describe these cases, which have thus far not been more closely characterized. The aim of this study was the comparison of 20 patients with overlapping features to representative patients considered suffering from typical AIH or typical PBC (20 patients in each group). We found these patients to indeed show a very mixed picture of both conditions biochemically, serologically, and histologically. However, closer analysis suggested that all of these patients were primarily suffering from PBC as all of them had at least either bile duct destruction on histology or anti-M2 positive antimitochondrial antibodies (AMA). We suggest that these PBC patients because of their genetic susceptibility, evidenced by the AIH-characteristic histocompatibility leukocyte antigen (HLA) type B8, DR3, or DR4, developed a more hepatitic picture. Response to immunosuppressive therapy was excellent. We propose that the name "overlap syndrome" be abandoned for "PBC, hepatitic form." These observations not only have pathophysiological implications, but also suggest that therapy of PBC should be guided by the degree of biochemical and histological hepatic involvement.
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PMID:Characterization of the overlap syndrome of primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) and autoimmune hepatitis: evidence for it being a hepatitic form of PBC in genetically susceptible individuals. 1009 50

The patient was a woman of forty-eight. Liver dysfunction was pointed out at the age of forty-five. She was admitted to hospital because of her hyperthyroidism. Her palmar skin was wet and her fingers were swollen like sausages. She had a diffuse and elastic hard goiter with a rough surface. The serum levels of free T3 (9.6 pg/mL) and free T4 (3.76 ng/dL) were high and that of TSH (0.11 microU/mL) was low. The activity of TSH-binding inhibitory immunoglobulin (TBII) was 89%. The uptake rate of 123I to the thyroid was 55.1% and the uptake pattern was nearly diffuse. The goiter was proved to contain several nodules by ultrasonography, but aspiration cytology showed no malignant cells. She was diagnosed to have Graves' disease with adenomatous goiter. She also had high ALT (34 IU/L) and gamma-globulin (1.97 g/dL). She had positive antinuclear antibody (speckled type), positive anti-ribosomal nuclear protein antibody, and positive LE cell phenomenon. The liver biopsy revealed mononuclear cell infiltration with fibrosis in the portal area. These data indicated that she also had autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) and mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD). The analysis of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) showed positive A11 which had been reported to relate to Graves' disease, and positive DR4 which had been reported to relate to AIH and MCTD. These results suggested that HLA would determine susceptibility to three distinct autoimmune diseases in this case.
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PMID:A case of Graves' disease associated with autoimmune hepatitis and mixed connective tissue disease. 1042 83

Despite a large number of T cells infiltrating into the liver of patients with autoimmune hepatitis (AIH), little is known about their roles or target antigens. To investigate the roles of these T cells in the pathogenesis of AIH, we have studied the clonality of alphabeta T cell populations in liver tissue by size spectratyping the complementarity-determining region (CDR)3 size lengths of T cell receptor (TCR) Vbeta-chain transcripts. Analysis of nine AIH patients who had the HLA DR4 haplotype showed clonal expansion in all samples. More than two T cell clones expanded in most patients. Although the expression of the TCR Vbeta genes was different among the nine patients, clonal expansion of T cells expressing either TCR Vbeta2, 3, 4, 16, or 22 was observed in two patients or more. TCR Vbeta4 clones expanded in 5 cases. Cloning and sequencing of TCR Vbeta CDR3 from PCR products revealed no whole CDR3-shared clones among different patients. In conclusion, several T cell clonotypes first recognize target antigens, then expand and accumulate in the liver of AIH patients. These suggest heterogeneity of autoantigens and the complexity of AIH immunopathogenesis in individual patients.
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PMID:T cell repertoire in the liver of patients with autoimmune hepatitis. 1052 87

The pathogenic mechanisms for autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) are not completely known. Susceptibility to AIH is associated with the human leukocyte antigens (HLA) class II: DR3 and DR4. Nevertheless, AIH does not have a strong genetic predisposition, suggesting that other factors are involved. Perhaps the strongest evidence of a viral cause for AIH exists for hepatitis C virus. AIH has been reported to develop rarely after acute infection with hepatitis A virus. We report on a 55-year-old woman in whom AIH developed during the convalescence period of serologically proven acute viral hepatitis type A. HLA class II DRB1*0401, which was reported to be associated with AIH with a moderate coarse and late appearance in life, was found in this patient. Steroid therapy was followed by a complete clinical remission. Our case supports the possibility that acute hepatitis A may trigger the development of AIH in a genetically susceptible subject.
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PMID:Autoimmune hepatitis in a genetically susceptible patient: is it triggered by acute viral hepatitis A? 1054 41

Autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) is a rare disease, characterized by female predominance, hypergammaglobulinemia, autoantibodies, association with HLA DR3 and HLA DR4 and a good response to immunosuppression. Different subtypes of AIH may be distinguished, based on differences in the autoantibody patterns. AIH type 1 is characterized by anti-nuclear (ANA) and/or anti-smooth muscular (SMA) autoantibodies. AIH type 2 is characterized by liver/kidney microsomal autoantibodies (LKM). AIH type 3 may be distinguished by autoantibodies to soluble liver proteins (SLA) or the liver pancreas antigen (LP). AIH-2 affects predominantly pediatric patients and is characterized by a more severe clinical course, a higher frequency of relapse under immunosuppressive treatment and a more frequent progression to cirrhosis. In contrast, AIH types 1 and 3 show a higher age of onset and a better long-term response to immunosuppressive treatment. At present, the treatment of choice is prednisone alone or a combination with prednisone and azathioprine. Both treatment protocols show high survival rates. However, a rate of 13% of treatment failures and the failure to induce permanent remission in most patients underlines the urgent need to develop additional treatment regimens. A yet unknown genetic predisposition is believed to act as the underlying etiological factor in AIH. This genetic predisposition includes a few known risk factors such as the presence of HLA DR3 or HLA DR4, deletions of C4A alleles and female gender. Furthermore, it has to be postulated that defects in immunoregulatory genes exist. A model for such defects may be the autoimmune polyglandular syndrome type 1 (APS1), which results from the defects in a single gene, the autoimmune regulator type 1 (AIRE-1). Patients with APS1 suffer from mucocutaneous candidiasis and a number of organ-specific autoimmune diseases. Characteristic is a high variability in the number and character of the disease components in APS1, indicating that other genetic and environmental factors may strongly modulate the outcome of disease. Environmental factors may comprise chemical influences, such as nutritional compounds and drugs, or virus infections. Several drugs or chemicals were shown to induce hepatitis with autoimmune involvement, e.g. tienilic acid, dihydralazine and halothane. Adduct formation of an activated metabolite is believed to act as a trigger and to induce a specific immune response. Similarly, viruses were repeatedly shown to trigger autoimmune hepatitis. In virus infections, sequence similarities between viral and self-proteins may trigger autoimmune processes and the simultaneous presence of inflammatory cytokines during virus infection may further increase the risk of developing self-perpetuating autoimmune reactions which overshoot.
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PMID:Autoimmune hepatitis. 1072 4

The analysis of the immunogenetic studies on hepatitis C patients among the Caucasoid population of western Siberia has revealed a significant increase in the detection rate of antigens HLA-A10 and HLA-DR5, the combinations of DR2-DR5, DR5-DR7, DR1-B27 and the complete absence of antigen HLA-DR4, which is indicative of the fact that susceptibility and resistance to the development of the disease is associated with the genes of the main histocompatibility complex. In hepatitis of mixed etiology, B and C, a significant increase in the occurrence of HLA antigens: -A1, -B8, -DR1 and -DR3, as well as the combinations of A1-DR1, A1-DR3, A3-DR3, A9-A10, DR1-DR3, B8-DR3 is noted; at the same time a decrease in the occurrence of antigen DR4 and its combination with antigen HLA-A2 is observed.
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PMID:[The clinical immunogenetics of viral hepatitis C in a Caucasoid population of western Siberia]. 1092 85

Susceptibility to autoimmune hepatitis type I (AIH-1) has been associated with HLA-DR3, DR52, and DR4 antigens in Caucasian and Oriental patients. However, in Brazil, disease susceptibility is primarily linked to DR13 and DR52. In this highly admixed population, we find different DR13-associated haplotypes, presenting a unique opportunity to discriminate relevant genes within a tightly linked genomic region. To identify the primary susceptibility locus, we sequenced DR13 alleles of 39 patients with AIH-1 and 22 controls. Patients were almost exclusively DRB1*1301, but half of controls typed DRB1*1302. HLA-DQ haplotypes were varied. Oligotyping of DRB3 locus of all patients and also within the HLA-DR13 positive group showed an allele distribution comparable to controls, confirming that the stronger association lies in the DRB1 locus. On the other hand, if DRB1*1301 is the major susceptibility factor in our sample, the only amino acid different from DRB1*1302 in position 86, corresponding to pocket 1 in the peptide-presenting groove, may be important. We propose that peptide presentation leading to pathogenesis of AIH-1 may be quite stringent, but will also be affected by other strong genetic or environmental susceptibility factors, which would explain the various HLA molecules associated to the disease in the different populations.
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PMID:Analysis of HLA haplotypes in autoimmune hepatitis type 1: identifying the major susceptibility locus. 1118 27

To investigate whether sclerosing cholangitis with an autoimmune serology characteristic of autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) and AIH are distinct entities, we studied 55 consecutive children with clinical and/or biochemical evidence of liver disease and circulating antinuclear (ANA), anti-smooth muscle (SMA), and/or liver-kidney-microsomal type 1 (LKM1) autoantibodies. They underwent liver biopsy, direct cholangiography, sigmoidoscopy, and rectal biopsy at presentation. Twenty-eight were diagnosed as AIH in the absence and 27 autoimmune sclerosing cholangitis (ASC) in the presence of radiological features of cholangiopathy. Twenty-six ASC and 20 AIH had ANA and/or SMA; 1 ASC and 8 AIH LKM1 autoantibody. Similarities between the 2 conditions included most clinical and biochemical parameters and a lower frequency of HLA DR4. Inflammatory bowel disease and histological biliary changes were more common in ASC; coagulopathy, hypoalbuminemia, lymphocytic periportal hepatitis, and HLA DR3 were more common in AIH. Histological biliary changes were observed in 65% of ASC and 31% of AIH patients. Eighty-nine percent responded to immunosuppression. Follow-up liver biopsies from 17 ASC and 18 AIH patients had similarly reduced inflammatory activity and no progression to cirrhosis. Sixteen follow-up cholangiograms from AIH patients and 9 from ASC patients were unchanged, while 8 ASC patients showed a progressive cholangiopathy. One child with AIH and ulcerative colitis developed sclerosing cholangitis 8 years after presentation. At 2 to 16 years (median, 7 years) from presentation, all patients are alive, including 4 ASC patients who underwent liver transplantation. In conclusion, ASC and AIH are similarly prevalent in childhood; cholangiography is often needed to distinguish between these 2 entities, which are likely to lie within the same disease process.
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PMID:Autoimmune hepatitis/sclerosing cholangitis overlap syndrome in childhood: a 16-year prospective study. 1123 Jul 33

To determine if shared genetic risk factors for autoimmune liver disease affect clinical manifestations, we evaluated 271 patients and 92 normal subjects by DNA-based techniques. Genetic risk factors were intermixed in all conditions, and frequency varied according to disease type. DR4 distinguished autoimmune hepatitis (P = 0.0002) and primary biliary cirrhosis (P = 0.004) from primary sclerosing cholangitis. DR52 distinguished primary sclerosing cholangitis from autoimmune hepatitis (P = 0.0007) and primary biliary cirrhosis (P = 0.00007) and DR3 distinguished autoimmune hepatitis (P = 0.002) and primary sclerosing cholangitis (P = 0.0005) from primary biliary cirrhosis. Only the occurrence of DR4 in primary sclerosing cholangitis was lower than in normal subjects (P = 0.02). Patients with mixed genetic risk factors did not have distinctive features or manifestations of hybrid conditions. We conclude that patients with shared genetic risk factors do not have characteristic features nor do they have overlap syndromes. DR4 may be protective against primary sclerosing cholangitis.
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PMID:Shared genetic risk factors in autoimmune liver disease. 1127 Jul 78


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