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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Antibodies specific for
cytochrome
CYP2D6, formally known as liver-kidney-microsome type-1 antibodies (LKM-1), are characteristically found in a subgroup of patients presenting autoimmune
hepatitis
. They are also found in some patients with chronic HCV infection. These autoantibodies are usually detected by indirect immunofluorescence, immunoblotting and ELISA tests. In an attempt to set up a more sensitive detection assay we developed a quantitative immunoprecipitation radioligand assay using a 35S-methionine-labelled CYP2D6 antigen obtained by in vitro transcription and translation synthesis. All 16 sera from AIH-2 patients strongly bound to this CYP2D6 antigen. Two of the nine sera (22%) from AIH-2 patients that presented only liver cytosol-1 antibodies also bound to CYP2D6. All 24 sera from HCV patients that were positive for LKM-1 antibodies by indirect immunofluorescence were also positive using this CYP2D6 radioligand assay. Lastly, all 15 sera from HCV patients negative for LKM-1 antibodies were negative by this test. The present results support the view that this quantitative radioligand assay is more sensitive than immunoblotting and ELISA CYP2D6 assays, and that it could be used in combination with indirect immunofluorescence assay.
...
PMID:A new approach to cytochrome CYP2D6 antibody detection in autoimmune hepatitis type-2 (AIH-2) and chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection: a sensitive and quantitative radioligand assay. 918 82
Drug-induced hepatitis is uncommon and generally unpredictable. Hepatotoxicity may be related to the drug itself, or to chemically reactive metabolites which can bind covalently to hepatic macromolecules and may lead to either idiosyncratic, toxic
hepatitis
or to immunoallergic
hepatitis
. There is now evidence indicating that genetic variations in systems of biotransformation or detoxication may modulate either the toxic or sensitizing effects of some drugs. Thus, the genetic deficiency in a particular hepatic
cytochrome
P 450 isozyme (CYP 2D6) is involved in per-hexiline liver injury. The deficiency in CYP 2C19 might also contribute to Atrium hepatotoxicity. Slow acetylation related to N-acetyltransferase 2 deficiency contributes to sulfonamide
hepatitis
. The genetic deficiency in glutathione synthetase may increase the susceptibility to several drugs including acetaminophen. A constitutional deficiency in another cell defense mechanism, still not characterized, seems to increase significantly the risk of hepatotoxicity with halothane, phenytoin, carbamazepine, phenobarbital, sulfamides and amineptine.
...
PMID:Genetic predisposition to drug-induced hepatotoxicity. 920 5
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) and aflatoxins are major risk factors for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) exhibiting a synergistic interaction in the development of this disease. The molecular mechanisms of this interaction remain to be elucidated but an altered carcinogen metabolism in the presence of
hepatitis
-induced liver injury is one hypothesis. The availability of biomarkers of aflatoxin exposure and metabolism permits this hypothesis to be examined in human populations whilst animal models, such as HBV transgenic mice permit parallel studies in an experimental setting. The hepatitis B virus X protein (HBx) is suspected to play a role in the hepatocarcinogenic process by virtue of its capacity to transactivate oncogenes and several other cellular genes via cis-acting elements. In previous studies in HBV transgenic mice expressing the HB surface antigen and X genes we observed a marked induction of specific
cytochrome
P450s (CYP) (Kirby et al., 1994a). In the current study we investigated the status of CYP, glutathione S-transferases (GST) and antioxidant enzymes in mice carrying only the X gene under the control of the alpha-1 antitrypsin regulatory elements (ATX mice). Livers of ATX mice showed no major pathological alterations compared to age-matched non-transgenic control mice. Immunohistochemical staining for CYP1A, 2A5 and GST expression and determination of related enzymatic activities (7-ethoxyresorufin O-deethylation, 7-methoxyresorufin O-deethylation, coumarin 7-hydroxylation and GST activities) revealed no differences between control and ATX mice. In addition, no differences in antioxidant enzymes were observed. Overall, these results support the conclusion that HBx expression alone is insufficient to induce transactivation of CYP and GST genes or to alter the antioxidant system and that the induction in other HBV models is a result of inflammatory injury in the liver, a feature absent in ATX mice. These data are compared to biomarker studies of enzyme activities in aflatoxin-exposed human populations with and without HBV infection.
...
PMID:Hepatitis B virus-induced liver injury and altered expression of carcinogen metabolising enzymes: the role of the HBx protein. 1002 19
Autoantibodies, markers of autoimmune diseases, can also be detected in chronic allograft rejection. However, the appearance of these autoantibodies in acute rejection after orthotopic liver transplantation has not yet been reported. Liver-kidney-microsome type-1 (LKM-1) antibodies directed against the autoantigen
cytochrome
CYP2D6 define a group of patients with autoimmune
hepatitis
type-2 (AIH-2), distinct from autoimmune
hepatitis
type-1 (AIH-1) in which anti-nuclear antibodies and anti-smooth muscle antibodies (SMA) with actin specificity are present in patient sera. Autoantibodies were studied by the quantitative CYP2D6 radioligand assay (RLA) that uses a radiolabeled CYP2D6 as antigen, immunoblotting using recombinant CYP2D6 protein and human liver microsomal and cytosolic fractions, and indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) using rat kidney-stomach-liver cryostat sections. In addition, the specificity of anti-SMA was detected by IIF on HEp2 cell line harvested with colchicin. This report describes the time course of CYP2D6 antibodies and the appearance of anti-SMA (without anti-actin, cytokeratin and vimentin reactivity) associated with acute rejection during a 2-year follow-up, in a patient who underwent transplantation at end-stage type 2 autoimmune
hepatitis
. In addition, we report a new reactivity against an unknown 40-kDa protein using a rat cytosolic fraction. The detection of autoantibodies in sequential samples may be important to better predict rejection or relapse, and to establish adequate therapy.
...
PMID:Autoantibodies associated with acute rejection after liver transplantation for type-2 autoimmune hepatitis. 1090 2
A 68-year-old woman, with type 2 diabetes mellitus, hypercholesterolemia, and prior long-term simvastatin therapy, self-resumed troglitazone after running out of metformin. She developed an acute severe
hepatitis
with microvesicular steatosis and mysositis. There was subsequent resolution of the myositis but progression of the
hepatitis
to symptomatic cirrhosis over a period of 12 weeks. Both troglitazone and simvastatin are metabolized by cytochrome P-450 3A4. Troglitazone typically induces metabolism of drugs metabolized by this
cytochrome
so that simple simvastatin toxicity seems less likely to have been involved. The association with myositis, the severity of the
hepatitis
with progression to cirrhosis, and the presence of microvesicular steatosis suggests altered mitochondrial metabolism, which has been described with each agent, as the underlying pathogenic mechanism. Although troglitazone (Rezulin) has been withdrawn from the market, other similar agents are available for therapy of type 2 diabetes mellitus. Increased awareness of a potential interaction between these two classes of drugs is warranted.
...
PMID:Myositis, microvesicular hepatitis, and progression to cirrhosis from troglitazone added to simvastatin. 1128 Nov 88
Pre-clinical studies were carried out in order to characterize in rodents the biodistribution, the binding specificity and the metabolism of [18F]Fluoroethylflumazenil ([18F]FEF), a potential candidate for in vivo imaging of the benzodiazepine receptors. In vivo competition with flumazenil indicates that [18F]FEF binds specifically to the benzodiazepine receptor in the brain. The accumulation of [18F]FEF was significantly lower than using [3H]Flumazenil. The rather low accumulation in the brain is due to a rapid metabolism of [18F]FEF in hydrophylic metabolites which cannot cross the blood brain barrier, and are rapidly eliminated in the urine. Inhibition of the metabolism by acetaminophen (chemically induced
hepatitis
) led to a significant increase of the radioactivity found in the circulating blood and in the brain, while these results were not observed using classical inhibitors of the
cytochrome
CYP450, cimetidine and ketoconazole.
...
PMID:Biodistribution, binding specificity and metabolism of [18F]fluoroethylflumazenil in rodents. 1157 2
The differential diagnosis of the three disorders that are usually classified as autoimmune liver diseases, namely autoimmune
hepatitis
(AIH), primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) and primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), requires careful exclusion of other causes of chronic liver disease together with the finding of suggestive patterns of abnormalities of serum biochemical parameters, immunoglobulin isotypes and 'conventional' non-organ-specific autoantibodies. Antimitochondrial antibodies (particularly those reacting with epitopes on the E2 components of the pyruvate dehydrogenase and other 2-oxo-acid dehydrogenase complexes), and some sub-specificities of antinuclear antibodies, are virtually pathognomonic of PBC. Anti-liver-kidney microsomal antibodies reacting with defined epitopes on the
cytochrome
isoform P4502D6 are relatively specific for a small sub-group of (so-called 'type 2') AIH. However, most of the other serological parameters lack specificity. Additionally, within and between each disease group there is wide variability, even among patients with comparable severity of liver damage. Thus, in many cases, liver histology and/orcholangiography is still required for definitive diagnoses or for assessing stage and severity of these disorders. A number of autoantibodies that are more directly related to the liver than the 'conventional' autoantibodies are showing promise as possibly more specific diagnostic markers of AIH. Commercial tests for some of these are under development and it is hoped that they will soon become widely available.
...
PMID:Autoimmune liver diseases. 1171 93
A boy presented with lactic acidosis, hepatomegaly, hypoglycemia, generalised icterus, and muscle hypotonia in the first weeks of life. At the age of 2 months, neonatal giant cell
hepatitis
was diagnosed by light microscopy. Electron microscopy of the liver revealed an accumulation of abnormal mitochondria and steatosis. Skeletal muscle was normal on both light and electron microscopy. At the age of 5 months, the patient died of liver failure. Biochemical studies of the respiratory chain enzymes in muscle showed that cytochrome-c oxidase (complex IV) and succinate-
cytochrome
-c oxidoreductase (complex II + III) activities were (just) below the control range. When related to citrate synthase activity, however, complex IV and complex II + III activities were normal. Complex I activity was within the control range. The content of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) was severely reduced in the liver (17% to 18% of control values). Ultracytochemistry and immunocytochemistry of cytochrome-c oxidase demonstrated a mosaic pattern of normal and defective liver cells. In defective cells, a reduced amount of the mtDNA-encoded subunits II-III and the nuclear DNA-encoded subunits Vab was found. Cells of the biliary system were spared. Immunohistochemistry of mtDNA replication factors revealed normal expression of DNA polymerase gamma. The mitochondrial single-stranded binding protein (mtSSB) was absent in some abnormal hepatocytes, whereas the mitochondrial transcription factor A (mtTFA) was deficient in all abnormal hepatocytes. In conclusion, depletion of mtDNA may present as giant cell
hepatitis
. mtTFA and to a lesser degree mtSSB are reduced in mtDNA depletion of the liver and may, therefore, be of pathogenetic importance. The primary defect, however, is still unknown.
...
PMID:Depletion of mitochondrial DNA in the liver of an infant with neonatal giant cell hepatitis. 1195 53
A population-based case-control study was carried out to investigate risk factors for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in Nagoya, Japan, including
hepatitis
virus infections, drinking and smoking habits and genetic polymorphisms in aldehyde dehydrogenase2 (ALDH2) and
cytochrome
P4502E1 (CYP2E1). A total of 84 patients with HCC and 84 sex, age and residence pair-matched controls were recruited for this study. By univariate analysis, hepatitis B virus (HBV) (OR=5.14; 95%CI=2.29-11.6) and hepatitis C virus (HCV)(OR=32.00; 95%CI=7.83-130.7) infections, having a history of blood transfusion (OR=5.25; 95%CI=1.80-15.29), and habitual smoking (OR=2.36; 95%CI=1.17-4.78) were significantly linked to cases; by multivariate analysis, HCV infection (OR=23.5; 95%CI=5.07-108.9) and habitual smoking (OR=5.41; 95%CI=1.10-26.70) were still associated with a significantly increased risk. The c1/c1 genotype of CYP2E1 (odds ratio [OR]= 0.45; 95% confidence interval [CI]=0.21-0.99), detected by Pstl and Rsal digestion was significantly more prevalent in the control group, while 1-1 genotype of ALDH2 (OR=1.24; 95%CI=0.70-2.20) did not demonstrate variation. There were no statistically significant interactions between habitual smoking/drinking and genetic polymorphisms of ALDH2/P4502E1 with reference to HCC development. These findings suggest that viruses, especially HCV infection, and habitual smoking are major independent risk factors, while genetic polymorphisms of ALDH2 and CYP2E1 have only limited contribution to the risk of HCC in Nagoya, Japan.
...
PMID:HBV/HCV Infection, Alcohol, Tobacco and Genetic Polymorphisms for Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Nagoya, Japan. 1271 71
Ethanol toxicity on liver is a function of duration of alcoholism, amount of daily intake of alcohol and patient's nutrition. The threshold of alcohol toxicity on the liver is about 40 g of ethanol daily in men and 20-30 g in women, however liver cirrhosis develops in no more than 8-20% of patients exceeding this values. Ethanol is oxidized in the liver to acetaldehyde--a compound considerably more toxic than ethanol itself. Despite small amount of alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) found in gastric mucosa, the metabolism of ethanol in this site may have an important hepatoprotective effect. The oxidation of ethanol is associated with a change of hepatocyte redox homeostasis, which leads to a number of metabolic disorders such as lactic acidosis, hyperlipidaemia and hyperuricaemia. Chronic ethanol consumption does not influence ADH activity, but has a profound stimulatory effect on microsomal enzymes, in particular
cytochrome
CYP2E1. This fact is responsible for development in alcoholic liver associated with rise of oxygen consumption, excessive production of free radicals and increased metabolism of ethanol, vitamin A and testosterone. Ethanol and acetaldehyde have a deleterious effect, both the direct and indirect, on hepatocytes e.g., generating radical oxygen species and damaging intestinal mucosal barrier. Cellular oxidative stress that is caused by both an excess of free radicals and the antioxidatives' deficiency (glutathion, vitamin E, phosphatidylcholine), may be the principal factor responsible for progression of alcoholic liver disease. Among other factors accelerating alcohol-related liver lesion there are certain drugs, high fat diet, infection with HCV and genetic factors (female sex, enzymatic polymorphic forms of ADH and ALDH, hemochromatosis). Great importance in pathogenesis of necrotic and inflammatory hepatic events is being attributed to portal endotoxaemia and cytokines induced within the liver, in particular TNF-alpha and interleukin 8. These cytokines play a key role in development of alcoholic hepatitis, which clinical severity ranges from subclinical to fatal forms. Apart from abstinence, the treatment of alcohol liver disease is based on hyperalimentation, since alcoholism is generally associated with protein malnutrition. In severe forms of alcohol
hepatitis
corticosteroids are recommended.
...
PMID:[Alcoholic liver disease]. 1290 Dec 71
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