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 mixture with essential and nonessential amino acids high in branched chain amino acids and low in aromatic amino acids (Fischer solution), and another synthetic mixture of branched chain amino acids containing 3 amino acids associated with the urea cycle (Hep-OU) were infused to control subjects and patients with severe hepatic disease. Alterations in serum aminograms, blood ammonia levels and electroencephalograms following the infusion were studied and compared with those obtained by a commercially available amino acid mixture. Short-term or continuous infusion of a commercially available amino acid solution to cirrhotic patients caused an increase in methionine, phenylalanine and tyrosine and a decrease in branched chain amino acids. These post-infusion results were similar to the patterns seen in hepatic encephalopathy. In cirrhotic patients, infusion of Fischer solution which contains small quantities of methionine and phenylalanine produced an increase in the concentrations of these 2 amino acids, probably because of impaired utilization by the injured liver. No marked alterations in serum aminograms, however, were observed in cirrhotic patients either immediately after, or 3 h after, the end of the Hep-OU infusion. Reduction of methionine, tyrosine and phenylalanine levels and elevation of the molar ratio of (valine + leucine + isoleucine)/(phenylalanine + tyrosine) were significant. The infusion of Hep-OU to patients with liver cirrhosis or subacute hepatitis resulted in clinical and neurological improvements and the restoration of the molar ratio of branched chain amino acids/aromatic amino acids.
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PMID:An approach to nutritional therapy of hepatic encephalopathy by normalization of deranged amino acid patterns in serum. 15 28

Encephalopathic patients with cirrhosis of the liver consistently showed elevated levels of the aromatic amino acids, phenylalanine, tyrosine and free tryptophan as well as methionine in serum, whereas levels of the branched chain amino acids, valine, leucine and isoleucine, were depressed. Comatose patients with fulminant hepatitis had markedly elevated levels of all amino acids, the results being greatly different from those of cirrhotic patients. Molar ratios of (valine + leucine + isoleucine)/(phenylalanine + tyrosine) decreased both in cirrhotics with and without encephalopathy and in cases with fulminant hepatitis. Infusion of a commercially available L-amino acid solution in a cirrhotic patient induced a strikingly abnormal aminogram documented in hepatic encephalopathy. Therefore, effects of branched chain amino acid infusion on the deranged amino acid pattern were primarily studied for the purpose of improvement in hepatic encephalopathy by normalization of serum amino acid patterns. Elevated levels of the aromatic amino acids and methionine could be apparently depressed in a cirrhotic patient by this type of infusion but not in a case of fulminant hepatitis probably because of the poor utilization of these amino acids in severely impaired liver.
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PMID:Serum amino acids in hepatic encephalopathy--effects of branched chain amino acid infusion on serum aminogram. 52 13

We discuss an infant with hepatitis and hypermethioninemia. An inborn error of metabolism, such as methionine adenosyltransferase deficiency or hereditary tyrosinemia, was originally thought to be the basis for these abnormalities. The infant's subsequent clinical course, however, was incompatible with such a diagnosis; the hypermethioninemia was instead due to the trilogy of prematurity, hepatitis, and a high-protein, high-methionine diet.
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PMID:Hypermethioninemia in an infant. 56 5

Aliphatic mercaptans (aethanthiol, methanthiol, dimethylsulphide) can be measured in serum with a simple and rapid gaschromatographic method. The test takes 30 minutes. Aethantiol was found to be increased ten-fold (P less than 0.0001) in patients with acute hepatic failure (endogenous coma), while in exogenous hepatic coma it was always normal or decreased. Mild increase in aethanthiol concentration (two or threefold) was also found in chronic aggressive hepatitis, cirrhosis and obstructive jaundice. Methanthiol concentration was elevated in patients with endogenous and exogenous hepatic coma. Values for methanthiol are, however, of only limited use, because methionine is converted in small amounts to methanthiol during the test procedures. Dimethylsulphide is found in only very severe cases of endogenous or exogenous hepatic coma and can be considered to be a prognostically unfavourable sign. Determination of mercaptans makes it possible to differentiate exactly between endogenous and exogenous hepatic coma. Its value also lies in the recognition of the severity of endogenous intoxication and it is suitable for serial and control determination of the effectiveness of therapeutic measures.
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PMID:[The diagnostic value of determining serum-mercaptans in liver disease (author's transl)]. 71 Feb 90

Previous work from this laboratory has suggested that the plasma amino acid pattern, known to be deranged in hepatic encephalopathy, may be related causally. In order to test this hypothesis, 23% dextrose and a special amino acid solution whose components were calculated to normalize the plasma amino acid pattern were infused in 11 patients, eight with chronic cirrhosis and acute exacerbation (Group 1) and three patients with fulminant hepatitis (Group 2), in amounts of up to 120 Gm. of protein equivalent per 24 hours. Plasma amino acids were abnormal but different in both groups. In Group 1 (cirrhosis) changes in plasma amino acid pattern including elevated phenylalanine, tyrosine, glutamate, aspartate, and methionine and decreased valine, leucine, and isoleucine. In Group 2 all amino acids were elevated, with the exception of the branched chains which were normal. Hepatic encephalopathy improved in all patients in Group 1 and in one of three patients in Group 2 following the infusion. The ratio (see article) showed an excellent correlation with a grade of encephalopathy. When this ratio, previously 1.0 in the presence of encephalopathy, returned to the normal value near 3.0 to 3.5, encephalopathy improved. An excellent correlation was obtained between the ratio and the grade of encephalopathy and was dose related as well. The results suggest that different amino acid patterns in hepatic encephalopathy of differing etiologies require treatment modalities which may differ for the two types of encephalopathy. Whereas amino acid infusion appears to be a valuable, efficacious way of providing nutrition in treating hepatic encephalopathy in patients with cirrhosis and acute deterioration and coma, other means of therapy such as plasms "laundering" appear to be necessary in patients with fulminant hepatitis.
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PMID:The effect of normalization of plasma amino acids on hepatic encephalopathy in man. 81 29

Plasma amino acids were measured in 18 patients with hepatic encephalopathy on a protein-restricted diet of 20 g or less daily. Plasma aminograms tended to group into two distinct patterns depending on the etiology of the patients' hepatic pathology. Patients with chronic liver disease with superimposed acute insults, i.e., gastrointestinal bleeding, infection, alcoholic hepatitis, had elevated levels of the aromatic amino acids, phenylalanine, tyrosine, and tryptophan, as well as methionine, glutamate, and aspartate, whereas levels of the branched chain amino acids, valine, leucine, and isoleucine, were consistently depressed. Those patients with previously normal livers and acute hepatic necrosis, i.e., "fulminant hepatitis," had grossly elevated levels of all amino acids except the branched chain amino acids, which were normal. Elevations of amino acid levels in this patient group tended to correlate with extent of hepatic necrosis and hence had prognostic significance. Additionally, the different patterns seen in these two groups tend to suggest the indicated therapy as well as predict its efficacy.
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PMID:Plasma amino acid patterns in hepatic encephalopathy of differing etiology. 83 96

Susceptible BALB/c mice, after experimental infection with mouse hepatitis virus 3 (MHV3), revealed virus titres in the liver that increased gradually to a peak of 8 x 10(5) PFU/g of tissue after 3 days' infection, when the mice died of acute hepatitis. BALB/c mice were infected with MHV3, subsequently labelled in vivo with 35S-methionine, and then the liver preparations from both infected and non-infected animals were subjected to two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Comparisons of the patterns by computer image analysis revealed 17 gene products which increased, and 8 gene products which decreased, upon virus infection in their two-dimensional gel spot intensity. We conclude that during MHV3 infection of a susceptible strain of mice, a major modification in protein synthesis occurs. The pattern alterations were not related to the virus gene products but were mostly endogenous mouse proteins. Whether these proteins are a result of a defence attempt by the animal, or are dictated by the virus in order to prevent a protective response from happening, remains to be shown.
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PMID:The pattern of proteins synthesized in the liver is profoundly modified upon infection of susceptible mice with mouse hepatitis virus 3. 132 65

Fulminant hepatitis shows characteristic imbalance of amino acid levels; increased aromatic amino acid (AAA) and methionine. Elevated plasma AAA may cause hepatic encephalopathy and BCAA-enriched amino acids solution (BCAAs). Glucagon-Insulin (G-I) therapy and artificial liver support system have been proposed to correct the imbalance of amino acids. BCAAs and G-I therapy correct the aberrant amino acid patterns and artificial liver support system, including plasma pheresis, and charcoal haemoperfusion has also been used to reduce plasma amino acids levels. While imbalance of amino acids level in fulminant hepatitis is a result of acute necrosis of a large proportion of hepatocytes, careful and sufficient management of the disease is essential to normalize amino acid profiles.
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PMID:[Imbalance of amino acid metabolism in fulminant hepatitis and its management]. 140 90

In order to determine whether acute toxic hepatitis in the rat is associated with an accumulation of methionine enkephalin in plasma and increased blood-to-brain transfer of methionine enkephalin, immunoreactive methionine enkephalin levels were determined by radioimmunoassay in plasma, cerebrospinal fluid and whole brain samples from rats with thioacetamide induced acute toxic hepatitis. Thioacetamide treatment was associated with an 8.7-fold increase in plasma immunoreactive methionine enkephalin levels (P less than or equal to 0.005) 24 h after treatment. However, this marked elevation in plasma immunoreactive methionine enkephalin levels was not associated with an increase in whole brain or cerebrospinal fluid immunoreactive methionine enkephalin levels. These data suggest that increased plasma-to-brain transfer of methionine enkephalin does not occur in this model of acute toxic hepatitis.
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PMID:Methionine enkephalin accumulates in plasma but not in brain or cerebrospinal fluid of rats with acute toxic hepatitis. 143 41

Gomisin A (TJN-101) is one of the lignan components isolated from Schisandra Fruits and expected to have some efficacies in clinical treatment of hepatitis. The serum concentrations of TJN-101 and Met. B, which was identified as a demethylenated substance and one of the major metabolites of TJN-101 in rats, were investigated. After intravenous administration at doses of 1.6, 4.0 and 10 mg/kg of body weight, the serum concentration of TJN-101 decreased biphasically, and the terminal elimination half-life at each dose was about 70 min. Dose-dependency was observed for the area under the concentration-time curve (AUC). On the other hand, the serum concentration of TJN-101 increased rapidly and reached maximum within 15 to 30 min when administered orally. This result was supported by the in situ roop method. The Cmax and the AUC values were not exactly dose-dependent, but the values increased with a dose-up of TJN-101. The biotransformation of TJN-101 to Met. B, was very rapid in both intravenous and oral administrations. The AUC value of Met. B after oral administration of TJN-101 at a dose of 1.6 mg/kg was relatively larger than any other dosages. It suggested that TJN-101 was extensively underwent the first pass effect in rats. More than 80% of TJN-101 was bound with rat serum protein in vitro and in vivo. Therefore, it seems to be necessary to pay attention when it was administered concurrently with high protein binding drugs.
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PMID:[Studies on the metabolic fate of gomisin A (TJN-101). I. Absorption in rats]. 176 54


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