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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Current strategies for treating hepatitis B focus on clearance of active HBV infection through suppression of viral replication by interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) and the nucleoside analogs (lamivudine and adefovir). Lamivudine therapy for 1 year leads to HBeAg seroconversion in 16-18% of patients compared to 4-6% of untreated controls, to histological improvement in 49-56% treated patients and in 23-25% controls. HBeAg seroconversion rates increase with the duration of lamivudine therapy from 17% at 1 year to 27, 40, 47 and 50% at 2, 3, 4 and 5 years, respectively. When prescribing lamivudine, drug resistance due to the emergence of tyrosine-
methionine
-aspartate-aspartate (YMDD) mutations that increases with duration of therapy and the potential risk of a severe flare of
hepatitis
with sudden cessation of therapy, probably greatest in patients with cirrhosis, are realistic concerns. After 48 weeks of treatment with 10 or 30 mg of adefovir dipivoxil per day, significantly more patients with HBeAg-positive chronic hepatitis B than those on placebo had histologic improvement (53, 59 and 25%, respectively), a reduction in serum HBV DNA levels (by a median of 3.52, 4.76 and 0.55 log copies/ml), undetectable levels of serum HBV DNA (21, 39 and 0%), normalisation of ALT levels (48, 55 and 16%) and HBeAg seroconversion (12, 14 and 6%). In HBeAg negative patients treated with adefovir dipivoxil (10mg/day) for 48 weeks, ALT levels had normalised in 72% (29% in the placebo group), serum HBV DNA levels were reduced to fewer than 400 copies/ml in 51% (none in the placebo group), liver histology improved in 64% (33% in the placebo group). No adefovir-associated resistance mutations of viral DNA were detected. Ongoing studies investigate combination therapy with lamivudine or IFN.
...
PMID:Treatment of chronic viral hepatitis. 1558 3
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease is the most common reason for abnormal liver chemistries in the United States. The factors that lead from benign steatosis to nonalcoholic steatohepatitis are poorly understood. Transthyretin-Abcb11 (TTR-Abcb11) transgenic mice overexpress the bile salt transporter Abcb11 and hypersecrete biliary lipids. Thus the aim of this study is to employ feeding of the
methionine
-choline-deficient (MCD) diet to TTR-Abcb11 transgenic mice to further determine the mechanisms responsible for the development of steatohepatitis. FVB/NJ and TTR-Abcb11 mice were fed control or MCD diets for up to 30 days. Serum aminotransferase levels, serum and hepatic triglyceride content, cytokines, markers of oxidative stress, and expression of selective genes were examined. MCD diet-fed TTR-Abcb11, but not wild-type, mice have elevated serum aminotransferase levels when compared after 7 days. They also have significantly lower hepatic triglyceride levels at all time points studied. After 14 days on the MCD diet, TTR-Abcb11 mice have 3-fold increases in TNF-alpha mRNA and 3.9-fold increases in IL-6 mRNA compared with FVB/NJ mice. TTR-Abcb11 mice also had a greater increase in cytochrome P-450 2E1 expression. A greater decrease in sterol regulatory element binding protein-1c and fatty acid synthase mRNA expression was also seen in TTR-Abcb11 compared with wild-type mice fed an MCD diet. They also have enhanced TNF-alpha, IL-6, and cytochrome P-450 2E1 expression. We conclude that TTR-Abcb11 mice develop a more rapid
hepatitis
with less steatosis.
...
PMID:Steatohepatitis develops rapidly in transgenic mice overexpressing Abcb11 and fed a methionine-choline-deficient diet. 1565 Jan 32
Alcoholic liver disease is a major cause of illness and death in the United States. In the initial stages of the disease, fat accumulation in hepatocytes leads to the development of fatty liver (steatosis), which is a reversible condition. If alcohol consumption is continued, steatosis may progress to
hepatitis
and fibrosis, which may lead to liver cirrhosis. Alcoholic fatty liver has long been considered benign; however, increasing evidence supports the idea that it is a pathologic condition. Blunting of the accumulation of fat within the liver during alcohol consumption may block or delay the progression of fatty liver to
hepatitis
and fibrosis. To achieve this goal, it is important to understand the underlying biochemical and molecular mechanisms by which chronic alcohol consumption leads to fat accumulation in the liver and fatty liver progresses to
hepatitis
and fibrosis. In addition to alcohol consumption, dietary fatty acids and obesity have been shown to affect the degree of fat accumulation within the liver. Again, it is important to know how these factors modulate the progression of alcoholic liver disease. The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism and the Office of Dietary Supplements, National Institutes of Health, sponsored a symposium on "Role of Fatty Liver, Dietary Fatty Acid Supplements, and Obesity in the Progression of Alcoholic Liver Disease" in Bethesda, Maryland, USA, October 2003. The following is a summary of the symposium. Alcoholic fatty liver is a pathologic condition that may predispose the liver to further injury (
hepatitis
and fibrosis) by cytochrome P450 2E1 induction, free radical generation, lipid peroxidation, nuclear factor-kappa B activation, and increased transcription of proinflammatory mediators, including tumor necrosis factor-alpha. Increased acetaldehyde production and lipopolysaccharide-induced Kupffer cell activation may further exacerbate liver injury. Acetaldehyde may promote hepatic fat accumulation by impairing the ability of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha to bind DNA, and by increasing the synthesis of sterol regulatory binding protein-1. Unsaturated fatty acids (corn oil, fish oil) exacerbate alcoholic liver injury by accentuating oxidative stress, whereas saturated fatty acids are protective. Polyenylphosphatidylcholine may prevent liver injury by down-regulating cytochrome P450 2E1 activity, attenuating oxidative stress, reducing the number of activated hepatic stellate cells, and up-regulating collagenase activity. Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis may develop through several mechanisms, such as oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction and associated impaired fat metabolism, dysregulated cytokine metabolism, insulin resistance, and altered
methionine
/S-adenosylmethionine/homocysteine metabolism. Obesity (adipose tissue) may contribute to the development of alcoholic liver disease by generating free radicals, increasing tumor necrosis factor-alpha production, inducing insulin resistance, and producing fibrogenic agents, such as angiotensin II, norepinephrine, neuropeptide Y, and leptin. Finally, alcoholic fatty liver transplant failure may be linked to oxidative stress. In vitro treatment of fatty livers with interleukin-6 may render allografts safer for clinical transplantation.
...
PMID:Role of fatty liver, dietary fatty acid supplements, and obesity in the progression of alcoholic liver disease: introduction and summary of the symposium. 1567 Jun 59
Telbivudine, the prototype member of beta-L-2 -deoxynucleosides, has proven to be safe in in vitro animal and human studies. Telbivudine given for 4 weeks resulted in an 8-log reduction of woodchuck
hepatitis
virus DNA, and a 3.8-log reduction of hepatitis B virus DNA in human. After 52 weeks of telbivudine treatment there was an approximate 6-log reduction of hepatitis B virus DNA levels, hepatitis B virus DNA became undetectable by PCR assay in 61% of patients. Its antiviral efficacy is significantly better than lamivudine. The probability of tyrosine-
methionine
-aspartate-aspartate mutations at 52 weeks of telbivudine therapy is low, although still occurring in 4.5% of patients. After 96 weeks of therapy, the proportion of patients with undetectable hepatitis B virus DNA by PCR assay increased to 71%, but genotypic resistance also increased to 18.2%, with only 4.5% showing alanine aminotransferase flares. Telbivudine is probably one of the most potent antiviral agents for hepatitis B virus that will become available in the near future.
...
PMID:Telbivudine: an upcoming agent for chronic hepatitis B. 1610 94
The principal cause of human liver cancer is infection with
hepatitis
viruses B and C, but tumor progression is fueled by ensuing perturbations that confer gain of function on proto-oncogenes or loss of function on tumor suppressor genes. Frequent among these perturbations is overexpression of the proto-oncogene
MET
. We have modeled the pathogenesis of liver tumors by expressing conditional transgenes of
MET
in the hepatocytes of inbred mice. The response to the
MET
transgene varied with both the magnitude and timing of its expression but included hyperplasia of hepatic progenitor cells, as well as benign and malignant tumors that display both phenotypic and genotypic resemblances to human counterparts. The results reveal
MET
to be a crucial switch in the development of the liver; dramatize how different cellular compartments within a developmental lineage can give rise to distinctive tumor stem cells; delineate rules of tumor progression; provide evidence that the experimental tumors in mice are authentic models for human tumors; and support a role for
MET
in the genesis of human liver tumors. The models should be useful in elucidating the mechanisms of tumorigenesis and in the preclinical testing of new therapeutics.
...
PMID:Genomic progression in mouse models for liver tumors. 1686 57
We clarified the clinical features of NICCD (neonatal intrahepatic cholestasis caused by citrin deficiency) by retrospective review of symptoms, management and long-term outcome of 75 patients. The data were generated from questionnaires to paediatricians in charge of the patients. Thirty of the patients were referred to hospitals before 1 month of age because of positive results in newborn screening (hypergalactosaemia, hypermethioninaemia, and hyperphenylalaninaemia). The other 45, the screen-negative patients, were referred to hospitals with suspected neonatal
hepatitis
or biliary atresia because of jaundice or discoloured stool. Most of the screen-negative patients presented before 4 months of age, and 11 had failure to thrive. Laboratory data showed elevated serum bile acid concentrations, hypoproteinaemia, low levels of vitamin K-dependent coagulation factors and hypergalactosaemia. Hypoglycaemia was detected in 18 patients. Serum amino acid analyses showed significant elevation of citrulline and
methionine
concentrations. Most of the patients were given a lactose-free and/or medium-chain triglyceride-enriched formula and fat-soluble vitamins. Symptoms resolved in all but two of the patients by 12 months of age. The two patients with unresolved symptoms suffered from progressive liver failure and underwent liver transplantation before their first birthday. Another patient developed citrullinaemia type II (CTLN2) at age 16 years. It is important to recognize that NICCD is not always a benign condition.
...
PMID:Clinical pictures of 75 patients with neonatal intrahepatic cholestasis caused by citrin deficiency (NICCD). 1732 44
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) reactivation is the frequent complication after cytotoxic chemotherapy in HBsAg-positive non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) patients. Pre-chemotherapy viral load may be a risk factor and HBeAg-positive status is associated with increased viral load. The aim of this study was to investigate the long-term treatment outcome of lamivudine in preventing HBV reactivation and its associated morbidity according to HBeAg status. Twenty-four adult HBsAg-positive NHL patients were taken 100 mg of lamivudine daily before the initiation of chemotherapy. The median duration of lamivudine therapy was 11.5 months (range: 1-54 months) and the median number of chemotherapy cycles was 6 (range: 1-16 cycles). The steroid containing chemotherapy regimens were used in 18 patients (75%), and the anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody containing chemotherapy regimen was used in 6 patients (25%). Four patients received autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation without resultant HBV reactivation.
Hepatitis
related to HBV reactivation was developed in 1 patient among 14 HBeAg-positive patients and no one among 10 HBeAg-negative. One patient developed HBV reactivation after lamivudine withdrawal, and 4 patients developed the YMDD (tyrosine-
methionine
-aspartate-aspartate) mutation during lamivudine therapy. There were no statistical differences in HBV reactivation rate during chemotherapy according to the HBeAg status. Our results demonstrate that lamivudine should be considered preemptively before the chemotherapy for all HBsAg-positive NHL patients to prevent HBV reactivation, regardless of pre-chemotherapy HBeAg status. Finally, compared with the chronic hepatitis B patients, similar rate of HBV reactivation after lamivudine withdrawal and development of YMDD mutation was observed in NHL patients.
...
PMID:Long-term outcome after prophylactic lamivudine treatment on hepatitis B virus reactivation in non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 1732 49
Adefovir dipivoxil (ADV) has demonstrated clinical activity against both wild-type and lamivudine-resistant hepatitis B virus (HBV). We analyzed the evolution of viral load and the changes of polymerase and precore/core promoter sequences in lamivudine-resistant virus during ADV therapy. The authors studied 14 patients who had breakthrough
hepatitis
after lamivudine therapy. Serial sera were obtained prior to adefovir administration and at 3, 6 and 12 months after ADV therapy. Nucleotide sequences of polymerase and the precore/core promoter from the hepatitis B virus were analyzed. The median serum HBV DNA decrease with adefovir treatment was 4.35 log(10) copies/mL at 12 months. Tyrosine-
methionine
-aspartate-aspartate (YMDD) mutants were found in 12 patients among the 14 patients with lamivudine resistance. The YMDD mutant viruses reversed to the wild-type in 6 patients out of the 12 patients after 3-6 months of ADV after discontinuing lamivudine therapy. In the analysis of the nucleotide sequences of the precore/core promoter gene, core promoter mutants in 12 patients were replaced by wild-type virus in three patients (25%), while precore mutants in four patients were replaced by the wild-type in three patients (75%). The results demonstrate the patterns of polymerase and precore/core promoter mutations in lamivudine-resistant hepatitis B viruses and the reversion from the mutant to the wild-type in some patients. In addition, despite several mutations in the polymerase during ADV therapy, ADV effectively suppressed HBV replication without the emergence of resistant viral mutants.
...
PMID:Evolution of viral load and changes of polymerase and precore/core promoter sequences in lamivudine-resistant hepatitis B virus during adefovir therapy. 1751 33
It remains unclear whether mutational patterns of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) genome are associated with the development of severe
hepatitis
after the emergence of tyrosine-
methionine
-aspartate-aspartate (YMDD) variants during lamivudine treatment. Thirty patients with chronic hepatitis B who had YMDD variants during lamivudine therapy and were followed up subsequently while receiving lamivudine alone for at least 6 months were examined retrospectively. The lamivudine resistant mutations in the HBV polymerase gene were detected by a line probe assay, and the full-length sequences of HBV DNA were determined in some patients. Between months 5 and 33 of therapy, mutations from
methionine
to isoleucine at rt204 (rtM204I) were detected in 18 patients, and mutations from
methionine
to valine at rt204 (rtM204V) were detected in 12. The rtM204V mutations were always accompanied by mutations from leucine to
methionine
at rt180 (rtL180M), while rtM204I mutations were not. Baseline characteristics, alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels, and HBV DNA levels within 6 months after the emergence of YMDD variants did not differ significantly between patients with rtM204I alone and those with rtL180M/rtM204V. No specific mutation was identified on full-length sequence analysis in three patients with a
hepatitis
flare. During long term follow-up, the addition of rtL180M to rtM204I was found in four patients 7-31 months after detecting the change at rt204 and was linked to increased ALT levels. In conclusion, mutational patterns of HBV DNA at the time of emergence of YMDD variants were apparently unrelated to the clinical outcomes in Japanese patients with chronic hepatitis B during lamivudine therapy.
...
PMID:Mutational patterns of hepatitis B virus genome and clinical outcomes after emergence of drug-resistant variants during lamivudine therapy: analyses of the polymerase gene and full-length sequences. 1785 34
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease is the most common noninfectious liver disease in clinical practice, and there is an increasing need for new therapeutic approaches for the treatment of this liver disease. Here, we examined the effect of the thyroid hormone triiodothyronine (T3) and the agonist of the thyroid hormone receptor beta isoform (TRbeta), GC-1, on fatty liver and steatohepatitis induced in rodents by a choline-
methionine
deficient (CMD) diet. Male Fischer 344 rats fed a CMD diet for 1 wk developed a marked fatty liver and mild
hepatitis
. Concurrent administration of T3 resulted in a complete prevention of the fatty change associated with increased fatty acid mitochondrial and peroxisomal beta-oxidation. To investigate whether T3 could also reverse fully established fatty liver, rats were fed a CMD diet for 10 wk and then cofed T3 for 1 wk. Coadministration of T3 resulted in a complete regression of liver steatosis associated with a decrease of lipid peroxidation, cyclooxygenase-2 expression, and activation of phospho-STAT3 and phospho-SAPK/JNK. Finally, additional experiments showed that GC-1, which has no significant side effects on heart rate, prevented and reverted CMD-induced fat accumulation, and ameliorated steatohepatitis. These results indicate that TR agonists have the potential to inhibit or reverse hepatic steatosis induced by a nutritional model.
...
PMID:Thyroid hormone (T3) and TRbeta agonist GC-1 inhibit/reverse nonalcoholic fatty liver in rats. 1843 32
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