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)

The development of hepatitis, induced in 48 rats by the administration of galactosamine (GalN) in varying doses, was studied with the use of substrate and enzyme histochemical techniques. The so-called atypical glycogen, which is at first highly resistant to diastase, was shown to be digestible after deamination. The increasing accumulation of atypical glycogen during the course of GalN-hepatitis conceals the loss of normal glycogen when the PAS-reaction is used. Nevertheless glycogenolysis could also be demonstrated by the increasing activity of phosphorylase. The acid phosphatase activity was progressively diminished, which was interpreted as signifying early lysosomal damage. G6Pase activity remained nearly constant but SDH showed a decrease in activity after 12 h. These histochemical results are considered to provide deeper insight into the pathological mechanism of GalN-hepatitis.
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PMID:Histochemical studies on carbohydrate metabolism in rat liver after galactosamine administration. 3 60

Drug hepatitis occurred in 0-32 per cent of 7492 patients receiving antituberculous therapy, while the overall incidence of drug reactions was estimated at 9 per cent. PAS was the most common cause of drug hepatitis among the 38 patients analysed. The clinical, biochemical and haematological picture of antituberculous drug hepatitis was found to be fairly uniform. However, the patients with definite PAS hepatitis had lower SGOT values than those in whom there was uncertainty whether PAS or INH was implicated. Premonitory symptoms were present in all but four patients before the onset of jaundice. One or more of the features associated with dry hypersensitivity reactions, such as fever, rashes, lymphadenopathy, arthralgia, leucocytosis, eosinophilia and atypical monocytes were present in 89 per cent of cases so that confusion with viral hepatitis seldom arose. Sensitization time was less than three months in all except three patients, who were considered to be suffering from viral hepatitis. While no patients with PAS hepatitis died, the overall mortality was 17 per cent. A review of the literature stresses the frequency of asymptomatic elevations of SGOT, the value of clinical surveillance during the early months of therapy and the importance of stopping all therapy immediately warning symptoms appear.
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PMID:Hepatic complications of antituberculous therapy. 5 Jun 5

A reaction of Kupffer cells with changes of mucopolysaccharides is shown during experimental mercury hepatitis. An initial diminution of the reaction intensity is followed by the increase of MPS polymerization degree. Association of effort leads to a significant increase of the A-PAS reaction. The lympho-histiocytes infiltrating portal spaces present the same MPS dynamics.
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PMID:Behaviour of mucopolysaccharides of Kupffer cells in experimental mercury hepatitis. 15 37

One of the most sensitive and specific signs of the galactosamine effect upon the rat liver cell is the appearance of PAS-positive and diastase-resistant granules within the cytoplasm of hepatocytes. Light-microscopic, histochemical, biochemical, and electron-microscopic findings reveal that the appearance of these ADB (= atypical dense bodies) depends upon a working glycogen metabolism at the time of GalN treatment. The ADB are composed of particles resembling, due to shape and size, ribosomes and beta particles of glycogen. Most of them are surrounded by the rER, but they are never enclosed by a limiting membrane. Due to sequential changes they can be generally classified into three types; the early, the intermediate, and the late type. In seven experiments it can be shown, that the appearance of the ADB depends upon the time and dosage after GalN treatment. They occur even if an additional treatment with galactose or uridine prevents the liver from the features of a hepatitis, as also shown in the livers of newborn animals up to 3 weeks of age. The histochemical response against various glucosidases, hexosaminidases, pronase, and RNAse as well as against various fixatives indicates that ADB are composed of, at least, two different constituents, the former RNAse-sensitive and visible with routine light-microscopic staining procedures, the latter RNA-resistant, PAS-positive, and invisible after staining with H & E or toluidine blue. The latter is diastase-resistant, suggesting that this portion of ADB does not represent the usual glycoproteins but some abnormal metabolite of glycogen. The ADB can be detected with maximal accumulation in the cytoplasm of hepatocytes at that time when the glycogen content determined in the liver homogenate by biochemical methods is greatly reduced.
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PMID:The appearance and degradation of specific hepatocellular cytoplasmic inclusion bodies in rat liver due to D-galactosamine. I. The relation between the amount of liver glycogen and the appearance of the atypical dense bodies in the liver cell. 18 85

Sixty-nine specimens of liver tissue from 53 infants with neonatal hepatitis or its sequelae were examined without knowledge of the alpha1-antitrypsin phenotype. Distinctive, diastase-resistant, PAS-positive, pure magenta-coloured, sharply defined globules, 2-20 microns in diameter were found in periportal and paraseptal hepatocytes in all liver biopsies from eight alpha1-antitrypsin deficient (PiZZ) infants biopsied after the age of 12 weeks. Such globules were not seen in biopsies from PiZZ individuals aged less than 12 weeks nor in individuals of normal alpha1-antitrypsin phenotype (PiMM). No other specific histological abnormality was found in PiZZ individuals, but in them giant-cell transformation was infrequent and liver damage was more severe, three of 14 cases developing cirrhosis in contrast to four of 27 PiMM subjects. The pathogenesis of liver disease in PiZZ individuals is discussed.
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PMID:Liver disease in infancy: histological features and relationship to alpha-antitrypsin phenotype. 108 Jan 60

A case of a 70-year-old woman with a history of gastric ulcer and several pneumonias is presented. She was found to have pulmonary emphysema, severe alpha-1-antitrypsin (alpha1AT) deficiency and raised serum mitochondrial antibodies. Surgical liver biopsy showed portal liver cirrhosis, PAS-positive, diastaseresistant globules in the hepatocytes and changes interpreted as florid duct lesion of primary biliary cirrhosis. A brother has severe alpha1AT deficiency. Two daughters had raised mitochondrial antibodies. One of the latter had a granulomatous hepatitis, a common finding in primary biliary cirrhosis. The association of alpha1AT deficiency and primary biliary cirrhosis does not seem to have been described previously.
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PMID:Alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency, mitochondrial antibodies and possible primary biliary cirrhosis. A case report and family study. 108 Sep 23

Sarcocystis canis n. sp. is proposed for the protozoon associated with encephalitis, hepatitis, and generalized coccidiosis in dogs. Only asexual stages are known in macrophages, neurons, dermal, and other cells of the body. The parasite is located free in the host cell cytoplasm without a parasitophorous vacuole; schizonts divide by endopolygeny. Schizonts are 5-25 x 4-20 microns and contain 6-40 merozoites. Merozoites are approximately 5-7 microns x 1 micron and do not contain rhoptries. The parasite is PAS-negative and reacts with Sarcocystis cruzi antiserum but not with Toxoplasma gondii, Neospora caninum, or Caryospora bigenetica antisera in an immunohistochemical test.
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PMID:Sarcocystis canis n. sp. (Apicomplexa: Sarcocystidae), the etiologic agent of generalized coccidiosis in dogs. 190 53

Fourteen cases of alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency are presented. All of them had a PIZZ phenotype except two in which a PIMZ phenotype was found. It must be pointed out that histological findings show a great variability among the different patients most of which did not have intracellular PAS-positive amylase inclusions in liver biopsy specimens. Clinical course did not correlate with either the age of onset of the disease or the phenotype found, thus indicating that other additional factors are involved in determining prognosis. We insist on the importance of a careful study of all neonatal hepatitis syndromes in order to rule out a alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency.
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PMID:[Hepatic lesions caused by alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency in childhood. Review of 14 cases]. 348 28

SZ-Alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency, leading to severe transient neonatal cholestasis with mild hepatitis is rare. In our patient, intrahepatic bile duct hypoplasia was suspected. Since cholecystography and hepatic scintigraphy failed to reveal intrahepatic bile ducts, a diagnostic surgical liver biopsy was performed. Typical intrahepatocytic PAS-positive granules and a low serum alpha 1-antitrypsin concentration allowed a correct diagnosis of the SZ phenotype. The administration of an elementary diet quickly improved the clinical condition of our patient. Follow-up studies of this case and others will allow a better establishment of prognostic criteria and help in genetic counselling.
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PMID:Neonatal hepatitis with obstructive jaundice in an SZ heterozygous alpha 1-antitrypsin-deficient boy and destructive lung disease in his SZ mother. A review of the literature. 387 94

Genetically obese mice (C57BL/6J-ob/ob), fed ad libitum, demonstrated a precipitous increase in the spontaneous death rate after 50 weeks. The first signs of morbidity were a ruffled hair coat and a progressive motor ataxia. Necropsy revealed that obese mice had pale and fatty livers, urolithiasis and grossly distended bladders. Microscopically, the hepatocellular changes observed in all aged obese mice included: a loss of orientation of hepatocytes, an enormous variability in the size of both hepatocytes and their nuclei, and an extensive deposition of both large and small lipid droplets, confirmed by an increase content of triacylglycerols. A subacute-to-chronic, multifocal, necrotizing hepatitis was also present. Kidneys from aged obese mice contained hypertrophied glomeruli and increased PAS-stained material. Tubular dilation with compaction of the tubular cells was also seen. There were no significant alterations in the microanatomy or mineralization of femurs from obese mice, yet there was a significant increase in plasma alkaline phosphatase activity. In obese mice at 62-63 weeks of age, hyperglycemia was present even in spite of hyperinsulinemia. Pituitary immunoreactive ACTH and its molar ratio to pituitary immunoreactive beta-endorphin were also increased in obese mice at this age. Even though the etiology of the decreased lifespan of genetically obese mice remains uncertain, the possibility is discussed that an overall defect in the central nervous system may be involved.
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PMID:Hormonal, metabolic and morphologic studies of aged C57BL/6J obese mice. 673 67


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