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)

In Brazil, clinicians followed 32 transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia patients, 1-49 years old, at the Regional Blood Center and the Department of Hematology of University Hospital of the School of Medicine of Ribeirao Preto to determine the prevalence of hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV), HIV-1, and HTLV-1. They also measured serum levels of ferritin and alanine aspartate transaminase (ALAT) to examine liver iron content and liver damage, respectively. 46.8% tested positive for antibodies to HCV, which was much higher than that of voluntary blood donors of the Regional Blood Center (1.4%) or of other countries. Yet it was about the same as that of multitransfused patients in the UK (23.2%), Italy (92.9%), and Saudi Arabia (33.3%). 3 of these 15 patients also tested positive for HBV markers. 15.5% tested positive only for HBV markers. 37.5% had no hepatitis markers. Hepatitis-positive people were older than those who tested negative for hepatitis (15.2 years vs. 8.5 years; p .05). The number of units of blood transfused and the levels of ferritin and ALAT were not statistically different between the 2 groups (192.1-336 vs. 135.2 and 36.6-52.3 U/l vs. 36.7 U/l, respectively). 75% of the HCV positive patients received more than 100 units of packed red blood cells while only 42% did in the HCV negative group. 2 people tested positive for HIV-1 1 of whom also tested positive for anti-HBs-Ag and the other for HCV antibodies. The HIV-1 cases had become infected before the blood bank began screening for HIV-1 in 1987. None of the patients receiving blood from the center became infected with HIV-1, yet 60% of hemophiliacs treated at the hospital were HIV-1 infected. No one tested positive for HTLV-1, even though all 32 patients had received more than 6250 units of blood not screened for HTLV-1. This reflected the low incidence of HTLV-1 in the general population (0.05%). No one was positive for HBs-Ag or HBe-Ag.
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PMID:The frequency of blood-born viral infections in a population of multitransfused Brazilian patients. 827 57

Copper (Cu) accumulating bound to metallothionein (MT) in the liver of LEC (Long-Evans with cinnamon-like coat color) rats due to a hereditary metabolic disorder is assumed to lead to acute hepatitis with severe jaundice. The metal was shown to be present in the liver in a form not bound to MT at the beginning of hepatitis after first delivery and lactation. Following this change in the distribution of Cu from MT-bound to non-MT bound form in the liver, changes in the concentrations and distributions of Cu, zinc (Zn) and iron in the plasma and kidneys of LEC rats were also observed. Cu plasma distribution on a gel filtration column by HPLC-ICP revealed that the holo-form of ceruloplasmin (Cp) was present before hepatitis and increased with its development, indicating the availability of Cu for Cp by hepatitis. Cu-binding proteins migrating at the same retention times as those of hepatic Cu-MT and Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD) were detected in plasma during hepatitis. Albumin was largely present in the form of nonmercaptoalbumin, reflecting that the bloodstream was under oxidative stress. A sudden increase in the concentration of Cu in the kidneys occurred with hepatitis, and the metal came to be distributed more to high molecular weight proteins with its development.
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PMID:Changes in copper distribution in the plasma and kidneys of LEC rats following acute hepatitis. 830 90

Thalassemia major is a progressive disease. Modern therapy with transfusions and iron chelation has greatly improved both the quality and length of thalassemics life. Nevertheless, progressive overload of iron in the organs, hepatitis and other infections acquired randomly imply the risk of mortality that increases with age. Bone marrow transplant from an HLA identical donor (a possibility for about 45%) represents the only form of radical cure of the disease. With the classification of the classes of risk we know today that a thalassemic child has a chance to die from transplant 3 to 100 with probability of being cured 94%. Thalassemics that receive the transplant at a more advanced stage of complications of the disease have a major risk of death due to the transplant of class 2 (14% probability of death due to the transplant against 83% chance of being cured). Class 43 patients have 9 chances out of 100 to die of transplant and 60% probability of being cured of thalassemia.
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PMID:[Bone marrow transplantation in thalassemia]. 830 17

The LEC (Long-Evans cinnamon) rat is a mutant strain displaying hereditary hepatitis and spontaneous hepatocellular carcinoma, and shows abnormal hepatic copper accumulation similar to that occurring in Wilson's disease. We evaluated the iron metabolism of LEC rats compared to LEA (Long-Evans agouti) rats. Hepatic iron and ferritin concentrations were remarkably increased depending on age in LEC rats but not in LEA rats. Increased hepatic iron is normally associated with decreased serum transferrin and total iron binding capacity in hepatic iron overload. In LEC rats, however, both serum transferrin and total iron binding capacity increased with increasing hepatic iron. This increase of serum transferrin and hepatic iron may be an additional important factor contributing to liver injury in LEC rats.
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PMID:Abnormal hepatic iron accumulation in LEC rats. 838 76

Twenty years after the first surveys of liver disease were done cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma were still found to be the most important liver diseases in Papua New Guinea. Hepatitis B virus appears to be the main cause of both these conditions. Data from a number of different sources suggest a prevalence of hepatitis B positivity of about 17%. The most significant new finding was grade 3 iron deposition in 8 patients. This raises the question as to whether iron storage disease may now contribute to the spectrum of liver disease in Papua New Guinea. Many biopsies in the 1960s and 1980s were interpreted as nonspecific hepatitis; in the light of recent observations, at least some of these may have been due to hepatitis C infection.
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PMID:Liver disease in Papua New Guinea 1981 to 1988, twenty years after the first surveys were done. 857 80

We report changes in free radical-metabolizing enzymes and the increased generation of lipid peroxides associated with extreme metal accumulation in the liver of the Long-Evans with cinnamon-like coat color (LEC) rat, a new mutant strain displaying hereditary hepatitis and subsequent hepatocellular carcinoma. The activity of free radical-metabolizing enzymes and lipid peroxides, and the concentration of metal in the liver were determined sequentially after birth. Mn-superoxide dismutase activity significantly increased immediately after the onset of hepatitis in LEC rats, whereas no remarkable change was observed in control rats. Cu, Zn-superoxide dismutase activity in LEC rats was similar to that in control rats. Glutathione reductase activity increased, while glutathione peroxidase activity was lower in LEC rats than in control rats throughout the observation periods. Lipid peroxides, estimated by thiobarbituric acid reaction, also increased 4- to 5-fold immediately after the onset of hepatitis in LEC rats. Copper concentration was 30- to 50-fold higher in the liver of LEC rats than in control rats, and the iron content also increased significantly before and after the onset of hepatitis. These findings suggested that an oxidant injury generated by toxic metals could be one of the factors responsible for hepatocellular damage in this unique hereditary hepatitis.
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PMID:Changes in free radical-metabolizing enzymes and lipid peroxides in the liver of Long-Evans with cinnamon-like coat color rats. 857 34

Abnormal liver function persisting late after allogeneic BMT is usually attributed to chronic GvHD, viral hepatitis or drug toxicity. We describe a patient who had negative hepatitis serology, was on no hepatotoxic medication, had no evidence of GvHD but had abnormal liver function 15 months post MBT. She was diagnosed as having grade IV hemosiderosis of the liver. Her total red cell support had only been 52 units. We therefore postulate that in a proportion of patients receiving allogeneic BMT impaired intestinal iron absorption may be an important cause of hemosiderosis.
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PMID:Severe hemosiderosis post allogenic bone marrow transplantation. 861 34

Trientine dihydrochloride (trientine) is an alternative medicinal copper chelating agent for patients with Wilson's disease of penicillamine intolerance. We examined the effects of trientine on the spontaneous development of hepatitis and hepatic tumors, by its short-term and long-term administration to Long-Evans cinnamon (LEC) rats with an accumulation of copper in the liver, as animal models of Wilson's disease. Male rats were given trientine in their drinking water at 1500 ppm for 18 weeks, from 6 weeks to 24 weeks of age in short-term experiment, and 1500 ppm for 27 weeks then 750 ppm for 52 weeks, from 8 to 87 weeks of age in the long-term experiment. Development of hepatitis was observed in the control LEC rats at 18 weeks of age. They had high levels of plasma transaminases (glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase [GOT], glutamic pyruvic transaminase [GPT]), and on pathological examination, hepatocyte destruction was observed. Histological findings revealed that short-term administration of trientine inhibited the development of hepatitis remarkably. The plasma GOT and GPT levels of treated animals were only slightly higher than those of normal LEA (Long-Evans with agouti coat color) rats, a sibling line of LEC rats. Copper levels in the liver were decreased by a maximum of 50 percent. In the long-term administration of trientine, the incidence of hepatic cell carcinoma (HCC) in the treated rats was 67 percent that of the untreated LEC rats, and the number of HCCs per rat in the treated group was 0.7 +/- 0.5, being significantly lower as compared with 4.7 +/- 3.5 in the untreated rats. Additionally, the development of cholangiofibrosis in LEC rats was completely prevented by long-term administration of the agent. The copper level in the liver of treated rats was reduced by 33 percent at 87 weeks of age. Development of HCC in LEC rats might be partly, but not totally, because of copper accumulation. No effects on the levels of copper, iron, or zinc in the liver of LEA rats was detected, and no adverse effects were detected in either LEC or LEA rats after both short- and long-term administration of trientine in drinking water.
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PMID:Inhibition of hereditary hepatitis and liver tumor development in Long-Evans cinnamon rats by the copper-chelating agent trientine dihydrochloride. 866 30

Hepatitis B virus (HBV)- and hepatitis C virus (HCV)-related liver damage is linked to an increased risk of hepatocellular carcinoma, but the mechanisms underlying hepatitis C viral activity are not known. We therefore compared hepatocellular proliferative activity in chronic C virus-related hepatitis and in liver damage of other etiology. Hepatocyte proliferation rate was investigated in 56 patients with chronic hepatitis using the Ki67 MIB1 monoclonal antibody in archival material. According to etiology, the patients were subgrouped as follows: HCV (34), HBV (11), Alcohol (4), HCV + Alcohol (4), and Hemochromatosis (3). Proliferation rate was correlated with age, sex, etiology, disease activity, liver iron storage, free-radical production, and glutathione levels by regression and discriminant analysis. HCV-positive patients had significantly more MIB1-positive hepatocytes in the periportal area (P < .011) and in the low-proliferating perivenular area (zones 2 and 3) (P < .05). The number of MIB1-positive cells correlated directly with alanine transaminase (ALT) levels, Knodell index (KI), and, inversely, with iron saturation. By stepwise discriminant analysis, ALT levels and etiology were identified as single independent variables. These data suggest that HCV infection induces increased and abnormal hepatocyte proliferation, which might be related to the increased risk of hepatocellular carcinoma in patients with HCV-related liver damage.
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PMID:Hepatocyte proliferative activity in chronic liver damage as assessed by the monoclonal antibody MIB1 Ki67 in archival material: the role of etiology, disease activity, iron, and lipid peroxidation. 867 66

Several clinical studies have suggested that excess hepatic iron accumulation is a progressive factor in some liver diseases including chronic viral hepatitis and hemochromatosis. However, it is not known whether iron-induced hepatotoxicity may be directly involved in hepatitis, cirrhosis, and liver cancer. The Long-Evans Cinnamon (LEC) rat, which accumulates excess copper in the liver as in patients with Wilson's disease, is of a mutant strain displaying spontaneous hemolysis, hepatitis, and liver cancer. We found previously that LEC rats harbored an additional abnormality: accumulation of as much iron as copper in the liver. In the present study, we compared the occurrence of hepatitis and liver cancer in LEC rats fed an iron-deficient diet (ID) with those in rats fed a regular diet (RD). The RD group showed rapid increments of hepatic iron concentrations as the result of hemolysis, characteristics of fulminant hepatitis showing apoptosis, and a 53% mortality rate. However, no rats in the ID group died of fulminant hepatitis. Hepatic iron, especially "free" iron concentration and the extent of hepatic fibrosis in the ID group were far less than those of the RD group. At week 65, all rats in the RD group developed liver cancer, whereas none did in the ID group. These results suggest that the accumulation of iron, possibly by virtue of synergistic radical formation with copper, plays an essential role in the development of fulminant hepatitis, hepatic fibrosis, and subsequent hepatocarcinogenesis in LEC rats.
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PMID:Hepatic iron deprivation prevents spontaneous development of fulminant hepatitis and liver cancer in Long-Evans Cinnamon rats. 877 Aug 63


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