Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Hepatic insufficiency is generally caused by active liver cirrhosis with portal hypertension. The final stage is the exogenous hepatic coma. Much rarer is the endogenous hepatic coma caused by fulminant acute hepatitis or severe intoxications. In the treatment of hepatic insufficiency it is first necessary to eliminate all exacerbating factors such as too high protein-intake, gastrointestinal bleedings, abuse of alcohol and diuretics. Because hepatic encephalopathy is mainly produced by toxic intestinal protein metabolites no protein should be adminstered at the beginining of the disease. The production of toxic protein metabolites in the gut can be diminished as well by enemas with sodium acetate buffer (pH 4, 5) as by neomycin (6-8 gm daily). Because long-term treatment with neomycin reduces also the physiological intestinal bacteria combination with lactulose (70-100 gm daily) is better. Treatment with lactulose reduces not only significantly hyperammoniemia but also increases serum phenols. The same effect have so-called ammonia reducing amino acids such as arginine, ornithine and glutamic acid. In endogenous hepatic coma blood exchange transfusions, liver perfusions and charcoal perfusions are necessary. Nevertheless, the prognosis of hepatic insufficiency caused by fulminant hepatitis is very poor in the final stage of the disease. Therefore early diagnosis and treatment in special departments with intensive care is necessary.
...
PMID:[Therapy of hepatic insufficiency]. 91 52

The elimination of para-aminosalicylic acid (PAS) after the intravenous injection of 20 mg PAS sodium/kg was estimated in patients with liver disease, in uremic patients and in volunteers without damage of the liver or kidneys. The drug was estimated with a colorimetric and fluorometric method. In the volunteers, the half-lives obtained with the fluorometric method were significantly longer than those estimated with the colorimetric method. This is caused by the estimation of more PAS metabolites by the used fluorometric method. In the patients with renal insufficiency (dialysis patients) the elimination rate of unchanged PAS--estimated with the colorimetric method--was not altered, whereas the elimination of PAS and its metabolites extractable by ethyl acetate was markedly slowed in comparison with the results obtained with the volunteers. The clearance of the unchanged PAS was even increased in the uremic patients. The serum protein binding of PAS was lowered significantly in the serum of uremic patients. In patients with liver cirrhosis, acute virus hepatitis and cholangitis the elimination rate of the drug was not altered in comparison with the volunteers. The results show that the dose of PAS in patients with renal insufficiency may not be reduced. The therapeutic level of the drug cannot otherwise be reached in these patients.
...
PMID:Elimination of para-aminosalicylic acid in patients with liver disease and renal insufficiency. 92 30

Four compounds, prednisolone, sodium phenobarbitone, azathioprine and orotic acid, were tested for their ability to inhibit galactosamine induced hepatitis in the rat. Prednisolone offered total protection at doses of 100 mg/kg and above; sodium phenobarbitone and orotic acid modified the response to galactosamine and azathioprine was without effect.
...
PMID:Inhibition, by drugs, of galactosamine induced hepatitis in the rat. 124 44

A 56-year-old diabetic man underwent heart transplantation for end-stage ischemic heart disease; fever, progressive thrombocytopenia, and hepatitis developed 8 weeks after transplantation. Cytomegalovirus was cultured from the serum buffy coat. In spite of therapy with high-dose ganciclovir sodium, the patient died on the seventy-seventh postoperative day. Autopsy revealed a previously unsuspected high-grade B-cell lymphoma with extensive hepatic replacement.
...
PMID:Lymphoma mimics cytomegalovirus-induced hepatitis in a heart transplant recipient. 132 29

The putative core gene of hepatitis C virus (HCV) was incorporated into a plasmid vector (pCC5-J4), and expressed in Escherichia coli. The product of 180 amino acids (p20c) was purified by gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate, and used in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for antibodies against the putative core protein of HCV (anti-p20c). Anti-p20c was detected in 13 (1.5%) of 873 apparently healthy blood donors. It was detected in 205 (86.5%) of 237 patients with acute or chronic non-A, non-B (NANB) hepatic disease, significantly more frequently (p less than 0.01) than antibodies against the C100-3 protein encoded by nonstructural regions of HCV (anti-C100-3) that was found in 178 (75.1%). Anti-p20c developed in the circulation of a patient with acute NANB hepatitis much earlier than anti-C100-3. HCV RNA was detected by polymerase chain reaction in serum samples from blood donors positive for anti-p20c in high titers, one of which was negative for anti-C100-3. These results indicated that anti-p20c would be useful in complementing anti-C100-3 for the diagnosis of NANB hepatitis and further decreasing the incidence of posttransfusion NANB hepatitis.
...
PMID:Serodiagnosis of hepatitis C virus infection by ELISA for antibodies against the putative core protein (p20c) expressed in Escherichia coli. 137 23

An autoantibody to liver cytosol was previously described in childhood autoimmune chronic active hepatitis type 2. The antigen, liver cytosol antigen type 1, was for the first time partially purified using gel filtration and ion exchange chromatography, and it was characterized using immunodiffusion, immunoblot and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of the immunoprecipitate. Immunoblot detected a unique antigenic peptide at 62 kD from human cytosol and at 58 kD from rat cytosol. The same peptides were also detected when immunoprecipitates of liver cytosol antigen type 1 and autoantibodies to liver cytosol antigen were submitted to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A polymeric structure, probably a tetramer, is suggested for native liver cytosol antigen type 1 because in gel filtration chromatography liver cytosol antigen type 1 was eluted as a protein of a molecular weight between 240 and 290 kD when human liver cytosol was fractionated and between 220 and 270 kD from rat liver cytosol. Liver cytosol antigen type 1 is probably poor in carbohydrates because it was not stained by periodic acid-Schiff stain. The autoantibodies to liver cytosol were frequently found in association with antiliver kidney microsomal autoantibodies type 1, which are directed against the cytochrome P-450 of the IID6 subfamily. Antiliver kidney microsomal autoantibodies type 1 but not antiliver cytosol autoantibodies were found in association with antibodies to hepatitis C virus. Autoantibodies to liver cytosol antigen type 1 seem to be a more specific marker for autoimmune hepatitis type 2 than antiliver kidney microsomal antibodies type 1 autoantibodies.
...
PMID:Characterization of the liver cytosol antigen type 1 reacting with autoantibodies in chronic active hepatitis. 139 95

The follow-up involved patients with infiltrative pulmonary tuberculosis who developed toxic medicamentous hepatitis associated with antituberculosis drugs. They were treated by the method of combined pharmacotherapy which comprised sodium nucleinate (0.5 g 4 times daily), splenin (2 ml twice a day) and quercetin. The given combination of drugs rapidly improved clinical parameters and normalized immunologic tests.
...
PMID:[Combined chemotherapy of toxic hepatitis in patients with pulmonary tuberculosis]. 140 10

A general procedure is presented for the isolation of several liver microsomal target proteins of the reactive trifluoroacetyl halide metabolite of halothane. It was found that most of these proteins could be selectively extracted from microsomes with 0.1% sodium deoxycholate and separated into partially purified fractions by DEAE-Sepharose anion-exchange chromatography. Using this method, we describe the isolation and identification of a 63-kDa target protein of halothane in rat liver. Amino acid sequences of the N-terminal and of several internal peptides of the protein, as well as the deduced amino acid sequence of a nearly full-length rat liver cDNA clone of the protein, showed 98% identity with a reported murine cDNA that encodes for calreticulin, a major calcium-binding protein of the lumen of endoplasmic reticulum. Although it remains to be determined what role calreticulin has in the development of halothane hepatitis, this study has shown that calreticulin can be a target of reactive metabolites of xenobiotics.
...
PMID:The calcium-binding protein calreticulin is covalently modified in rat liver by a reactive metabolite of the inhalation anesthetic halothane. 150 64

Sera from patients with halothane hepatitis contain immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies to trifluoroacetylated liver microsomal proteins of 100, 76, 59, 57 and 54 kDa, which are produced as a consequence of metabolism of halothane to trifluoroacetyl halide by cytochrome(s) P450. In the present study, the membrane topographies of the various antigens in rat liver microsomal fractions were investigated. Liver microsomal fractions from rats treated with halothane in vivo, and rat liver microsomal fractions which had been incubated with halothane in vitro, were used as the source of trifluoroacetyl antigens. The antigens were detected by immunoblotting. Whereas the 100, 76, 59 and 57 kDa antigens were solubilized from the microsomal membrane by either 0.1 M sodium carbonate or 0.1% (w/v) sodium deoxycholate, the 54 kDa antigen was not solubilized by 0.1% (w/v) sodium deoxycholate. In intact microsomal fractions, the 100, 76, 59 and 57 kDa antigens were not degraded appreciably by trypsin unless detergent was added to permeabilize the microsomal membrane. These results indicate that the 54 kDa antigen is an integral membrane protein, whereas the 100, 76, 59 and 57 kDa antigens are peripheral membrane proteins situated within the lumen of microsomal vesicles, and hence presumably located within the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum in vivo.
...
PMID:The topography of trifluoroacetylated protein antigens in liver microsomal fractions from halothane treated rats. 151 Jul 11

It has previously been shown that the M (E1) glycoprotein of mouse hepatitis virus strain A59 (MHV-A59) contains only O-linked oligosaccharides and localizes to the Golgi region when expressed independently. A detailed pulse-chase analysis was made of the addition of O-linked sugars to the M protein; upon sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, three different electrophoretic forms could be distinguished that corresponded to the sequential acquisition of N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc), galactose (Gal), and sialic acid (SA). A fourth and fifth form could also be detected which we were unable to identify. Following Brefeldin A treatment, the M protein still acquired GalNAc, Gal, and SA, but the fourth and fifth forms were absent, suggesting that these modifications occur in the trans-Golgi network (TGN). In contrast, in the presence of BFA, the G protein of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), which contains N-linked oligosaccharides, acquired Gal and fucose but not SA. These results are consistent with earlier published data showing that Golgi compartments proximal to the TGN, but not the TGN itself, relocate to the endoplasmatic reticulum/intermediate compartment. More importantly, our data argue that, whereas addition of SA to N-linked sugars occurs in the TGN the acquisition of both SA on O-linked sugars and the addition of fucose to N-linked oligosaccharides must occur in Golgi compartments proximal to the TGN. The glycosylation of the M protein moreover indicates that it is transported to trans-Golgi and TGN. This was confirmed by electron microscopy immunocytochemistry, showing that the protein is targeted to cisternae on the trans side of the Golgi and co-localizes, at least in part, with TGN 38, a marker of the TGN, as well as with a lectin specific for sialic acid.
...
PMID:O-glycosylation of the coronavirus M protein. Differential localization of sialyltransferases in N- and O-linked glycosylation. 162 9


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>