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)

As with most liver diseases, the symptoms of hepatitis in dogs are nearly always aspecific: the dogs eat less, are apathetic, sometimes have polyuria/polydipsia, and sometimes have diarrhoea. Hepatoencephalopathy and ascites only occur with these symptoms in very advanced stages of chronic hepatitis. Only a part of the dogs have jaundice. Because of these aspecific symptoms, the diagnosis hepatitis is often not taken into consideration, even though the presence of a liver disease can be easily detected by measuring plasma concentrations of alkaline phosphatase and bile acids, one or both of which are elevated. The diagnosis is confirmed by histological examination of a liver biopsy sample. The most common forms of hepatitis are non-specific reactive hepatitis, acute hepatitis, and chronic hepatitis. Non-specific reactive hepatitis is a reaction against endotoxin as a result of sepsis or an increased gastrointestinal absorption. Treatment is directed to the primary process. Leptospirosis also causes non-specific reactive hepatitis, but then renal insufficiency is the most prominent feature. The diagnosis is made not on the basis of a liver biopsy but on the basis of increased IgM titres against Leptospira. Immediate treatment with antibiotics and infusions at the first signs (jaundice and uraemia) can save the animal's life. Acute hepatitis can develop as a result of infection, toxins, or liver hypoxia. There is no specific treatment, but adequate recovery often occurs with supportive treatment. Corticosteroids are contraindicated. Chronic hepatitis, which can lead to cirrhosis, is the most common form of hepatitis. It is an autoimmune inflammatory reaction that is usually caused by a virus infection but sometimes by poisoning (intoxication). Long treatment with prednisolone or azathioprine is usually successful, but early recognition of the disease increases the likelihood of success. Nowadays, chronic hepatitis due to hepatic copper accumulation in Beddlington terriers can be detected by DNA tests. Such tests make it possible to distinguish between carriers and non-carriers. Affected animals can be kept symptom-free by life-long treatment with zinc gluconate or penicillamine.
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PMID:[Hepatitis in dogs; a review]. 958 48

This investigation describes histologic lesions in the livers of 18 Doberman Pinschers suffering from subclinical doberman hepatitis (DH). The dogs' ages ranged from 2.5 to 7 years; 15 were females and 3 were males. At the time of liver biopsy, the dogs had no clinical signs of liver disease, although serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) values had been elevated in two samples in successive months. In the histologic examination, all biopsies revealed parenchymal and portal mononuclear inflammation. In the parenchyma, the inflammation was diffuse, with multifocal clusters of inflammatory cells. The periportal reaction was usually mild to moderate. Bridging necrosis (3/18) and bile duct proliferation (2/18) were rare. Excessive copper was detected by rubeinic acid stain in every specimen. Postmortem liver samples were obtained from nine dogs 3.5-65 months after the initial biopsy specimen; five of these dogs had been euthanatized for reasons other than DH, and liver specimens revealed piecemeal necrosis (5/5), bridging necrosis (3/5), and bile duct proliferation (2/5). Four of them had been euthanatized because of DH. Liver lesions of these dogs were typical for chronic active hepatitis, with bridging and piecemeal necrosis (4/4), portal expansion (4/4), bile duct proliferation (4/4), and fibrosis (4/4). A scoring system was used to evaluate changes numerically from biopsy to postmortem samples. Lesions in all dogs had progressed. The most important histologic changes were expansion of portal areas (P = 0.008), increased periportal and bridging necrosis (P = 0.008), increased fibrosis (P = 0.016), and proliferation of the bile ducts (P = 0.063).
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PMID:Lesions of subclinical doberman hepatitis. 975 41

Liver tissue samples were reviewed from 35 Doberman Pinschers with chronic active hepatitis in the precirrhotic stage. Thirty dogs had elevated hepatic copper concentrations, and five had normal liver copper concentrations. The earliest changes were inflammation and scar tissue deposition around the small hepatic vein branches. There was also apoptosis of scattered hepatocytes in zone 3. Inflammation consisted of macrophages, lymphocytes, and plasma cells. As the disease progressed, collagen deposition increased around the hepatic veins; in some liver specimens, thin scar tissue septa radiated from the hepatic vein branches, and inflammation spread to include the portal tracts. The sinusoids adjacent to the scar tissue were converted to endothelial-lined, thin-walled vessels. Chronic active hepatitis (commonly referred to as Doberman hepatitis or chronic active hepatitis of Dobermans) is a progressive fibrosis, inflammation and hepatocyte loss beginning among zone 3 hepatocytes around the terminal hepatic vein branches. The histomorphologic changes were the same among those Dobermans with elevated hepatic copper and those with normal hepatic copper. The cause was not determined, but these morphologic studies support the idea of immune-mediated disease.
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PMID:Histomorphological and immunohistochemical studies of chronic active hepatitis in Doberman Pinschers. 975 43

A novel copper-binding protein was identified in the liver supernatant (100,000 x g) of Indian childhood cirrhosis (ICC), purified to apparent homogeneity and characterized [corrected]. Purified major copper-binding protein (MCuBP) is solely responsible for binding about 35% of the total supernatant copper. Elution profile of ICC liver supernatant on Sephadex G-75 column chromatography showed three peaks. About 60% of the total supernatant copper was resolved in peak II, whereas zinc content was insignificant in this peak. But peak II was almost missing in a gel elution profile of control liver supernatant. The control group included cases of various liver diseases viz. neonatal hepatitis, septicemia, and mixed nodular cirrhosis. Copper-binding proteins of peak II further purified on ion-exchange chromatography and elution profile showed that peak II was a MCuBP with high copper-binding capacity (10 g atoms/mol of native protein). SDS-PAGE of this protein also revealed the existence of a single band with molecular mass of about 50 kD. UV spectra of MCuBP showed the maximal absorbance at 254 nm. Unlike the classical metallothionein, the amino acid composition of MCuBP revealed the presence of aromatic amino acids and higher content of glutamic acid and aspartic acid followed by glycine and serine. The ratio (0.3) of basic amino acids to acidic amino acids strongly indicates that it is an acidic protein. The cysteine content in this protein was insignificant, which further corroborates the possibility that the acidic amino acids might be prominent candidates for binding copper. Thus, the 50-kD MCuBP apparently makes a major contribution to the total copper-binding activity in ICC liver cytosol and may play a significant role in hepatic intracellular copper accumulation.
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PMID:Identification of a novel copper-binding protein from the liver of Indian childhood cirrhosis: purification and physicochemical characterization [corrected]. 980 48

We present the case of a 53 year-old patient with idiopathic thrombocytopenia associated with Wilson's disease. Idiopathic thrombocytopenia was diagnosed in August of 1994, and as the response to corticosteroid therapy was poor, the patient underwent a splenectomy in October of the same year. A liver biopsy, which was performed during the operation, showed Wilson's disease in the form of mild, chronic, active hepatitis. The serum ceruloplasmin was low, and the Kayser Fleischer's ring was positive. MRI of the brain showed cortical reductive changes with areas of copper accumulation in the white brain matter. An unusual presentation of Wilson's disease associated with idiopathic thrombocytopenia has not been published as of yet. The diagnosis of Wilson's disease was made at an advanced, adult age, which may implicate a heterozygous genetic configuration.
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PMID:Idiopathic thrombocytopenia associated with Wilson's disease. 984 Jan 46

The inbred mutant strains of Long-Evans Cinnamon (LEC) rats spontaneously develops acute hepatitis as a result of abnormal copper accumulation, followed by chronic hepatitis, cholangiofibrosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. To shed some light on the role of macrophages in the liver failure, immunohistochemical methods were used to investigate the kinetics of macrophage populations in the liver of male LEC rats, in relation to the appearance of myofibroblastic cells and hepatocyte apoptosis. Rats examined at 24 weeks of age and moribund rats killed at 22-25 weeks of age had increased serum concentrations of aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase, with jaundice and histological changes indicative of hepatic failure, whereas rats examined at 8, 12, 16 or 20 weeks old showed no such abnormal findings. Immunolabelling with ED1 (a monoclonal antibody recognizing rat macrophages) and ED2 (a monoclonal antibody specific for rat resident macrophages) revealed that numbers of blood monocyte-derived macrophages and Kupffer cells began to increase markedly at 16 weeks of age (before the onset of hepatitis). However, alpha-smooth muscle actin (SMA)-positive myofibroblastic cells (modulated perisinusoidal cells) and hepatocyte apoptosis, demonstrable by the TUNEL method, were rarely seen at 8, 12, 16, 20 or 24 weeks. There was no close relationship between macrophage expansion and the appearance of myofibroblastic cells or hepatocyte apoptosis. In moribund rats, only a few SMA-positive cells were seen in the periportal zones; hepatocytes undergoing apoptosis increased in number, and macrophages engulfing apoptotic bodies were observed occasionally, suggesting that apoptosis was related to hepatic failure as an early event. In addition, immunohistochemical examination demonstrated abnormal deposits of laminin along the sinusoids from 20 weeks, as an initial extracellular matrix protein in LEC rat livers.
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PMID:Macrophage populations and apoptotic cells in the liver before spontaneous hepatitis in Long-Evans Cinnamon (LEC) rats. 1020 30

Conflicting results have been reported on the usefulness of histochemistry for copper in the diagnosis of Wilson's Disease (W.D.). In spite of the high number of methods proposed in the literature, no-one has shown to have the characteristics typical of a good histochemical method: high sensitivity associated with high specificity. On this basis, it seemed of interest to evaluate, in a large series of patients with W.D., the diagnostic value of the most commonly used histochemical methods for copper (rhodanine, orcein and Timm's method). To this end, 74 liver needle biopsies from patients affected by W.D., 39 males and 35 females, aged 4-60 years (mean age 28.5 years), were stained with rhodanine (R), orcein (O) and Timm's (T) methods. On the basis of the histological picture, liver biopsies were subdivided in four evolutive stages: stage I = steatosis; stage II = interface hepatitis; stage III = bridging fibrosis; stage IV = cirrhosis. In stage I, histochemistry for copper was positive in 11 out of 21 cases: 6 cases were T+; 1 case R+ and 2 cases O+; 2 cases were T+, R+, O+. In stage II, 11 out of 14 cases were positive for copper staining: 4 T+, 2 R+ and 2 O+; 3 cases were contemporary positives for T, R, O. In stage III, 22 out of 25 cases resulted positive: 8 T+, 3 R+ and 1 O+; 10 cases were positives, in the mean time, for more of one method. In stage IV, 12 of 14 cases were positives: 5 T+, 2 R+, 2 O+ and 3 cases were contemporaneously positives for multiple methods. Our data show that: 1) the percentage of positivity obtained using three histochemical methods for copper is higher than using only one method. From a practical point of view, it is mandatory to utilize, in clinical practice, multiple histochemical stains in order to increase the diagnostic utility of histochemistry for copper; 2) the Timm's method appears to be the most sensitive method for the demonstration of copper in all stages of W.D.; 3) even though hepatic copper already abounds in the early stages of W.D., this pool of intrahepatic copper is not yet demonstrable with any of the three histochemical techniques utilized.
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PMID:[Multiple histochemical methods in the diagnosis of Wilson's disease. (Presentation of 74 cases and review of the literature)]. 1022 Sep 97

Visualization of copper-induced hepatitis (CuH) in LEC rats was performed by using an MRI apparatus equipped with a magnet producing a high magnetic field of 7.05 T. When three groups of LEC rats (6-16 [pre-hepatitis], 15-26 [acute hepatitis] and 40-77 [chronic hepatitis] weeks old) were examined by MRI under T2-weighted imaging conditions which are suitable for the diagnosis of human hepatitis, hypointense MR images of the livers were, as a whole, obtained in all groups, suggesting that these conditions were not adequate for imaging of CuH of LEC rats. The shortening of the T1 and T2 relaxation times of livers due to an excess amount of paramagnetic irons under the high magnetic field was responsible for the lowering of MR signal intensities of the livers, especially those of 15 to 26-week old rats showing acute hepatitis. However, theoretical calculation of the MR signal intensities using the T1 and T2 relaxation times of the livers indicated that their imaging might be possible under proton density-weighted conditions even with a high magnetic field. Experimental results showed that hepatic injury was visualized as hyperintense regions in the MR image of the liver in the acute-phase rat.
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PMID:MR imaging of hepatic injury in the LEC rat under a high magnetic field (7.05 T). 1033 Nov 95

Spontaneous renal cell tumors in totals of 223 male and female Long-Evans Cinnamon (LEC) rats of 51-120 weeks old, 157 male F344 rats of 51-120 weeks old, and 14 male Long-Evans Agouti (LEA) rats of 51-70 weeks old were examined histologically. The incidences of renal cell tumors increased with age in male and female LEC rats, but no tumors developed in F344 or LEA rats. Dilated atypical tubules of the kidneys were observed at high incidence in aged LEC rats. Copper staining of LEC rat kidneys showed a positive reaction in proximal tubules of the cortex and the outer stripe of the medulla. The renal copper concentration of LEC rats reached a peak in the period of necrotizing hepatitis with renal tubular necrosis, and was higher than that in F344 rats for up to 106 weeks. In contrast, the renal iron concentration of LEC rats was lower than that in F344 rats except in the period of necrotizing hepatitis. Long-term treatment of LEC rats with D-penicillamine, a copper-chelating agent, inhibited accumulation of copper, but not iron, in the kidneys, and inhibited the development of karyomegaly of proximal tubules and dilated atypical tubules. These results suggest that persistent copper accumulation after toxic necrosis of tubules is the major cause of spontaneous renal carcinogenesis in LEC rats.
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PMID:Role of copper accumulation in spontaneous renal carcinogenesis in Long-Evans Cinnamon rats. 1036 75

To examine the effect of nongenotoxic chemicals on hepatocarcinogenesis in Long-Evans Cinnamon (LEC) rats, we gave 6-week-old male and female LEC rats (n = 18) weekly subcutaneous injections of D-galactosamine hydrochloride (GalN, 300 mg/kg) in 0.9% NaCl or only 0.9% NaCl for 50 weeks, and killed them in week 62. GalN-treated male rats unexpectedly showed no lethal necrotizing hepatitis. GalN treatment increased the incidence of cholangiofibrosis in males and its severity in females, but did not cause significant increases of hepatocellular tumors in either sex. GaIN treatment increased the 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU)-labeling index of hepatocytes and plasma hepatocyte growth factor, and accelerated megalocytic alterations without reduction of the hepatic copper concentration. Next, male and female LEC rats were subjected to two-thirds partial hepatectomy (PH) or sham hepatectomy in week 8 (n = 12) or in week 14 (n = 9), and killed in week 62. PH in week 14 inhibited lethal hepatitis, but PH in week 8 was less effective. PH reduced the hepatic copper concentration to half that of controls. The present data suggest that induction of hepatocyte regeneration by repeated injections of GalN, or by PH just before the onset of jaundice has a significant effect in prevention of hepatic injury of LEC rats, but not enhancement of spontaneous hepatocarcinogenesis.
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PMID:Effects of D-galactosamine hydrochloride and partial hepatectomy on spontaneous hepatic injury and hepatocarcinogenesis in Long-Evans Cinnamon rats. 1039 Oct 88


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