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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fulminant hepatitis shows characteristic imbalance of amino acid levels; increased aromatic amino acid (AAA) and methionine. Elevated plasma AAA may cause hepatic encephalopathy and BCAA-enriched amino acids solution (BCAAs). Glucagon-
Insulin
(G-I) therapy and artificial liver support system have been proposed to correct the imbalance of amino acids. BCAAs and G-I therapy correct the aberrant amino acid patterns and artificial liver support system, including plasma pheresis, and charcoal haemoperfusion has also been used to reduce plasma amino acids levels. While imbalance of amino acids level in fulminant
hepatitis
is a result of acute necrosis of a large proportion of hepatocytes, careful and sufficient management of the disease is essential to normalize amino acid profiles.
...
PMID:[Imbalance of amino acid metabolism in fulminant hepatitis and its management]. 140 90
Ischemic hepatitis is not an uncommon complication of reversible severe hypotension or cardiac failure. The prognosis usually is determined by the cause of the initial hypotension or cardiac failure, rather than the subsequent hepatic dysfunction. We report a retrospective analysis of nine patients with ischemic
hepatitis
in which previously unreported clinical and biochemical abnormalities are noted. The clinical and biochemical course of the patients were reviewed until recovery or death from ischemic
hepatitis
. All the patients had a rapid striking elevation of aspartate aminotransferase, and lactic dehydrogenase, with an equally rapid resolution of these parameters. Abnormal serum glucose levels occurred in six patients (none of whom had a prior carbohydrate intolerance).
Insulin
therapy was given to three patients for a limited period. Renal impairment was manifest in all nine patients, and it resolved spontaneously within 10 days. Altered mental status was detected in six patients; the changes reverted to normal within 7 days of their onset. A preexisting anemia (hemoglobin less than 11.0 g/dl) was noted on admission in four patients, and it did not appear to potentiate the manifestations of the hepatic ischemia. We conclude that ischemic
hepatitis
should be anticipated in all patients with a recent history of systemic hypotension. It should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients with unexplained
hepatitis
; the early massive rise in lactic dehydrogenase, the rapid fall in transaminases, and the early mild/moderate renal failure strongly suggest ischemic
hepatitis
. Patients with ischemic
hepatitis
can manifest reversible renal failure, mental confusion, and hyperglycemia which may require insulin for its control.
...
PMID:Ischemic hepatitis: widening horizons. 848 Jul 56
Insulin
- and anti-immunoglobulin-antibodies have been recently reported in pre-diabetic subjects: the former has been proposed as a predictive marker of Type I diabetes in non-diabetic-subjects. To evaluate the diabetes-related specificity of these antibodies, the presence of insulin autoantibodies, using a recently developed and highly sensitive competitive radioimmune assay, and of anti-immunoglobulin antibodies together with that of immune complexes and of other autoantibodies has been investigated in patients with organ- or non-organ-specific autoimmune diseases. One hundred and eleven serum samples were assayed from patients with Graves' disease, primary hypothyroidism, chronic autoimmune thyroiditis, Addison's disease, chronic autoimmune
hepatitis
, pernicious anemia, lupus erythematosus, and rheumatoid arthritis, together with 45 serum samples from normal subjects. From patients with autoimmune diseases, 32.4% of all sera revealed values of insulin autoantibodies above the limit of positivity (p less than 0.001); anti-immunoglobulin antibodies were present in 4.1% of patients (NS); immune complexes were found in 19.5% (NS) of all patients, but in 38% of patients with Graves' disease and chronic hepatitis (p less than 0.02). There was a trend for multiple autoantibody positivity to be associated with high levels of insulin autoantibodies (p less than 0.05). Thus, whereas contrary to expectation anti-immunoglobulin antibodies are not associated with non-diabetes-related autoimmune diseases, increased humoral immunoresponsiveness to endogenous insulin appears to be related to autoimmunity in general rather than restricted to Type I diabetes.
...
PMID:Autoantibodies to insulin do appear in non-diabetic patients with autoimmune disorders: comparison with anti-immunoglobulin antibodies and other autoimmune phenomena. 218 33
Insulin
secretion in response to glucose, glucose-stimulated insulin biosynthesis and insulin content was studied in pancreatic islets freshly isolated from male Wistar rats (150-200 g) with galactosamine-induced
hepatitis
. Animals were sacrificed by decapitation 3, 6, 12 and 24 hours after a single intraperitoneal injection of 500 mg/kg of galactosamine. Isolated islets prepared by collagenase method were perifused in Swim's medium with 20 mM glucose at 37 degrees C up to 30 minutes. Samples were taken at 2-10 min intervals for insulin assay.
Insulin
biosynthesis was assessed by the incorporation of [3H]-leucine into immunoprecipitable products (insulin and proinsulin) in pancreatic islets after 120 min incubation with 20 mM glucose. Glucose-stimulated insulin secretion was significantly increased at 6, 12 and 24 hours following the administration of galactosamine compared to control. The rate of insulin biosynthesis was stimulated to 170, 138 and 185% of control level 3, 6 and 12 hours after galactosamine-treatment, respectively. Significant increase in insulin content of islets was found 24 hours after galactosamine treatment, following the increased insulin biosynthesis. The present results indicate that pancreatic B cell function is activated in early stage of acute liver injury.
...
PMID:Increase in glucose-stimulated insulin release and insulin biosynthesis in isolated pancreatic islets from D-galactosamine-treated rats. 219 63
Insulin
and C-peptide in venous blood were determined during oral glucose tolerance testing in 59 non-manifest diabetics with histologically established chronic liver disease (fatty degeneration, chronic aggressive
hepatitis
, cirrhosis). Glucose tolerance was pathologic in 60-80% of patients. When compared to a control group patients with chronic liver disease showed significantly increased values of blood glucose (after glucose intake), of insulin and of C-peptide (fasting and after glucose intake). The C-peptide/insulin ratio, a measure of hepatic insulin degradation, was significantly decreased after glucose uptake. There were no significant differences of blood sugar, insulin and C-peptide among the various liver diseases. In chronic aggressive
hepatitis
and in cirrhosis the C-peptide/insulin ratio was partly significantly lower than in fatty degeneration. From the increased C-peptide values increased insulin secretion in chronic liver diseases can be deducted. In addition, the decreased C-peptide/insulin ratios show an impairment of insulin degradation in liver cirrhosis and other chronic hepatic diseases. However, in fatty liver degeneration this is clearly less pronounced than in more serious liver diseases.
...
PMID:[Insulin and C-peptide in chronic liver diseases during oral glucose tolerance testing]. 636 4
6 girls, aged 4-16 years, with acanthosis nigricans and hirsutism were studied. Fasting and postglucose hyperinsulinism was present in the 5 older girls. In the youngest, a transitory diabetes with hyperinsulinism was induced by a cortisone therapy for
hepatitis
.
Insulin
resistance, suggested by the failure to significantly decrease blood glucose after insulin injection (0.1 U/kg), was demonstrated in three steps: (1) Patient plasma failed to bind 125I-insulin after a 5-day incubation followed by precipitation by antihuman globulin serum. (2) Specific 125I-insulin binding to rat liver membranes was identical in the presence of patient plasma and control plasma. (3) Specific 125I-insulin binding to the erythrocytes of the 6 patients (3.5-7.0%) was significantly lower (p less than 0.01) than in controls (4.5-19.5%). Moreover, the significant correlation present in controls between total binding and reticulocyte counts (r = 0.824, p less than 0.001) was absent in the patients. These data demonstrate further that, in the juvenile type of acanthosis nigricans, insulin resistance which may precede hyperinsulinism is not related to anti-insulin antibodies nor to antireceptor antibodies, but results from a primary defect of insulin receptors.
...
PMID:Insulin-specific binding to erythrocytes in 6 girls with acanthosis nigricans. 648 30
A 72-year-old woman was admitted because of jaundice and hepatocellular dysfunction. She was diagnosed with autoimmune
hepatitis
from laboratory test results showing high titers of antinuclear antibodies and negativity for
hepatitis
viral markers. Steroid i.v. pulse therapy and oral administration of prednisolone were effective in improving the liver function test results, except for hyperbilirubinemia. Elevated serum bilirubin levels, of approximately 20 mg/dl persisted for more than 6 months, despite the administration of ursodeoxycholic acid.
Insulin
-glucagon therapy was given for normalization of transaminases and then withdrawn 3 weeks after admission, but it was resumed at 3 months, resulting in a dramatic decrease in serum bilirubin levels, which then normalized in 2.5 months. Liver biopsy 6 months after onset showed chronic active hepatitis with bile plugs.
Insulin
-glucagon therapy, because of its choleretic effect, may be worth continuing even after recovery of acute hepatic failure.
...
PMID:Prolonged intrahepatic cholestasis in acute-onset, severe autoimmune hepatitis. 921 59
The definable causes of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) include jejunoileal bypass surgery (JIB), other causes of rapid and profound weight loss in obese subjects, total parenteral nutrition, drugs, industrial toxins, copper toxicity, and disorders characterized by extreme insulin resistance. However, the etiopathogenesis in most cases of NASH appears multifactorial. Obesity, type 2 diabetes, and hypertriglyceridemia are often associated with hepatic steatosis, and although this does not invariably lead to NASH, the fatty liver is vulnerable to hepatocellular injury initiated by reactive oxygen species (ROS). It is critical to understand not only the triggers for
hepatitis
(injury and inflammation) in NASH but also how this is perpetuated as chronic liver disease. The present focus is on whether the biochemical processes that generate oxidative stress lead to hepatocyte injury and secondary recruitment of inflammation or whether inflammation is the primary mediator of liver cell injury.
Insulin
resistance is a reproducible pathogenic factor in NASH. It favors accumulation of free fatty acids in the liver and predisposes to oxidative stress by stimulating microsomal lipid peroxidases and by the direct effects of high insulin levels in decreasing mitochondrial beta-oxidation. CYP2E1 is normally suppressed by insulin but is invariably increased in the livers of patients with NASH. In rodent dietary models of steatohepatitis, CYP2E1 is the catalyst of microsomal lipid peroxidation, while in Cyp 2e1 nullizygous mice, CYP4A proteins are induced and function as alternative microsomal lipid peroxidases. Other studies implicate activation of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-alpha (PPAR alpha) as leading to NASH; PPAR alpha is a transcription factor that governs both microsomal (via CYP4A) and peroxisomal (beta-oxidation) pathways of lipid oxidation and ultimately production of ROS. Increased lipid peroxidation is a crucial difference between the livers of rodents with experimental NASH and those of ob/ob genetically obese mice that have uncomplicated steatosis. Administration of endotoxin, through the release of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), provokes liver inflammation with hepatocyte injury in the steatotic liver. This may be particularly relevant in JIB and has been suggested as a pathogenic mechanism in primary NASH. It has been proposed that inheriting one or more copies of the hemochromatosis gene, C282Y, promotes fibrotic progression in NASH because of increased hepatic iron deposition, but recent studies have failed to confirm this. The relationship between the severity of
hepatitis
in NASH and progression to cirrhosis implies that products of the inflammatory infiltrate play a role in fibrogenesis. In summary, NASH can be regarded as the hepatic consequence of the metabolic syndrome (or syndrome X). Attention should now shift from steatosis, a generally benign process that is less evident in the advanced stages of cirrhosis, to the mechanisms for hepatocellular injury, inflammation, and hepatic fibrosis. In particular, the genetic, molecular, and cellular factors that ordain and moderate fibrosis in the context of steatohepatitis will be of greatest relevance to effective therapy and clinical outcome.
...
PMID:Etiopathogenesis of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis. 1129 94
Insulin
resistance (IR) in childhood has importance to the understanding and prevention of the growing epidemic of insulin resistance syndrome (IRS) in adults with attendant obesity, type 2 diabetes (T2DM), atherosclerotic diseases, hypertension, gout, non-alcoholic, steato-
hepatitis
(NASH), gall bladder disease, nephropathy, polycystic ovarian disease (PCOS), infertility and premature senility. The severity of IR and its' complications in children unfortunately and usually progresses in their pubertal transition to adulthood; affected young children are more likely than adults to have underlying causal monogenic disorders; the sequence of natural history and events give insights into disease pathogeneses, and optimal life style choices that last are best made during the early formative years. Some features of IR in children discussed herein are: a strong tendency to low birth weight for gestational age, adverse effects of adrenarche and therapeutic steroid therapy, predisposition to premature pubarche, acanthosis nigricans, tall stature despite pituitary GH suppression, allergic diathesis, hyperandrogenism and PCOS, dyslipidemia and fatty liver disease, and diagnosis by clinical and biochemical markers of IR including insulin regulated hepatic hormonal binding proteins such as IGFBP-1. The national preoccupation with the "metabolic syndrome" T2DM and obesity, should be appropriately directed to an improved understanding of IR in children and their management, if the looming health crisis in affected adults is to be seriously addressed. The nation is facing its' first generation of children who will be less healthy and die younger than the previous generation (Marks (2005) Presentation to the American Association of Diabetes Educators 32nd Annual Meeting and Exhibition, August 10-13, Washington, DC).
...
PMID:Childhood obesity and insulin resistance. 1770 76
Insulin
resistance exists in various chronic liver diseases such as fatty liver disease, liver cirrhosis,
hepatitis
, etc.
Insulin
resistance not only participates in the development of chronic liver diseases but also affects the efficacy of drug treatment. Paying more attention to diagnosis and treatment of insulin resistance will enhance the therapeutic effect and improve the prognosis of the patients. Traditional Chinese medicine has displayed its characteristics and advantage in treating insulin resistance. Investigation to chronic liver diseases based on lifestyle interference, exploration of the syndrome mechanism of insulin resistance, and scientific evaluation of the efficacy of Chinese herbal prescriptions will contribute to the research of traditional Chinese medicine in preventing and treating insulin resistance in chronic liver diseases.
...
PMID:[Pay attention to insulin resistance in chronic liver diseases]. 2008 50
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