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)

We present a patient with left ventricular thrombus diagnosed by two-dimensional echocardiography. Thrombosis was due to acquired transient protein C deficiency which was caused by impaired liver function due to hepatitis, sepsis and heart failure. With proper treatment the thrombus disappeared on the fourth day. Eighteen weeks later the protein C level returned to normal. We recommend echocardiographic evaluation and follow-up of suspected cases for intracardiac thrombus. The measurement of protein C level in such cases is proposed. This is the first case with left-sided cardiac thrombus associated with protein C deficiency in the medical literature.
...
PMID:Left ventricular thrombosis due to acquired protein C deficiency diagnosed by two-dimensional echocardiography. 159 53

Bleeding complications during liver transplantation have been attributed to accelerated fibrinolysis. In order to determine its cause, 11 adults (mean age: 38.9 +/- 13.2 yr) undergoing liver transplantation were studied. There were three groups of patients: cirrhosis (n = 4), fulminating hepatitis (n = 4) and one group including a primary biliary cirrhosis, a hepatic metastasis and a hepatoma. The following factors were studied in the immediate preoperative period, at different surgical times throughout the procedure and 2-3 h after the end of the abdominal sutures: platelet count, prothrombin concentration, fibrinogen, activated kephalin time, factors II, V, VII + X and VIIIc, antithrombin III, protein C, D-dimers, fibrinogen and fibrin degradation products (PDF), plasma plasminogen, tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) and the fast tPA inhibitor (PAi). Preoperatively, only the two patients with hepatic cancer had a normal haemostatic profile. Throughout the procedure, all patients had only moderate changes in platelets, coagulation factors and their inhibitors, and plasminogen, because platelet concentrates and fresh frozen plasma were transfused. Levels of tPA rose, becoming very high during the anhepatic period and just after graft reperfusion. An abrupt fall occurred at the end of surgery. There were important individual differences in tPA activity. PAi activity was low during the preanhepatic and anhepatic stages, rising rapidly after revascularization.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Fibrinolytic activity in patients undergoing hepatic transplantation]. 249 27

A 24-year-old patient was admitted to our hospital because of vertigo, coldness and exercise-dependent pain in the left arm. She reported to have suffered from tuberculosis of the lung and a non-A-non-B hepatitis five years ago. Angiography of the aorta thoracica revealed a complete obstruction of the left arteria (a.) subclavia, stenosis of the a. carotis communis on both sides, of the a. carotis interna and the a. vertebralis on the left side as well as a non-detectable perfusion of the upper and medium segment of the left lung. ESR was elevated with 89/128 mm n.W., a hypochromic anaemia, thrombocytosis, hypalbuminaemia, elevation of alpha 2 and gammaglobulins in serum as well as a reduced quick value were found. AT III and protein C concentrations in plasma were also decreased, whereby protein C activity was reduced additionally. HLA-B-51 was positive. Takayasu's arteriitis was diagnosed by us. High-dose treatment with corticosteroids led to a considerable improvement of the clinical status and laboratory parameters of the patient. As this therapy was not associated with a normalization of protein C and AT III concentrations in plasma, protein C and AT III deficiency could be of significance in the development of Takayasu's arteriitis. Until now protein C and AT III deficiency were not described in patients with Takayasu's arteriitis.
...
PMID:[A patient with Takayasu arteritis and protein C and AT III deficiency]. 288 94

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is the major cause of transfusion-acquired non-A, non-B hepatitis. HCV is an enveloped positive-sense RNA virus which has been classified as a new genus in the flavivirus family. Like the other two genera in this family, the flaviviruses and the pestiviruses, HCV polypeptides appear to be produced by translation of a long open reading frame and subsequent proteolytic processing of this polyprotein. In this study, a cDNA clone encompassing the long open reading frame of the HCV H strain (3,011 amino acid residues) has been assembled and sequenced. This clone and various truncated derivatives were used in vaccinia virus transient-expression assays to map HCV-encoded polypeptides and to study HCV polyprotein processing. HCV polyproteins and cleavage products were identified by using convalescent human sera and a panel of region-specific polyclonal rabbit antisera. Similar results were obtained for several mammalian cell lines examined, including the human HepG2 hepatoma line. The data indicate that at least nine polypeptides are produced by cleavage of the HCV H strain polyprotein. Putative structural proteins, located in the N-terminal one-fourth of the polyprotein, include the capsid protein C (21 kDa) followed by two possible virion envelope proteins, E1 (31 kDa) and E2 (70 kDa), which are heavily modified by N-linked glycosylation. The remainder of the polyprotein probably encodes nonstructural proteins including NS2 (23 kDa), NS3 (70 kDa), NS4A (8 kDa), NS4B (27 kDa), NS5A (58 kDa), and NS5B (68 kDa). An 82- to 88-kDa glycoprotein which reacted with both E2 and NS2-specific HCV antisera was also identified (called E2-NS2). Preliminary results suggest that a fraction of E1 is associated with E2 and E2-NS2 via disulfide linkages.
...
PMID:Expression and identification of hepatitis C virus polyprotein cleavage products. 767 46

Urinary gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (gamma-Gla) levels were determined in healthy subjects of all ages. The urinary gamma-Gla levels were highest in infants (0-1 years), then fell in an age-dependent manner, again in subjects reaching a minimum value in adults, then gradually increased over 60 years of age. Urinary gamma-Gla levels therefore change markedly with aging. The relationships between the urinary gamma-Gla excretion and plasma levels of prothrombin and protein C in patients with various hepatic diseases or diabetes mellitus were examined and compared with those in healthy adults. Both plasma prothrombin and protein C levels were decreased in all patients with liver disease compared with healthy adults. In patients with hepatitis and liver cirrhosis, the decrease did not, however, affect the gamma-Gla excretion. In addition, in patients with hepatoma or carcinoma with liver metastases, the urinary gamma-Gla levels were increased. In patients with diabetes mellitus, the urinary gamma-Gla levels and plasma levels of prothrombin and protein C tended to increase, but this was not significant. The present results indicate that simultaneous measurement of the levels of urinary gamma-Gla and plasma prothrombin and protein C is a useful tool for the diagnosis of liver diseases and diabetes mellitus.
...
PMID:Urinary levels of gamma-carboxyglutamic acid and its clinical significance. 814 4

We present a 2-month-old male infant with thrombosis in the superior vena cava and pericardium due to transient protein C deficiency. Protein C deficiency was related to sepsis and hepatitis-induced liver function impairment. The patient's cardiac anatomy was otherwise normal. The patient was referred to us with signs of superior vena cava syndrome. Pericardial mass was excised. Pathological examination diagnosed the mass as organized thrombus. After the operation, signs of superior vena cava syndrome totally resolved. Serial echocardiographic examinations revealed regression of thrombus in the superior vena cava. This is the first case reported in the literature with intrapericardial thrombus secondary to transient protein C deficiency.
...
PMID:Venous and intrapericardial thrombosis: secondary to transient protein C deficiency. 1683 80

The purpose of the investigation was to study the condition of the protein C system in chronic virial hepatitis (CVH) and viral hepatic cirrhosis (HC) during the course of antiviral therapy. The total protein C system activity (in a form of normalized ratio - NR) was studied before and 6 month after antiviral therapy in 27 patients with CVH B, in 79 patients with CVH C, and in 5 patients CVH D, as well in 29 patients with viral HC and 29 patients with alcoholic HC/. The total protein C system activity was decreased in chronic viral hepatic disease, and was minimal in patients with HC; the most severe disturbances were observed in patients with poor prognosis of HC and decompensated portal hypertension. The study found a correlation between NR values and histological manifestation of the pathology, which demonstrates an important role of the protein C system in the progress of chronic hepatic diseases. Anti-virial drugs had a positive effect of the functioning of the protein C system, which may be one of the ways of the realization of their antifibrotic effect.
...
PMID:[The protein C system in chronic hepatic diseases, and anti-viral therapy]. 1836 97

A 70-year-old Caucasian man with a medical history of Parkinson's disease presented with a 3-month history of violaceous reticulated patches on his upper and lower extremities. The lesions were asymptomatic. The patient did not have a history of cardioembolic events or autoimmune disorders. No new medications were started before the onset of the lesions. Review of systems was unremarkable. On examination, large erythematous to violaceous patches were present in a reticulated net-like pattern on the patient's upper and lower extremities (Figure 1 and Figure 2). No edema, erosions, or ulcerations were noted. An extensive workup for autoimmune, infectious, and hematologic causes of livedo reticularis was performed. Complete blood cell count, anti-nuclear antibodies (ANAs), anti-Ro and anti-La antibodies, antiphospholipid antibodies, protein C and S levels, cryoglobulin screen, rheumatoid factor, and hepatitis screen were all within normal limits. After these potential other causes were excluded, the patient was diagnosed with amantadine-induced livedo reticularis (LR), a medication he had been taking for 2 years for Parkinson's disease. The patient's dose of amantadine was decreased from 100 mg to 50 mg twice daily and over the next few months, his lesions gradually faded. Because his neurologic condition benefited from amantadine and his lesions were asymptomatic, his neurologist continued the medication.
...
PMID:Livedo reticularis from amantadine. 2216 49

Vitamin K is frequently administered in cirrhotic patients to correct their coagulopathy, but evidence for such practice is lacking. We aimed to assess whether vitamin K administration increases the levels of the vitamin K-dependent factor VII (FVII), protein C, and protein S in patients with different stages of liver dysfunction. Eighty-nine patients were recruited into four groups: group 1 [hepatitis B virus (HBV) inactive carriers, n = 23]; group 2 [chronic HBV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) hepatitis, n = 21]; group 3 (cirrhosis, n = 24); group 4 (hepatocellular carcinoma, n = 21); and a healthy control group (n = 39). A single dose of 10 mg of vitamin K1 was administered subcutaneously to all patients. Prothrombin time (PT), activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT), thrombin time (TT), fibrinogen, FVII, protein C, total and free protein S, and proteins induced by vitamin K absence (PIVKA)-II (des-gamma-carboxy prothrombin) were measured at baseline and 72 h after vitamin K administration. There was progressive increment in baseline PIVKA-II, and decrements in fibrinogen, FVII, protein C, and protein S across study groups (P < 0.0001). Compared to baseline, vitamin K administration did not affect the measured parameters, whereas TT showed no reduction in any of the groups. Protein C levels declined in group 2, whereas FVII, total and free protein S did not increase in any group, for all parameters. Vitamin K therapy does not cause significant improvements in the majority of coagulation parameters and hence does not seem to be routinely indicated in patients with liver disease.
...
PMID:The coagulopathy of liver disease: does vitamin K help? 2308 Mar 65