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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Interleukin 10 (IL-10) is an important anti-inflammatory cytokine. To examine its role in virus-induced encephalomyelitis, IL-10-deficient (IL-10 -/-) mice were infected with a neurotropic strain of mouse
hepatitis
virus (JHMV). JHMV-infected IL-10 -/- mice, compared to IL-4 -/- and syngeneic C57BL/6 mice, exhibited increased morbidity and mortality. Virus was cleared from the CNS of all groups of mice with equal kinetics by day 9 postinfection and the lack of either IL-4 or IL-10 did not alter the distribution of viral antigen, suggesting a lack of correlation between viral replication and the increased clinical disease in IL-10 -/- mice. In moribund IL-10 -/- mice, a moderate increase in mononuclear cell infiltration was correlated with increased expression of
tumor necrosis factor
-alpha, interferon-gamma, and inducible nitric oxide synthase mRNAs. In the small percentage of IL-10 -/- mice that survived, no differences in either demyelination or inflammation were observed. Together, these results suggest that IL-10 is not required for viral clearance, and although it appears to be one of the mechanisms responsible for inhibiting the extent of inflammation in the CNS during acute JHMV infection, it has little role in the eventual resolution of CNS inflammatory responses.
...
PMID:The role of IL-10 in mouse hepatitis virus-induced demyelinating encephalomyelitis. 963 66
The liver injury in the concanavalin A (Con A)-induced mouse
hepatitis
model has been well studied. However, there has been little study on the effects of Con A on extrahepatic organs. The aim of the present work was to determine the effects of Con A on the spleen, kidney and lung. A histopathological study showed that Con A (15 mg/kg, i.v.) administration affects not only the liver, but also all these extrahepatic organs. Messenger RNA expression was studied by the using polymerase chain reaction. Treatment with Con A induced interleukin-2 mRNA in the spleen, but only slightly induced it in the kidney. The mRNAs of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) and
tumor necrosis factor
-alpha (TNF-alpha) were induced in all these organs. At 24 hr after Con A treatment, the expression of IFN-gamma mRNA, but not that of TNF-alpha mRNA, was inhibited by cyclosporine A (50 mg/kg, i.p.), suggesting that Con A induced these cytokine mRNAs through different mechanisms. In the kidney and lung, CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell infiltration was suggested by the Con A-induced CD4 and CD8 mRNAs. The present study showed the histopathological effects of Con A and Con A-induced cytokine mRNA expression on the spleen, kidney and lung.
...
PMID:Expression of cytokine mRNA in extrahepatic organs in a mouse concanavalin A-hepatitis model. 971 69
The Fas ligand (FasL), a member of the
tumor necrosis factor
family, induces apoptosis in Fas-expressing cells. A matrix metalloproteinase-like enzyme cleaves the membrane-bound FasL to produce the soluble FasL (sFasL). Since FasL has been reported to play a pivotal role in the development of
hepatitis
, we evaluated clinical significance of serum sFasL in acute liver injury including acute self-limited and fulminant
hepatitis
. Serum sFasL in 19 patients including 12 with acute self-limited
hepatitis
and 7 with fulminant
hepatitis
was measured by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The clinical data consisted of 18 indices including age, sex, liver function tests, hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), outcome and sFasL. Serum sFasL in fulminant
hepatitis
is 0.06+/-0.01 ng/ml, being identical to that in acute self-limited
hepatitis
, Serum sFasL is positively correlated with AST and ALT (p<0.0001 and p<0.0001). The factors associated with outcome of the patients were HGF, albumin, prothrombin time, platelet count, cholinesterase and leukocyte count in this order. Serum sFasL serves as an indicator of liver injury in acute self-limited and fulminant
hepatitis
.
...
PMID:Clinical significance of serum soluble Fas ligand in patients with acute self-limited and fulminant hepatitis. 975 39
It is well known that females show a greater susceptibility to alcohol-induced liver injury than males. Additionally, females who consume alcohol regularly and have been obese for 10 years or more are at greater risk for both
hepatitis
and cirrhosis. Female rats on an enteral alcohol protocol exhibit injury more quickly than males, with widespread fatty changes over a larger portion of the liver lobule. Levels of plasma endotoxin, intercellular adhesion molecule-1, free radical adducts, infiltrating neutrophils, and nuclear factor-kappaB are increased about twofold more in livers from female than male rats after enteral alcohol treatment. Estrogen treatment in vivo increases the sensitivity of Kupffer cells to endotoxin. Evidence has been presented that Kupffer cells are pivotal in the development of alcohol-induced liver injury. Destruction of Kupffer cells with gadolinium chloride (GdCl3) or reduction of bacterial endotoxin by sterilization of the gut with antibiotics blocks early inflammation due to alcohol. Similar results have been obtained with anti-
tumor necrosis factor
-alpha antibody. These findings led to the hypothesis that alcohol-induced liver injury involves increases in circulating endotoxin, leading to activation of Kupffer cells, which causes a hypoxia-reoxygenation injury. This idea has been tested using pimonidazole, a nitroimidazole marker, to quantitate hypoxia in downstream pericentral regions of the liver lobule. After chronic enteral alcohol, pimonidazole binding increases twofold. Enteral alcohol also increases free radicals detected with electron spin resonance. Importantly, hepatic hypoxia and radical production detected in bile are decreased by destruction of Kupffer cells with GdCl3. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that Kupffer cells participate in important gender differences in liver injury caused by alcohol.
...
PMID:II. Alcoholic liver injury involves activation of Kupffer cells by endotoxin. 975 87
To investigate the relationship among circulating cytokines, inflammation in the liver, and kind of response to interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) in hepatitis C, we studied 63 consecutive patients (38 male, 25 female), treated with IFN for up to 1 year. Serum
tumor necrosis factor
-alpha (TNF-alpha) was measured at baseline and after 3 months of treatment. Transient (TR) or sustained response (SR) was observed in 29 and 16 patients, respectively. Baseline levels of TNF < or = 22 ng/L were observed in 69% of patients with SR, 55% of patients with TR, and 22% of nonresponders (p < 0.01). There was a significant correlation between baseline TNF levels and histologic grading score of
hepatitis
(p < 0.01). After 3 months of treatment, TNF levels >22 ng/L were observed in 63% of patients with SR, 69% of patients with TR, and 83% of nonresponders (p NS). Independent of the treatment outcome, TNF levels were lower at baseline and increased significantly with treatment in patients with lower histologic grading (p < 0.005). In conclusion, in patients with chronic hepatitis C, circulating TNF levels correlate with the degree of inflammation in the liver. Response to IFN is accompanied by an inflammatory response involving the release of TNF.
...
PMID:Relationship among hepatic inflammatory changes, circulating levels of cytokines, and response to IFN-alpha in chronic hepatitis C. 978 9
Elevated concentrations of plasma proinflammatory cytokines have been detected in patients with alcoholic hepatitis (AH) and in a model of lipopolysaccharide-induced
hepatitis
in ethanol-fed Wistar rats. These cytokines have been implicated in the pathogenesis of the liver damage. Considering the likely involvement of the immune system in AH, and the frequent use of Lewis rats in autoimmune disease models, Lewis rats were examined in the model to determine whether they would more closely mimic the immune status of a chronic alcoholic and be a preferable strain for use in future experiments. Lipopolysaccharide-induced hepatic
tumor necrosis factor
-alpha, interleukin-1alpha, interleukin-1beta, and interleukin-6 mRNA expression was examined in both rat strains. The overall pattern of histological (panlobular piecemeal necrosis) and biochemical liver damage (plasma ALT levels), and cytokine expression was similar in both strains. Thus, it would appear that, despite the known susceptibility of Lewis rats to autoimmune phenomena, they do not respond to the experimental regime significantly better than Wistar rats. This study confirms that unknown mediators are contributing to the liver damage seen in this model and possibly in AH.
...
PMID:A comparison of lipopolysaccharide-induced hepatitis in ethanol-fed Wistar and Lewis rats. 980 38
The effect of matrine (Mat) on lipopolysaccharides (LPS)-induced fatal
hepatitis
and
tumor necrosis factor
(
TNF
) production in Propionibacterium acnes (PA)-primed mice were studied. Mice were injected i.p. LPS (10 micrograms/mouse) 7 d after i.p. PA (0.5 ml/mouse) to induce fatal
hepatitis
. After i.p. LPS, serum
TNF
activity rose to 1657 +/- 406 kU.L-1 at 1.5 h and ALT activity increased up to 1,496 +/- 890 U.L-1 at 5 h. Six of 8 mice died within 5 h and the massive hemorrhagic necrosis of the liver was observed in all mice. Administration of Mat (10, 50 mg.kg-1, i.p., bid x 3 d) before the LPS injection markedly reduced the elevation of serum
TNF
and ALT activity in a dose-dependent manner, and diminished the mortality induced by LPS. Liver congestion and necrosis induced by LPS in PA-primed mice were ameliorated markedly by Mat pretreatment. Mat (62.5-250 mg.L-1) inhibited LPS-induced
TNF
release from PA-primed mouse peritoneal macrophage in vitro in a concentration-dependent manner. These results seggest that Mat protected PA-primed mice from the development of fatal
hepatitis
induced by LPS due to inhibition of
TNF
production.
...
PMID:[Effect of matrine on mouse hepatitis and tumor necrosis factor production induced by Propionibacterium acnes/lipopolysaccharides]. 986 31
The purpose of this study was to determine the frequency of infection by hepatitis A, B, C, D, E, and G in liver biopsy specimens from symptomatic patients and to correlate viral localization with the expression of interferon tau, interleukin 4, and
tumor necrosis factor
messenger RNA. Tissue biopsy specimens were taken from 78 patients as follows: 14 patients with transplants, 23 patients with cirrhotic livers, and 41 patients with chronic hepatitis. At least one of the
hepatitis
viruses was detected in 60 of 78 (77%) specimens; multiple infection was evident in 18 of 78 (23%) specimens. The overall incidence of the different viruses was as follows: 8% hepatitis A, 3% hepatitis B, 52% hepatitis C, 1% hepatitis D, 24% hepatitis E, 18% hepatitis G. Throughout each category, hepatitis C was the most common virus detected. No histologic variable correlated with either the percentage of infected hepatocytes per lobule or nodule or with the specific viral type. The cytokines localized to monocytes or lymphocytes adjacent to infected hepatocytes. These results demonstrate that viral infection is present in most biopsy specimens of patients with chronic hepatitis and liver transplants and that hepatitis C, E, and G account for most of the infections. The results also suggest that direct viral infection in conjunction with expression of different cytokines is important in the pathophysiology of viral-induced liver disease.
...
PMID:Histologic distribution of hepatitis A, B, C, D, E, and G with concomitant cytokine response in liver tissue. 999 Apr 85
Experimental
hepatitis
induced by
tumor necrosis factor
in D-(+)-galactosamine-sensitized mice or by an agonistic anti-Fas antibody in normal mice is accompanied by dramatic apoptosis of hepatocytes. Apoptosis is the final result of activation of a cascade of caspases. We used caspase-1-/- mice, generated by gene targeting, to study the role of this protease in TNF- and anti-Fas-induced lethal
hepatitis
. We found that mutant mice exhibited the typical caspase-1-/- phenotype, since they resisted to a lethal injection of LPS and released no interleukin-1beta in the circulation, in contrast to wild-type littermates. When caspase-1-/- mice were challenged with different doses of
tumor necrosis factor
/D-(+)-galactosamine or with anti-Fas, no increased survival was observed compared with control mice. Furthermore, apoptosis in the livers of these mice and serum levels of alanine aminotransferase were not reduced. These data indicate that caspase-1 deficiency does not lead to reduced apoptosis in these models, either because caspase-1 is irrelevant in this model or because of functional redundancy.
...
PMID:Caspase-1 is not involved in experimental hepatitis in mouse. 1006 84
Rolipram is a type IV phosphodiesterase inhibitor endowed with powerful immunomodulatory properties. In this study, we evaluated the effects of this drug on the development of the T-cell-mediated
hepatitis
inducible in mice by concanavalin A. The results indicated that prophylactic treatment with either 5 or 10 mg/kg rolipram injected intraperitoneally 24 h and 1 h prior to intravenous (i.v.) challenge with 20 mg/kg concanavalin A successfully ameliorated serological and histological signs of liver damage, so that the treated mice showed lower transaminase levels in the plasma and milder mononuclear cell infiltration of the liver as compared to vehicle-treated controls. Moreover, this effect was associated with profound modifications of circulating levels of cytokines released after concanavalin A injection, with the blood levels of interferon-gamma and
tumor necrosis factor
-alpha being significantly lower and those of interleukin-10 higher than those of the control mice. In particular, the increased blood levels of interleukin-10 might play an important role in the anti-hepatitic effects of rolipram as coadministering this compound with anti-interleukin-10 monoclonal antibody significantly reduced its anti-inflammatory action. These results suggest that rolipram may be useful in the clinical setting for the treatment of cell-mediated immunoinflammatory diseases such as immunoinflammatory
hepatitis
.
...
PMID:Prevention by rolipram of concanavalin A-induced T-cell-dependent hepatitis in mice. 1007 16
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