Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0019163 (
hepatitis B
)
38,309
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An analysis of 242 patients with a hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has shown that 65 patients without a
hepatitis B
virus (HBV),
alcohol abuse
, or a transfusion history and 17 posttransfusion patients had a mean death age of 65.5 +/- 10.2 and 62.1 +/- 8.4 years respectively. The average age of 65 patients was 8.5 years older than those with a HBV and without a
alcohol abuse
history. Of 17 patients, 3 with a HBV had a mean death age of 55.3 +/- 10.8 years and the interval time from transfusion to a HCC was significantly shorter than in other post-transfusion patients.
...
PMID:[Clinical analysis of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma with non-A, non-B hepatitis virus]. 254 48
Metastatic patterns of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in 6997 autopsy cases recorded in the Annual of the Pathological Autopsy Cases in Japan from 1981 to 1984 were analyzed by using a computer. Significant association of the metastatic pattern of hepatocellular carcinoma with age and sex was shown after separating patients into different age groups in pack years. It was especially worthy of notice that bone metastasis decreased in an age-dependent manner only in men within the widest age range (P less than 0.001) and was significantly prevalent in men in their forties and fifties (P = 0.012). In addition, in 350 cases of hepatocellular carcinoma autopsied at Tokyo University Hospital during 15 years from 1971 to 1985, it was suggested that bone metastasis might be prevalent in male patients with liver cirrhosis although significant relationship between bone metastasis and
hepatitis B
virus infection or
alcohol abuse
was not shown. These results might indicate possible effects of sex differences on the metastatic pattern of hepatocellular carcinoma, particularly bone metastasis, as well as on the incidence of the cancer.
...
PMID:Age and sex differences in bone metastasis of hepatocellular carcinoma in Japanese autopsy cases. 254 98
The findings at 26.879 autopsies, that is 70% of all the deaths registered in the Province of Trieste, obtained at the Institute of Pathologic Anatomy and Histology of Trieste from 1976 to 1985 were studied. Liver cancer showed in the Province the World Standardized Incidence Rate (WR) of 1.87 (females) and 12.78 (males), one of the highest ever observed in nonendemic areas. In view of close association between cancer of the liver and cirrhosis (88%), the authors studied the most important etiological factors of cirrhosis in the region, i.e.
hepatitis B
and
alcohol abuse
. Some effective measures are suggested to decrease the incidence of cirrhosis and eventually cancer of the liver.
...
PMID:[Cancer of the liver (analysis of autopsy data)]. 256 May 8
Hepatitis B
virus sequences were studied by molecular hybridization in liver biopsies from patients with HBsAg-negative chronic liver disease or hepatocellular carcinoma, collected in Italy. Among the 42 patients with chronic liver disease who had no history of drug addiction,
alcohol abuse
nor evidence of metabolic and autoimmune disorders, only two (5%) had HBV-DNA sequences in the liver, although 23 of them (57%) were positive for antibodies to HBV in serum. HBV-DNA was also demonstrated in integrated form in the tumorous tissue of one out of eight cases with HBsAg-negative hepatocellular carcinoma. These incidences of HBV-DNA positivity in the liver are lower than those reported from other Mediterranean areas and similar to those of North Europe, United States and Japan, suggesting that etiologic factors other than HBV are responsible for the majority of HBsAg-negative chronic liver diseases in our region.
...
PMID:HBV-DNA sequences are rarely detected in the liver of patients with HBsAg-negative chronic active liver disease and with hepatocellular carcinoma in Italy. 282 61
To investigate risk factors for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in Italy--a country with medium (south: 5% to 10%) to low (north: 1% to 2%) incidence of
hepatitis B
virus (HBV) infection--we studied 646 consecutive patients: 58 chronic active hepatitis (CAH), 428 cirrhosis, and 160 HCC, 49% from Southern and 51% from Northern Italy.
Hepatitis B
surface antigen (HBsAg) was positive in 41.4% of the CAH, in 23.1% of cirrhotic patients, and in 26.2% of HCC. In the latter, HBV DNA assay increased the number of subjects with active HBV infection by about 12%.
Alcohol abuse
was evenly distributed in all three categories of HBV markers. Males were preferentially affected. The HCC was superimposed on cirrhosis in more than 90% of patients. Our data suggest that, in our epidemiologic setting, different factors (HBV, non-A, non-B agents, alcohol) may cooperate in the development of HCC, mainly through their potential for causing cirrhosis.
...
PMID:Risk factors for hepatocellular carcinoma in Italy. Male sex, hepatitis B virus, non-A non-B infection, and alcohol. 283 86
Serum levels of estrogens and testosterone were measured in 25 male patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and associated cirrhosis of the liver and in another 25 male patients with cirrhosis only. The two groups were statistically comparable in terms of age distribution, duration of liver disease, incidence of
alcohol abuse
, incidence of
hepatitis B
surface antigenemia, and grade of hepatic dysfunction. Estrone was significantly elevated in both groups of patients. Estradiol concentrations were above normal in 10 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and in 11 with cirrhosis only. All patients had normal concentrations of estriol. There were no statistical differences between the two groups in either individual or total estrogen levels (estrone 0.05 less than p less than 0.1). Eight of the patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and 5 of the cirrhotics had lower testosterone levels than normal, but this difference was not significant. However, the estrone to testosterone ratios were significantly higher in the hepatocellular carcinoma group than in the cirrhosis group (p less than 0.05). The present study seems to indicate that hyperestrogenemia commonly seen in male patients with liver cirrhosis may play some role in hepatic carcinogenesis of cirrhotic livers. Further studies are needed to determine if the estrone to testosterone ratio is implicated in hepatocarcinogenesis in cirrhotic men.
...
PMID:Serum levels of estrogens and testosterone in cirrhotic men with and without hepatocellular carcinoma. 298 53
Hepatocellular carcinoma has a lower prevalence and presents at a later age in urban Blacks than in rural Blacks. These differences have previously been shown not to be attributable to differences in
serum hepatitis
B virus markers. In the present study, the average age of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma in a developing urban Black population is shown to have risen from 38.9 to 56.5 years (p less than 0.0001) over a 20-year interval, while the prevalence of co-existing cirrhosis has declined from 66 to 44% (p less than 0.05) and tissue HBsAg positivity has fallen from 44 to 17.7% (p = 0.002). The lower prevalence of tissue HBsAg in the recent patients may be explained by their older age. Macronodular cirrhosis was present in 56% of cases in the earlier period but declined to 18.9% in the later period, with micronodular cirrhosis becoming the dominant nontumor pathology (p = 0.002). Liver damage attributable to the abuse of alcohol is now found in more than half of the cases (48/90) of hepatocellular carcinoma occurring in this population. The remainder show no changes (12 cases) or show macronodular or incomplete septal cirrhosis (30 cases), presumed to be of viral origin. The latter cases are more likely to have serum markers of current
hepatitis B
virus infection than those with evidence of
alcohol abuse
. We conclude that alcohol is increasing in importance as an etiologic association of hepatocellular carcinoma in urban South African Blacks. At the same time, the prevalence of macronodular cirrhosis (and of cirrhosis as a whole) in urban patients with this tumor has declined. The reason for this decline is not known.
...
PMID:Liver morphology in southern African blacks with hepatocellular carcinoma: a study within the urban environment. 298 64
A case-control study of risk for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) was carried out in our Department from December 1980 to December 1983. One hundred and twenty consecutive inpatients with HCC were compared with 360 controls pair-matched by sex and age (within years). For each case three different controls were selected from inpatients at the same hospital: one patient with liver cirrhosis; one patient with solid tumor and one patient with chronic illness other than neoplasm or liver disease. We report here the results on alcohol consumption, smoking habit and
hepatitis B
virus infection. The risk factors investigated are distributed similarly in HCC and cirrhosis. The prevalence of
alcohol abuse
in HCC is similar to that in cirrhosis and is significantly higher than in other neoplastic or otherwise chronically ill patients (odds ratio 2 X 3 and 3 X 2 respectively). Thus
alcohol abuse
is probably a risk factor for HCC as a cause of cirrhosis. Smoking habits were similar among the various disease groups and independent of alcohol consumption. The prevalence of heavy smoking was comparable in cases and controls. HbsAg negative-HCC with an ultrasonographic pattern of 'diffuse' alteration was more frequent in heavy smokers.
...
PMID:Assessment of some risk factors for hepatocellular carcinoma: a case control study. 299 96
The biological characteristics of hepatocellular cancer vary appreciably in different parts of the world, but especially between regions with very high and low incidences of the tumour. Hepatocellular cancer is multifactorial in origin, and the pattern of its aetiological associations differs between populations at high and low risk. In Africans and Chinese, who have the highest incidences of hepatocellular cancer, the
hepatitis B
virus is the most important causal association. The viral carrier state is acquired during early childhood, and carries a relative risk for the development of the tumour of over 200. Integration of
hepatitis B
virus DNA probably acts as a genotoxic initiator in the multistep process of hepatocarcinogenesis, although the precise mechanisms involved have not been determined. Aflatoxin ingestion may also have an aetiological role in high incidence regions, probably as a genotoxic or epigenetic promoter to
hepatitis B
virus-initiated carcinogenesis. In low risk populations cirrhosis is the most important causal association of hepatocellular cancer. The cirrhosis is often the result of
alcohol abuse
, but the tumour may complicate all aetiological forms of this disease. Whether neoplasia is an inevitable consequence of the hyperplasia of cirrhosis, or the increased hepatocyte turnover rate acts as a promoter is not known.
Hepatitis B
virus infection plays a lesser part, and aflatoxin no part at all.
...
PMID:The development of hepatocellular cancer in humans. 304 Feb 42
The abuse by injection of heroin or other drugs has long been associated with liver disease caused by
hepatitis B
virus (HBV) and other viruses. Increasingly severe hepatic and virological complications of parenteral drug abuse have been reported due to infection with new viruses or concomitant
alcohol abuse
. The hepatitis delta virus (HDV) can replicate and cause liver infection only in the presence of HBV; such infection in HBV carriers may cause rapidly progressive and clinically significant liver disease. Liver cirrhosis is frequently detected in parenteral drug abusers who have chronic infection with both HBV and HDV or who also abuse alcohol. More than one quarter of those persons with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in the United States of America are homosexual or heterosexual males who are parenteral drug abusers. Existing evidence implicates parenteral drug abusers in the spread of hepatitis viruses and the retrovirus associated with AIDS to the general population. To cope with these serious problems the authors suggest that more intensive international co-operation is needed, particularly with a view to promoting data collection, research and the exchange of knowledge and experience on measures that have been effective in dealing with parenteral drug abuse and its complications.
...
PMID:Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and infection with hepatitis viruses in individuals abusing drugs by injection. 377 78
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>