Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019163 (hepatitis B)
38,309 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Three women dying from hepatic carcinoma during pregnancy are presented. One of these women with a hepatocellular carcinoma and alpha fetoprotein in the serum and antibody to hepatitis B antigen. A fourth patient died 2 months post partum with a cholangiocarcinoma. A false positive pregnancy test suggested that she had metastatic choriocarcinoma in the liver, and a panhysterectomy was performed. The clinical diagnosis with the use of alpha fetoprotein and chorionic gonadotropin for detection of hepatoma and the etiopathogenesis of primary hepatic malignancy in pregnancy are discussed.
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PMID:Primary hepatic malignancy in pregnant women. 4 11

A clinical, biochemical, and pathological study was performed in 38 chronic HBsAg carriers. The study group is a part of 393 carriers found among 117 705 voluntary blood donors at the National Blood Bank, Hospital del Salvador, Santiago, Chile. None of the 38 carriers had a past history of illicit drug abuse, hepatitis, or work involving a high risk of hepatitis B virus infection. Ten individuals had a normal liver biopsy, 17 reactive non-specific hepatitis, one fatty changes, four chr onic persistent hepatitis, one aggressive hepatitis, two post-necrotic cirrhosis, and three alcoholic cirrhosis. There was not a close correlation between liver function test and liver histology. The most significant laboratory finding was the postivity of alpha fetoprotein in two cases. During the follow-up the two alpha fetoprotein patients presented a hepatocarcinoma 12 and 14 months after admission to the study.
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PMID:Clinical and pathological study of asymptomatic HBsAg carriers in Chile. 68 May 91

A case/control study has been carried out to determine by radioimmunoassay and passive hemagglutination techniques the prevalence of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) and antibody (anti-HBs) in patients with primary liver cancer (PLC) and age/sex-matched hospital controls with cancers of other sites (OCC) and similarly matched controls without cancer (NCC). HBsAg was found in 61.2% of 165 cases of PLC as compared to 11.7% of 328 NCC. The frequency of HBsAg in PLC patients was significantly higher (72.2%) in those with detectable alpha fetoprotein as compared to those without (40.3%). There was no difference in the frequency of HBsAg in PLC patients with and without accompanying cirrhosis. No significant difference in potential hepatitis exposure history was found in the three study groups.
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PMID:A case/control study of the association between primary liver cancer and hepatitis B infection in Senegal. 117 99

To evaluate the role of hepatitis C virus (HCV) in Chinese patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the antibodies to HCV (anti-HCV) were detected by enzyme immunoassay in 41 (12.6%) of the 326 patients with HCC. However, none of 35 patients with metastatic carcinoma of the liver had detectable anti-HCV. The prevalence of anti-HCV was significantly higher in patients with hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)-negative HCC than those with HBsAg-positive HCC (37.3% versus 4.1%, P less than 0.0001). However, the prevalence of anti-HCV was much higher in patients with HCC with negative results for HBsAg and antibody to hepatitis B core antigen (54.5%). The mean age of patients with HCC with positive results for anti-HCV was significantly greater than that of patients with HBsAg-positive HCC (65.1 versus 55.5 years, P less than 0.0001). Alpha-fetoprotein levels greater than 20 ng/ml were found in 70.7% of patients with HCC with positive results for anti-HCV and in 73.3% of patients with HBsAg-positive HCC. Of the Chinese patients with HCC, 74.5% had HBsAg-positive results and 96.6% had positive results for antibody to hepatitis core antigen. These data indicate that, although HCV may play an etiologic role in HCC, hepatitis B virus is still the most important causal agent among most Chinese patients with HCC.
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PMID:The prevalence of anti-hepatitis C virus among Chinese patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. 130 28

We studied all the 70 cases of liver cancer referred to us in 1988. Sixty (85.71%) were primary hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the other 10 (14.29%) were metastatic liver cancer. Of the 60 HCC, 48 were males and 12 females. Peak age incidence was between 20-40 years. Forty-five (75%) had tumours in both lobes. Of the remaining 15, seven had tumours in the right lobe while eight were in the left. More detailed assessment identified eight as Child's C. Seven (11.66%) had laparotomy, and two were inoperable. Three (60%) died shortly after resection, leaving two survivors. One of the survivors lived for 24 months, and the other had recurrent tumour after 26 months. The majority had cirrhosis of the liver, were positive for markers of hepatitis B virus, and showed elevated serum alpha fetoprotein (AFP). Palliative treatment was disappointing, and all were dead within 15 months. Prognosis of HCC in our environment is poor. Considering the advances made in liver surgery in recent years, our mortality and morbidity figures can improve. Notwithstanding, preventive measures should be intensified.
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PMID:Sixty cases of primary hepatocellular carcinoma in one year. A preliminary appraisal. 133

In order to assess frequency and importance of the presence of alpha fetoprotein (AFP) and AlAChy as well as hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection antigens in the tissue of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and in the liver tissue outside a tumour, there have been performed retrospective light-microscopic and immunohistochemical examinations of the liver tissue in 65 cases of HCC (39 autopsy and 26 biopsy cases). The finding of AlAChy in 100% of autopsy cases of HCC and 80.7% of biopsy cases of HCC compared with the presence of AFP in 33% of autopsy and 61.5% of biopsy cases point out that AlAChy is a more sensitive marker than AFP in diagnosing HCC. The presence of HBV infection antigens in 43.5% of autopsy cases and 23.5% of biopsy cases of HCC point to an important role of HBV infection in development of HCC in the studied population.
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PMID:[Association of liver cirrhosis, hepatitis B virus infection and hepatocellular carcinoma--immunohistochemical study]. 133 56

Alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) is a fetal specific glycoprotein normally produced primarily by the fetal liver. Normally, AFP levels decline rapidly after birth, reaching undetectable levels (less than 10 ng/ml) within several months after birth. The authors have developed a more sensitive radioimmunoassay, which has allowed them to study low levels of AFP in normal adults and to determine factors which may affect its normal level. Two hundred and seventy normal Houston blood donors were screened for the absence of hepatitis B and normal ALT levels. The mean AFP level was 3.04 ng/ml +/- 1.9 SD. There was a statistically significant higher level in men compared to women (p less than .004). Regression analysis demonstrated a statistically significant increase of AFP levels with age both in men (p less than .05) and in women (p less than .01). These data delineate the normal level of serum AFP in normal adults in the United States. With the normal level now defined, it becomes possible to compare levels in different populations including those exposed to hepatotoxins or hepatocarcinogens in the environment.
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PMID:Alpha-fetoprotein levels in normal adults. 137 9

From January 1976 to October 1989, 15 patients with hepatoblastoma who underwent surgery at the National Cancer Center Hospital were evaluated by clinico-radiological techniques. Eight patients were boys and seven were girls; their average age was 3 years and 5 months. Abdominal mass or distention was initially noted in 12 patients. Alpha-fetoprotein level was extremely high (average, 327 micrograms/ml) in all cases but one. Hepatitis B surface antigen was negative in all cases. Tumors occupied mainly the right lobe of the liver in 67% of patients, and the mean tumor diameter was 11.1 cm. Of 15 hepatoblastomas, 10 were grossly classified as massive type and five as multinodular. Histopathological diagnosis was well differentiated (fetal type) hepatoblastoma in 10 patients and poorly differentiated (embryonal type) hepatoblastoma in five. Fibrous capsule was also recognized in eight. The noncancerous liver was normal in all cases. Ultrasonography (US) (n = 7 patients) demonstrated an inhomogeneous internal echo with well demarcated margin in five cases and without such margin in two. Nonenhanced CT (n = 6) showed an isodense or low density mass in all cases. Drip infusion CT (n = 5) revealed isodensity in the early phase. Dynamic CT performed in one patient showed a well enhanced mass that appeared hypervascular on angiography. Preoperative chemotherapy and radiation therapy provoked histological changes such as necrosis, fibrosis and calcifications. These changes were reflected on CT images. Both US and CT demonstrated the characteristic internal structure and gross appearance of hepatoblastoma.
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PMID:[Hepatoblastoma: clinico-radiological study of fifteen cases]. 166 99

From June 1981 to June 1989 we diagnosed 174 cases of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) at our institution (Piacenza, Northern Italy). Average age was 65.6 years; male to female ratio 3.4. 149 patients were cirrhotic (85.6%); alcohol abuse was present in 88/169 (52.1%); in 53/145 patients all hepatitis B virus markers were negative. Alpha-fetoprotein showed a low diagnostic sensitivity (values above 500 ng only in 49/169 or 29.0%). We used ultrasound (US) examination with a very high identification rate in all cases; pathological diagnosis was achieved by US guided fine-needle aspiration biopsy in 135 patients; in 13, by laparoscopy-histology. Metastases were found in 24/169 cases (14.2%); a second malignancy was diagnosed in 13/169 (7.7%): the most common association was HCC-non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Only 14 patients could be referred to surgery, which significantly improved prognosis.
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PMID:Diagnostic aspects and follow-up of 174 cases of hepatocellular carcinoma. Second report. 170 84

Alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) was detected, by Ouchterlony immunodiffusion technique, in 81.5% of patients with histologically confirmed diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma. The test gave negative results with 35 cases of acute viral hepatitis, 7 haemochromatosis, 6 micronodular cirrhosis and 2 cholangiocellular carcinoma. Curiously, one patient with postnecrotic cirrhosis, a well recognized sequela of viral hepatitis, whose liver cell regeneration also showed "atypical changes", was AFP positive. AFP was not detected in sera from the general population which comprised 1029 male blood donors, 144 antenatal and 106 maternity cases. The only exception was the case of a woman who aborted a 5-month old foetus. A follow-up serum sample taken 3 months later was, however, negative for AFP. The frequency of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) detection in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (25.9%) was 4 to 5 times higher than that in the general population. This strong association between HBsAg and primary liver cancer in countries where liver tumours are often AFP secretors suggests a role for hepatitis B virus, not only in the aetiology of the cancer, but also in the reactivation of the gene encoding this foetal protein.
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PMID:A study of alpha-fetoprotein in primary liver cancer in Tanzania. 172 52


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