Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (hepatocellular carcinoma)
71,386 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Many of the major alterations in plasma proteins characteristic of the hepatic acute phase response are regulated by IFN-beta 2/IL-6. Using a specific bioassay for IFN-beta 2/IL-6, which relies on the induction of the hepatic acute phase plasma protein alpha 1-antichymotrypsin in the human hepatoma cell line Hep3B clone 2 and its inhibition by anti-rIFN-beta 2/IL-6 antiserum, we have detected high levels of IFN-beta 2/IL-6 in the body fluids of patients with acute bacterial infections. Cerebrospinal fluid from four patients with acute bacterial meningitis (Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus, two cases of Listeria monocytogenes) all had high levels of IFN-beta 2/IL-6 (up to 500 ng/ml). Two of these patients with concomitant bacteremia had lower concentrations of IFN-beta 2/IL-6 in the serum (5 to 70 ng/ml). Three additional patients with Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Neisseria meningitidis bacteremia had high levels of serum IFN-beta 2/IL-6, as did the ankle fluid of a patient with Streptococcus canis arthritis. Normal cerebrospinal fluid and serum had little detectable IFN-beta 2/IL-6. A combination of immunoaffinity chromatography and immunoblotting procedures were used to characterize the IFN-beta 2/IL-6 species present in a representative sampling of serum and cerebrospinal fluids. Multiple immunoreactive species of IFN-beta 2/IL-6 in the size range 23 to 30 kDa as well as immunoreactive complexes in the range 60 to 70 kDa were detected in human body fluids. This is the first demonstration that previous descriptions of heterogeneity in human IFN-beta 2/IL-6 species produced in cell culture correspond to observations in the infected host.
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PMID:Multiple forms of IFN-beta 2/IL-6 in serum and body fluids during acute bacterial infection. 253 16

The aim of this study was to determine the efficacy of oral antibiotics in the treatment of severe infections in cirrhosis. Twenty-two patients (17 males, 5 females) with spontaneous bacteremia (n = 7) or bacterial peritonitis (n = 15) were treated with oral pefloxacin 400 mg per 24 hr alone (n = 1) or in combination with another oral antibiotic, trimethoprimsulfamethoxazole (n = 13), amoxicillin (n = 6), cefadroxil (n = 2), or metronidazole (n = 1). In patients with spontaneous bacteremia, all organisms were found to be sensitive to oral antibiotics, and a favorable response was elicited in 6 out of 7 (86 p. cent) within 3 days (mean) of treatment. In patients with spontaneous peritonitis, ascitic fluid cultures were positive in 11 cases, and organisms were sensitive to pefloxacin in 9 out of 11 cases. A favorable response was elicited in 13 out of 15 within 2 to 8 days of treatment. Fourteen patients died (64 p. cent), 3 of infection (bacteremia n = 1, peritonitis n = 2), and 11 patients of causes unrelated to infection, mainly variceal hemorrhage, hepatorenal syndrome or hepatocellular carcinoma, although the clinical symptoms of infection were controlled. One-year survival was 57 p. cent in patients with bacteremia and 33 p. cent in those with bacterial peritonitis. Oral treatment was well tolerated in all patients. We suggest that most bacteremia and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in cirrhotic patients can be treated with oral antibiotics. In some patients, this may be accomplished on an out patient basis.
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PMID:[Can septicemia and ascitic fluid infections in cirrhotic patients be treated by the oral route alone?]. 273 89

The case is reported of a 66-year old man who developed Streptococcus bovis endocarditis on a fairly loose aortic stenosis and who also presented with alcoholic cirrhosis complicated by an ultimately lethal hepatoma. On this occasion, comments are made on the following points: -Str. bovis is increasingly responsible for bacterial endocarditis. This micro-organism is now rapidly and reliably identified. -Str. bovis endocarditis has some clinical features of its own. -Patients in whom the usual portals of entry of bacterial infection (i.e. benign or malignant tumours of the colon or rectum) cannot be identified should be investigated systematically for hepatic cirrhosis. -Drug sterilization of the gut is useful to prevent bacteremia of intestinal origin in cirrhotic patients.
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PMID:[Infectious endocarditis caused by Streptococcus bovis and alcoholic cirrhosis complicated by hepatoma]. 282 37

The case notes of patients with blood cultures positive for enterobacteriaceae were examined retrospectively over a 6-month period in Parirenyatwa Hospital, Harare, Zimbabwe. Speciation was possible for Salmonella typhi and shigellae only. Nontyphoidal salmonellae were serotyped. Salmonella or shigella bacteremia was identified in 51 patients. There were 14 isolates of S. typhi, 32 isolates of nontyphoidal salmonellae, and 5 isolates of shigellae species. The case notes of 38 patients could be identified for review, and of these HIV serology was available for 15 seropositive and 15 seronegative patients. The male to female ratio was approximately 3:1 for both groups and the mean age was 29.7 +or- 21. Nontyphoidal bacteremias as compared with typhoid fever were strongly associated with HIV seropositivity [p 0.01]. 3 out of 8 HIV-negative patients with nontyphoidal bacteremia had another underlying immunosuppressive disease [2 had myeloma and 1 patient had cirrhosis with complicating hepatoma]. 2 patients with nontyphoidal bacteremia whose HIV status was unknown also had another immunosuppressing disease [acute myeloid leukemia and idiopathic pancytopenia]. 13 out of 15 HIV-positive patients showed other signs of HIV infection [oral candida, herpes zoster, persistent generalized lymphadenopathy]. 3 out of 11 patients [27%] with typhoid died, while 11 out of 27 patients [40.7%] with nontyphi bacteremia died. Most strains of S. typhimurium were included in serogroup B, which accounted for 37% of nontyphoidal isolates. Earlier studies identified invasive salmonellosis in patients with other AIDS defining diseases. In Nairobi clinical features of HIV infection were found in 64% of bacteremic HIV-positive patients, but only 28% of patients fulfilled the CDC clinical case definition for AIDS. A more recent study from Nairobi demonstrated that S. typhimurium bacteremia is a common cause of intercurrent infection in HIV-positive tuberculous patients.
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PMID:Salmonella and shigella bacteraemia in Zimbabwe. 813 Nov 97

The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of the 7288ctc Morris hepatoma on heart size and performance. Hearts from tumor bearing and control animals were perfused in the working configuration one to three weeks post implantation. As tumor growth progressed there was an inverse linear relationship between tumor size and heart weight. When intrinsic heart work (defined as the product of the cardiac output and peak systolic pressure) was assessed in vitro over a range of physiologic preloads, significant differences were found between tumor-bearing and non-tumor-bearing animals. The hearts from the tumor-bearing animals (tumor weight 10-20 grams) developed only 76% of the heart work of control animals at maximal left atrial filling pressure (25 cm H2O). Hearts excised from rats with tumor masses from 30-65 grams developed 43% of the myocardial work as controls at the same (25 cm) preload. At the time of sacrifice resting blood pressures, blood glucose, insulin, and tumor necrosis factor (TNF) levels were similar in both groups. Blood from tumor bearing animals were negative for both aerobic and anaerobic bacteria. The data suggests that the decrements in cardiac size and performance are independent of several vectors known to influence heart size and performance and occur in the absence of detectable bacteremia.
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PMID:Myocardial effects of experimental neoplastic disease. 828 90

Two isolates of serum-susceptible Campylobacter coli were recovered in a 7-day interval from blood from a patient with hepatocellular carcinoma and liver cirrhosis whose peritoneal-caval (Denver's) shunt malfunctioned. Identical random amplified polymorphic DNA fingerprints, cellular fatty acid chromatograms, and antibiograms of the two isolates indicate that C. coli has the ability to cause catheter-related bacteremia following its colonization of the catheter.
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PMID:Indwelling device-related bacteremia caused by serum-susceptible Campylobacter coli. 923 Apr 11

Sepsis and liver abscess are serious complications following transarterial embolization (TAE) for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). However, the exact incidence and the necessity of antibiotic prophylaxis remain undetermined. Between November 1996 and November 1997, we prospectively studied bacterial infections in 231 HCC patients who underwent 287 angiographic procedures without antibiotic prophylaxis, including 176 TAEs and 111 hepatic arteriographies (HAs). Four of the 111 HAs were complicated by transient asymptomatic bacteremia. Of the 176 TAEs, 2 were associated with asymptomatic bacteremia, and 7 (4%) were associated with symptomatic bacterial infection, including 3 cases of sepsis, 2 of liver abscess, and 2 of infected biloma. For patients with HCC, TAE was associated with a higher risk of developing symptomatic bacterial infections than was HA (4% vs. 0, respectively; P = .03). Previous gastrectomy was the only possible risk factor for liver abscess. Finally, early diagnosis and treatment of these infectious complications usually result in successful outcome.
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PMID:Bacterial infections associated with hepatic arteriography and transarterial embolization for hepatocellular carcinoma: a prospective study. 1043 80

Hepatectomy for biliary tract carcinoma with obstructive jaundice is associated with a higher incidence of postoperative septic complications as compared with hepatectomy for hepatocellular carcinoma or metastatic liver cancer. Since most bacteria isolated from septic sites are identical to those found in the preoperative percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage (PTBD) bile, bacterial colonization in bile appears to be responsible for posthepatectomy septic complications in patients with biliary tract carcinoma. Although it remains unclear how bile becomes contaminated after bile duct obstruction or why preoperative PTBD increases the incidence of biliary infection, bacterial translocation via the portal vein, resulting from loss of integrity of the intestinal mucosa and change in intestinal microflora, may in part account for the mechanisms. Moreover, impaired function of Kupffer cells and altered structure and function of hepatocyte tight junctions might also participate in the development of postoperative bacteremia in such patients. As septic complications and liver failure are profoundly associated with each other, it is important to take all measures before surgery to enhance liver function and to prevent postoperative septic complications.
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PMID:[Biliary bacterial infection in liver surgery]. 1259 25

Despite septic arthritis is increasingly being reported in elderly patients with diabetes or alcoholism, reported cases of spontaneous bacterial arthritis in cirrhotic patients are extremely rare. We present the first reported case of K. pneumoniae septic arthritis and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in a cirrhotic patient with hepatocellular carcinoma. K. pneumoniae, one of the most common causative organisms of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in cirrhotic patients, was isolated from both the blood and the joint fluid, which suggests that the route of infection was hematogenous. After the treatment with cefotaxime and closed tube drainage, the condition of the patient was improved, and subsequently, the joint fluid became sterile and the blood cultures were proved negative. Therefore, this case provides further evidence for the mode of infection being bacteremia in cirrhotic patients and suggests that the enteric bacteremia in cirrhotics may cause infection in different organ systems.
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PMID:Klebsiella pneumoniae septic arthritis in a cirrhotic patient with hepatocellular carcinoma. 1530 57

We report a 67-yr-old woman with hepatitis C-related liver cirrhosis and hepatoma who had developed severe bone marrow suppression after taking Cantharanthus roseus as an alternative anticancer treatment. The patient developed severe pancytopenia with initial presentations of vomiting, diarrhea, oral ulcer, and fever about 1 week after taking 5-days' course of Cantharanthus roseus. Bone marrow biopsy showed autolysis, which indicated massive necrosis of the hematopoietic cells. There was no malignant cell infiltration. The patient also had severe gastrointestinal disturbances, bacteremia, urinary tract infection, and impaired renal and liver function. Supportive care with broad-spectrum antibiotics, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, repeated blood transfusions, and albumin supplement was given. She recovered and was discharged after 48 days hospitalization. Coadministration of Cantharanthus roseus and cisapride was noted, and these two drugs are both substrates of cytochrome P450 3A4 enzymes (CYP 3A4). Because the vinca alkaloids are extensively metabolized by the liver cytochrome P450 enzymes, poor hepatic function and drug-herb interaction might predispose the patient to develop the bone marrow toxicity. This case report demonstrated possible effect of oral dose of vinca alkaloids and also hinted that all the substrates and inhibitors of CYP 3A4 have propensity to interfere with metabolism of vinca alkaloids.
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PMID:Severe bone marrow depression induced by an anticancer herb Cantharanthus roseus. 1546 62


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