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)

Hepatic steatosis is a consequence of both obesity and ethanol use. Nonalcoholic steatosis (NASH) resemble alcoholic steatosis and steatohepatitis. Both exhibit increased hepatocellular triglycerides(TG), reflecting an increase in long chain fatty acids (LCFA). LCFA enter cells by both facilitated transport and passive diffusion. A driving force for both is the plasma unbound LCFA concentration ([LCFAu]). In both obese rodents and obese patients, adipocyte LCFA uptake via both facilitated transport and diffusion is increased. However, the LCFA uptake Vmax in hepatocytes is not increased in obese animals. Nevertheless, total LCFA uptake in obese rodents is increased ~3-fold, reflecting increased plasma LCFA concentrations. With advancing obesity, resistance to the antilipolytic effects of insulin results in increased lipolysis within the omental fat depot, a consequent further rise in portal venous LCFA, and an even greater rise in portal [LCFAu]. This causes a further increase in hepatocellular LCFA uptake, increased intracellular generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), and transition from simple steatosis to NASH. By contrast, in rodent hepatocytes and in human hepatoma cell lines, ethanol up-regulates the LCFA uptake Vmax. Consequently, although plasma LCFA are unaltered, hepatocellular LCFA uptake in ethanol-fed rats is also increased~3-fold, leading to increased ROS generation and evolution of alcoholic hepatitis. Thus, while increased hepatic LCFA uptake contributes to the pathogenesis of both NASH and alcoholic hepatitis,the underlying mechanisms differ. Recognizing these mechanistic differences is important in developing strategies for both prevention and treatment of these conditions.
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PMID:Lipid metabolism in hepatic steatosis. 1533 Oct 68

The liver is continuously exposed to a large antigenic load that includes pathogens, toxins, tumor cells and dietary antigens. Amongst the hepatitis viruses, only hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) cause chronic hepatitis, which can progress to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Of the different antiviral defense systems employed by the tissue, apoptosis significantly contributes to the prevention of viral replication, dissemination, and persistence. Loss of tolerance to the liver autoantigens may result in autoimmune hepatitis (AIH). This review outlines the recent findings that highlight the role and mechanisms of apoptotic processes in the course of liver diseases. Among factors that contribute to liver pathology, we discuss the role of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, HBx, ds-PKR, TRAIL, FasL, and IL-1alpha. Since TNF and FasL-induced hepatocyte apoptosis is implicated in a wide range of liver diseases, including viral hepatitis, alcoholic hepatitis, ischemia/reperfusion liver injury, and fulminant hepatic failure, these items will be discussed in greater detail in this review. We also highlight some recent discoveries that pave the way for the development of new therapeutic strategies by protecting hepatocytes (for example by employing Bcl-2, Bcl-XL or A1/Bfl-1, IAPs, or synthetic caspase inhibitors), or by the induction of apoptosis in stellate cells. The assessment of the severity of liver disease, as well as monitoring of patients with chronic liver disease, remains a major challenge in clinical hepatology practice. Therefore, a separate chapter is devoted to a novel cytochrome c-based method useful for the diagnosis and monitoring of fulminant hepatitis.
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PMID:Apoptosis in liver diseases--detection and therapeutic applications. 1625 9

Activation of Kupffer cells by gut-derived endotoxin is an important factor in ethanol hepatotoxicity. Further, it was shown that ethanol modulates both the expression and activity of several intracellular signaling molecules and transcription factors in Kupffer cells and chronic ethanol treatment enhances Kupffer cell sensitivity to endotoxin. These findings suggest that inhibition of Kupffer cell activation is effective for clinical application in alcoholic hepatitis. Recently, accumulating lines of evidence suggest a possibility that glycine is useful as an immuno-modulating amino acid. It has been shown that a diet containing glycine improved survival in endotoxin shock by preventing Kupffer cell activation. Glycine most likely prevents the LPS-induced elevation of intracellular Ca concentration in Kupffer cells, thereby minimizing LPS receptor signaling and cytokine production. Indeed, glycine prevents alcohol-induced liver injury in a long-term enteral ethanol feeding rats (Tsukamoto-French) by decreasing production of TNF-alpha in the liver. Moreover, glycine is protective against apoptosis of sinusoidal endothelial cells (SECs) that is one of the initial events in the development of liver injury. On the other hand, epidemiologic data have identified chronic alcohol consumption as a significant risk factor for carcinogenesis. Interestingly, glycine inhibits growth of tumor in vivo most likely because of the inhibition of angiogenesis. It was shown that the inhibitory effect of glycine on growth and migration of endothelial cells is due to activation of a glycine-gated Cl channel. It is hypothesized that the opening of this anion channel hyperpolarizes the cell membrane, blocks influx of Ca through voltage-dependent Ca channel, thereby blunting growth factor-mediated signaling. Therefore, glycine can be used not only for treatment of alcoholic hepatitis, but also for chemoprevention and treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma in alcoholic cirrhosis. Taken together, it is concluded that glycine is a potent therapeutic immuno-nutrient for various kinds of chronic liver diseases including alcoholic liver disease (ALD).
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PMID:Glycine as a therapeutic immuno-nutrient for alcoholic liver disease. 1634 3

HBV infection in the absence of HBsAg has been a matter of debate for years, but its existence and clinical relevance are now supported by many publications, editorials and reviews. HBV DNA without HBs antigenemia was detected in the following clinical situations: (1) Chronic, presumably viral, hepatitis unrelated to HCV, atypical alcoholic hepatitis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC); (2) viral reactivation following immunosuppression; (3) Transmission through transplantation, transfusion or experimental transmission to chimpanzees. Occult HBV infections are not restricted to areas of high HBV endemicity. Indeed, such cases have been described in Western countries including France. It is now established that occult HBV infection among non-HCV patients suffering from chronic hepatitis varies from 20% to 30% in Europe, and in the context of HCV infection it varies from 20% in France up to 80% in Japan. The percentage of occult HBV infections among non A-E cases depends on several parameters: (1) The method of detection, including PCR primer selection; (2) patient recruitment; (3) patients from countries highly endemic for HBV are more likely to develop occult HBV infections; (4) prevalence may also vary depending on the nature of biological material tested, with a higher proportion for liver compared to serum specimen. The mechanisms leading to HCC in occult HBV infection seem similar to those overt cases, patients with low-grade but diagnosable HBV replication that retains its pro-oncogenic properties. During the course of HCV infection, occult HBV infection may worsen liver damage induced by HCV and reduce the response to HCV antiviral treatment. Occult HBV infection is a frequent phenomenon and HBV DNA testing with highly sensitive PCR in the clinical setting is therefore becoming of paramount importance.
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PMID:Clinical impact of occult HBV infections. 1646 Dec 18

Since the first report by Ludwig, considerable progress has been made in the understanding of NASH and it is not currently considered as a merely benign clinical entity, but is rather thought as a common disease with a variety of clinical sequelae including liver cirrhosis and even hepatocellular carcinoma. Thus, NASH is considered as a type of a larger spectrum of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) that is a consequence of insulin resistance and other underlining factors with histological findings ranging from fatty change alone to fat plus inflammation, to fat plus ballooning degeneration, and to fat plus alcoholic hepatitis-like lesions including Mallory body and fibrosis, the latter two categories being considered as NASH. In this brief review article, particular emphasis has been paid to the clinical entity, namely cryptogenic cirrhosis in relation to the pathogenesis of NASH.
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PMID:[Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis: a brief review on its concept]. 1676 4

The liver disease characteristic of alcohol dependence encompasses three main related entities: steatosis, alcoholic hepatitis, and cirrhosis. Alcoholic cirrhosis is a leading cause of global morbidity and mortality. Alcohol intake among injecting drug users is a major contributor to transmission of viral infections, such as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis B virus (HBV), and hepatitis C viruses (HCV). HIV and HCV coinfected patients develop liver diseases earlier and more severely than the monoinfected individuals, including hepatocellular carcinoma. Interactions exist between the therapeutic drugs used to minimize and control the drug and alcohol dependence. Furthermore, drug-drug interactions occur between the highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) and alcohol, different HAART components and methadone, or each one of the therapies with the other, thus contributing to a higher toxicity level. With the evolution of effective antiretroviral therapy, survival of persons with HIV, and the syndrome it causes, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) has increased dramatically. Drug-drug interactions may appear between alcohol and anti-HBV or anti-HCV, therapy in the presence or absence of anti-HIV therapy. Several other medical-, social-, and drug-related factors of this population have to be considered when providing HAART. Because many coinfected patients also have problems with substance use, dealing with their drug dependence is an important first step in an attempt to improve adherence to and tolerance of antiviral therapy. It is necessary to minimize the risk of liver disease acceleration and/or reinfection with hepatitis viruses. Knowledge of potential drug interactions between methadone, antiretroviral therapy, psychoactive drugs, and antipsychotics and the role of coinfection with HBV or HCV and the drugs used in eradicating viral hepatitis permits suitable antiretroviral combinations.
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PMID:Drug interactions between psychoactive substances and antiretroviral therapy in individuals infected with human immunodeficiency and hepatitis viruses. 1700 89

The Model for End-stage Liver Disease (MELD) was initially created to predict survival in patients with complications of portal hypertension undergoing elective placement of transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunts. The MELD which uses only objective variables was validated subsequently as an accurate predictor of survival among different populations of patients with advanced liver disease. The major use of the MELD score has been in allocation of organs for liver transplantation. However, the MELD score has also been shown to predict survival in patients with cirrhosis who have infections, variceal bleeding, as well as in patients with fulminant hepatic failure and alcoholic hepatitis. MELD may be used in selection of patients for surgery other than liver transplantation and in determining optimal treatment for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma who are not candidates for liver transplantation. Despite the many advantages of the MELD score, there are approximately 15%-20% of patients whose survival cannot be accurately predicted by the MELD score. It is possible that the addition of variables that are better determinants of liver and renal function may improve the predictive accuracy of the model. Efforts at further refinement and validation of the MELD score will continue.
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PMID:The model for end-stage liver disease (MELD). 1732 6

We report the pattern of liver disease revealed by a study of liver biopsies of 277 adults aged 16-85 years old from January 1983 - December 1993. The most common histological diagnoses were: cirrhosis in 22.3%, chronic active hepatitis (CAH) 16.6%, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in 7.2%, fatty changes in 12% of patients. Less common diagnoses included: Cholestasis in 8 (2.8%), Hemochromatosis in 7 (2.5%), periportal fibrosis in 4 (1.4%), Wilson's disease in 3 (1%), Alcoholic hepatitis in one patient and lymphoma in one patient. Inadequate specimens were encountered in 7 (2.5%). The commonest causes of liver cirrhosis were: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) in 73.3% of patients tested for it and hepatitis B virus (HBV) in 23.2%. Complications related to the procedures were exceedingly low. One patient, with Budd-Chiari Syndrome required emergency laparotomy to control bleeding. In conclusion, liver cirrhosis, CAH and HCC were common patterns of chronic liver disease in this series. HCV was the most common cause of CAH and liver cirrhosis.
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PMID:Pattern of liver disease in a Saudi patient population: a decade of experience at security forces hospital, Riyadh, KSA. 1986 42

Impaired selective turnover of p62 by autophagy causes severe liver injury accompanied by the formation of p62-positive inclusions and upregulation of detoxifying enzymes. These phenotypes correspond closely to the pathological conditions seen in human liver diseases, including alcoholic hepatitis and hepatocellular carcinoma. However, the molecular mechanisms and pathophysiological processes in these events are still unknown. Here we report the identification of a novel regulatory mechanism by p62 of the transcription factor Nrf2, whose target genes include antioxidant proteins and detoxification enzymes. p62 interacts with the Nrf2-binding site on Keap1, a component of Cullin-3-type ubiquitin ligase for Nrf2. Thus, an overproduction of p62 or a deficiency in autophagy competes with the interaction between Nrf2 and Keap1, resulting in stabilization of Nrf2 and transcriptional activation of Nrf2 target genes. Our findings indicate that the pathological process associated with p62 accumulation results in hyperactivation of Nrf2 and delineates unexpected roles of selective autophagy in controlling the transcription of cellular defence enzyme genes.
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PMID:The selective autophagy substrate p62 activates the stress responsive transcription factor Nrf2 through inactivation of Keap1. 2019 Aug 29

A rare variant of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is encountered that produces small cirrhosis-like nodules diffusely throughout the liver (CL-HCC), instead of a larger evident mass. This pattern remains undetected as carcinoma clinically and radiographically and is unexpectedly discovered after liver transplantation in the explanted native liver. We studied 10 such cases (9 males and 1 female, age 35 to 80 y) from 4 medical centers. The pretransplant clinical, laboratory, and radiographical studies were reviewed to determine the cause and stage of liver disease, alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) levels, and detectability of a mass on imaging. All 10 cases had underlying cirrhosis of varying etiology [3 hepatitis C virus (HCV), 3 alcoholic hepatitis, 1 hepatitis B virus, 1 autoimmune, and 2 mixed HCV/alcoholic hepatitis and hemochromatosis/HCV] and underwent orthotopic liver transplantation with no preoperative clinical suspicion of HCC. Ultrasound and/or dynamic imaging showed cirrhosis and no definite HCC. AFP levels were only mildly elevated in only 3 of 10 cases (144, 150, and 252 ng/mL). Grossly, there were innumerable (from about 20 to >1000) small CL-HCC nodules (0.2 to 0.6 cm) scattered among cirrhotic nodules. Histologically, these were well or moderately differentiated HCC, often with pseudoglandular pattern, perinodular sclerotic rims, cholestasis, frequent Mallory bodies, and small vessel invasion. In addition to the usual HCC immunophenotype, CL-HCC showed frequent ubiquitin and cytoplasmic and membranous CD10 positivity, relatively low Ki-67 proliferative index and absence of AFP immunohistochemically. CL-HCC warrants recognition as a unique HCC variant that evades pretransplant detection despite massive tumor burden, mimics cirrhotic nodules, and shows some uncommon pathologic and immunophenotypical characteristics.
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PMID:Diffuse cirrhosis-like hepatocellular carcinoma: a clinically and radiographically undetected variant mimicking cirrhosis. 2046 69


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