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)

We investigated transglutaminase-induced cross-linking of cytokeratin polypeptides in liver and hepatoma cells. To overcome the difficulties in the biochemical analysis of highly cross-linked polymers and aggregates of cytokeratins, cross-linked cytokeratin dimers were analyzed by immunoblotting to evaluate the degree of cross-linking of cytokeratins. Covalently cross-linked cytokeratin dimers were not detectable in normal rat liver cells. However, cytokeratin dimers and high-molecular-weight cytokeratin polymers were detected in liver tissue with histological evidence of coagulative necrosis induced by ischemia or carbon tetrachloride. Treatment of cultured hepatoma cells with the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 showed a dose-dependent, time-dependent decrease of cell viability. The appearance of cytokeratin dimers was shown to be correlated with cell death. These results suggest that the transglutaminase-induced cross-linking of cytokeratin polypeptides in liver and hepatoma cells is closely associated with the process of cell degeneration and death.
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PMID:Cross-linked cytokeratin polypeptides in liver and hepatoma cells: possible association with the process of cell degeneration and death. 767 72

Hepatectomy was performed under in situ right lobar hypothermic perfusion combined with hepatoprotective agents in six patients who had hepatocellular carcinoma and coexisting liver disease. Following occlusion of the right hepatic vein and the right portal pedicle, in situ cold perfusion was initiated using chilled Ringer's lactate infused through a cannula placed in the right main portal vein. The right superior segments were resected in a bloodless field. The liver was cooled to 22-26 degrees C for 40 to 80 minutes with no significant changes in systemic hemodynamics or body temperature. Postoperative liver functions showed no marked derangement; the mean peak GPT was 221 U and the mean peak total bilirubin 2.3 mg d/l. Local cooling minimizes the risk of ischemia/reperfusion injury in this very vulnerable population, yet gives the surgeon adequate time to perform a challenging resection in a bloodless field.
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PMID:Hepatic resection under in situ hemihepatic hypothermic perfusion with hepatoprotective agents. 778 26

Twenty-seven patients were studied with MRI between 3 and 40 days following partial liver resection. Twenty-four patients had undergone major hepatectomy (three to six segments) and three had undergone minor hepatectomy (tumorectomy, one; bisegmentectomy, two). Indications for surgery were as follows: metastases (n = 16), hepatocellular carcinoma (n = 5), hemangioma (n = 3), focal nodular hyperplasia (n = 2), and cholangiocarcinoma (n = 1). A total of 36 MR examinations were performed using a 1.5 T superconducting unit. Three patients were studied three times and three patients were studied twice. The MR images were evaluated to detect and to characterize liver parenchymal abnormalities and intraabdominal fluid or blood collections as well as to assess vascular and/or graft patency. The MR images showed hepatic ischemia in two cases and allowed differentiation between intraabdominal hemorrhagic (n = 30 and nonhemorrhagic (n = 4) fluid collections. Gradient echo images allowed assessment of polytetrafluoroethylene graft patency as well as demonstration of iliac vein (one case) and portal vein (one case) thrombosis. The presence of surgical clips at the resection margins did not affect image quality.
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PMID:Early MR follow-up of partial hepatectomy. 845 55

These studies of a model liver cell line evaluate the mechanisms responsible for regulated release of K+ ions during metabolic stress. Metabolic inhibition of HTC hepatoma cells by exposure to 2, 4-dinitrophenol (50 microM) and 2-deoxy-D-glucose (10 mM) stimulated outward currents carried by K+ of 974 +/- 75 pA at 0 mV (n = 20, p < 0.001). Currents were inhibited by chelation of intracellular Ca2+ or exposure to apamin (50 nM), an inhibitor of SKCa channels. In cell-attached recordings from intact cells, removal of metabolic substrates (25/28 cells) or exposure to metabolic inhibitors (32/40 cells) opened K+-selective channels with a conductance of 6.5 +/- 0. 2 pS. Channels had an open probability of 0.31 +/- 0.08 and opened in bursts averaging 3.55 +/- 0.27 ms in duration (n = 6). Metabolic stress was associated with rapid translocation of the alpha isoform of protein kinase C (PKCalpha) from cytosol to membrane; and down-regulation of PKCalpha by phorbol esters or exposure to the PKC inhibitor chelerythrine (10 microM) each inhibited currents. Moreover, intracellular perfusion with purified PKCalpha activated currents in a Ca2+- and concentration-dependent manner. These findings indicate that metabolic stress leads to opening of apamin-sensitive SKCa channels in hepatoma cells through a Ca2+- and PKC-dependent mechanism and suggest that PKCalpha may be selectively involved in the response. This mechanism functionally couples the metabolic state of cells to membrane K+ permeability and represents a potential target for modification of liver injury associated with ischemia and preservation.
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PMID:Metabolic stress opens K+ channels in hepatoma cells through a Ca2+- and protein kinase calpha-dependent mechanism. 866 72

II cases of major hepatic resections under total vascular isolation (TVA) are presented: 4 women and 7 men, age between 17 and 70 years (mean 39.6 years). In another 2 cases the method was abandoned because the patients did not tolerate the vena cava clamping. The main indication for TVA were large tumors located near the suprahepatic veins opening into the vena cava. The diagnosis in the 11 cases was: hepatocellular carcinoma--3 cases, cholangiocarcinoma--1 case, colo-rectal metastasis--1 case, hemangioma--3 cases, hamartoma--2 cases, diffuse suppuration of the right lobe--1 case. The warm ischemia time was between 25 and 50 min (mean: 36.8 min). There were no intraoperative complications. The mean quantity of transfused blood was 450 ml. Postoperatively two patients bled and were reoperated. Both subsequently developed liver failure and died and in both cases microscopy found histologic lesions of chronic hepatitis. The mortality was then 18.1%. Six patients (54.5%) developed postoperative complications. Worth noting are 2 cases of transient liver failure, both in patients with cancer. The ICU stay was between 2 and 14 days (mean 7.1) and the whole postoperative hospitalization was between 11 and 46 days (mean: 16).
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PMID:[Total vascular exclusion in liver surgery]. 901 63

The following article contains a short review on gastrointestinal problems of the elderly. The diseases of the esophagus occurring in the elderly are not much different from those in younger patients. Clinically relevant in the stomach are above all bleeding ulcerations and the gastric carcinoma occurring more frequently in advanced age. The pyogenic liver abscess is diagnosed primarily in the elderly and is at a rule the consequence of an infection of the gall bladder and other abdominal sites. The hepatocellular carcinoma does not grow rapidly in the elderly, but its accompanying unfavourable survival rate at five years is also approximately 5 per cent. In the case of symptomatic cholelithiasis, older high risk patients do especially profit from minimally invasive laparoscopic surgical procedures. Today, bile duct calculi are preferably treated by endoscopic papillotomy and following extraction of the calculi. The pancreas is subjected to atrophy, lipomatosis and fibrosis at the advanced age. However, these changes are rarely of clinical relevance. A frequent problem in clinical practice is that of constipation, from which 35% of patients suffer above the age of 65 years. Another typical symptom of the elderly is the incontinence, the different causes are being discussed. In advanced age, gastrointestinal hemorrhages are mostly occurring above the Treitz's ligament. Hemorrhages of the lower gastrointestinal tract occur mostly in the form of diverticle bleedings and those of angiodysplasias in the elderly. The diverticulosis is also a disease observed in over 50 per cent of patients above 70 years, but it is symptomatic in only part of the patients. When suspecting an inflammatory bowel disease in the elderly, the possibility of a mesenterial ischemia must always be considered as differential diagnosis. The classical chronic inflammatory bowel diseases can, however, also occur at advanced age. The colon carcinoma is one of the most frequent lethal causes in the Western countries 90 per cent of the cases of colon carcinoma are found in patients older than 50 years of age. Intensive attention is therefore required in this age group.
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PMID:[Gastrointestinal problems in elderly patients]. 933 52

The arterial ketone body ratio (AKBR) has been proposed as an accurate indicator of liver mitochondrial redox potential. However, the efficacy of the AKBR as a biochemical marker has been recently called into question. To resolve this issue, we studied the effect of temporary vascular occlusion on the AKBR during hepatectomy. Twenty patients undergoing hepatectomy were divided into two groups: those with hepatocellular carcinoma with a history of hepatic cirrhosis (n = 10; cirrhotic group) and those with liver disease without cirrhosis (n = 10; non-cirrhotic group). To minimize blood loss during hepatectomy, temporary vascular occlusion was applied using the Pringle maneuver. Acetoacetate and beta-hydroxybutyrate concentrations in the arterial blood and the AKBR were determined before and after vascular occlusion. In 25% of the two groups combined, the AKBR increased following normothermic ischemia, as compared with the levels prior to clamping; in 20% of cases in the cirrhotic group, it increased immediately following reperfusion, as compared with the levels prior to clamping. Changes in the AKBR during hepatectomy did not correlate with preoperative hepatocellular function. An AKBR of less than 0.7 prior to clamping which persisted during surgery was not a consistent risk factor for postoperative complications. The AKBR was not a useful predictor of liver viability in partial liver resection with temporary vascular occlusion.
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PMID:Arterial ketone body ratio during hepatectomy. 935 69

We investigated the long-term efficacy and the contraindications of single-session percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI) under general anesthesia in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). One hundred patients were treated from October, 1991, to April, 1996: 24 patients had a single capsulated HCC, 4.5 to 10 cm phi (group A); 62 had a single infiltrating tumor or multiple lesions (3 to 6), with 10 cm maximum phi (group B); 14 patients were in an advanced stage because of Child class C or of infiltrating tumors with portal thrombosis, with 14 cm lesion maximum phi (group C). Group A patients were treated because they were not operable or refused surgery. Three to 22 injections were performed (mean: 13) depending on tumor size and ethanol spread. The maximum injected volume of ethanol was 190 ml (mean: 57 ml). The procedure took 20 to 50 minutes (mean: 30 minutes). The mean hospital stay was 3.5 days. Tumor necrosis was complete in 58% of encapsulated tumors and > 70% in infiltrating lesions. The greatest lesion with complete post-PEI necrosis was 8.2 cm phi. A transient and variable increase in transaminase, bilirubin, white cell and D-dimer levels and a decrease in red cell, platelet, hemoglobin, fibrinogen and haptoglobin levels were observed. These changes were due to hepatic cell necrosis, hemolysis and focal thrombosis. One death (bleeding esophageal varices in the Child C patient)(1%) and four major complications (one peritoneal bleeding, one liver decompensation, two chemical segmentectomies with pain)(4%) were observed. 1, 2, 3 year survival rates for groups A, B and C were: 80, 63, 63%; 70, 50, 30% and 58, 14 and 0% respectively. In our experience, PEI was an efficacious procedure. The risk conditions are: superficial lesion site with severe coagulation defects, severe portal and/or pulmonary hypertension, esophageal varices at risk of bleeding, cardiac ischemia, advanced cirrhosis.
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PMID:[Single-session alcohol administration for hepatocarcinoma]. 942 44

We report herein the case of a patient who had previously undergone a lateral segmentectomy for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in whom recurrent HCC invading the trunk of the right and middle hepatic veins in a damaged liver was treated by reconstruction of both hepatic veins, using total vascular exclusion with extracorporeal bypass and hypothermic hepatic perfusion. Reconstruction was performed using a graft taken from the left external iliac vein and divided into two pieces. Hepatic ischemia lasted for 91 min during the procedure and the intrahepatic temperature, as monitored by inserting a needle-type thermometer, was decreased to 11 degrees C throughout the procedure. The peak levels of serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase, lactate dehydrogenase, and total bilirubin were 363 IU/l, 1198 IU/ml, and 2.8 mg/dl, respectively, on postoperative day (POD) 2. The patient's postoperative course was uneventful except for mild, temporary swelling of the left leg. Postoperative computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging examinations disclosed no obstruction of either graft, and the patient was discharged on POD 40.
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PMID:Treatment of recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma by hepatectomy with right and middle hepatic vein reconstruction using total vascular exclusion with extracorporeal bypass and hypothermic hepatic perfusion: report of a case. 960 9

The paper describes the technique of anatomical liver segmentectomies based on the extraparenchymal clamping, at the hepatic hilum, of the afferent vascular pedicles. The resection is started on the liver surface along the demarcation line caused by the ischemia. During parenchymal transection the technique of hemihepatic vascular occlusion has been undertaken. The results obtained with 125 segmentary hepatic resections performed for hepatocellular carcinoma arised on cirrhosis are also reported. The overall operative mortality has been 6.4%. The actuarial 1 and 3 year survivals were 93.3% and 70.4% respectively. Hepatic segmentary resections are recommended for limited hepatic lesions, mainly in well compensated cirrhotic patients.
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PMID:Hepatic resective surgery in cirrhotic patients. Techniques and results of anatomical segmentectomies. 964 39


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