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

Most series in Africa show a high percentage of hepatitis B surface antigen in hepatocellular carcinoma. Two groups of cases were investigated in this study. The one was derived from the autopsy material at Baragwanath hospital from subjects who had lived in Soweto, a large Black urban town. The second group consisted of male Black mineworkers generally originating from rural areas. A combination of the aldehydefuchsin stain and immunoperoxidase technique was used. The two groups showed totally different results. The Baragwanath series consisted of 24 hepatocellular carcinomas of which only 4 (17%) were HBsAg positive. Of the 24 cases, 14 had cirrhosis of which 9 were macronodular and 5 micronodular. Ten of these cases showed heavy iron overload. The series of male Black mineworkers comprised 22 cases of which 16 (72%) were HBsAg positive. Twelve of the 22 cases showed a macronodular cirrhosis and there were no micronodular cirrhoses. Only one case showed severe iron overload. These findings delineate two different populations of hepatocellular carcinoma in Southern Africa.
...
PMID:Hepatitis B surface antigen and hepatocellular carcinoma in Southern Africa. 23 51

Iron overload was found in 3 patients who had undergone partial gastrectomy: a 61-year-old woman developed iron overload because she may have had idiopathic haemochromatosis and had also been given parenteral iron; in a 62-year-old man with thalassaemia minor, iron overload may have developed because of increased oral iron ingestion, low serum folate, increased, albeit ineffective, erythropoiesis and sideroblastic anaemia; a 74-year-old man with thalassaemia minor developed iron overload without exogenous therapy and died from a hepatoma. These cases illustrate that partial gastrectomy fails to protect patients from developing iron overload, particularly if given uncontrolled iron therapy.
...
PMID:Iron overload despite partial gastrectomy. 53 65

Macroregenerative nodules, also called nodules of adenomatous hyperplasia, have been well documented in Japan. Extensive studies support the hypothesis that in the Japanese population these lesions represent a possible pathway for hepatocarcinogenesis. However, reporting of these lesions in non-Japanese populations has so far been rare. We examined 44 sequential cirrhotic hepatectomy specimens from adult patients who underwent orthotopic liver transplantation at our institution. All livers were serially sectioned every 0.5 cm. Macroregenerative nodules were defined as regenerative nodules at least 1 cm in diameter. Forty-eight macroregenerative nodules were found in 11 livers (25% of livers). The antecedent diseases in these livers included hepatitis C (3), alcoholism (2), primary biliary cirrhosis (2) (one with iron overload), cryptogenic cirrhosis (2), hepatitis B (1) and alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency (1). The macroregenerative nodules often differed from the surrounding nodular parenchyma in color, texture or the degree to which they bulged beyond the cut liver surface. Three livers contained grossly apparent hepatocellular carcinomas. Microscopically, macroregenerative nodules could be classified as those with (type 2) and without (type 1) dysplasia. Four livers had type 1 lesions, two had type 2 lesions and five had lesions of both types. We found 36 type 1 lesions in all and 12 type 2 lesions, 3 containing foci of microscopic carcinoma. All hepatocellular carcinomas arose in livers containing macroregenerative nodules (either type). Liver cell dysplasia, large-cell or small-cell, was observed in cirrhotic nodules of 27 livers. Microscopic or macroscopic hepatocellular carcinoma occurred in three livers with large-cell but not small-cell dysplasia and in one liver without dysplasia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Macroregenerative nodules and hepatocellular carcinoma in forty-four sequential adult liver explants with cirrhosis. 132 12

Detection and exclusion of focal liver lesions is especially difficult in patients with diffuse liver disease. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging may be particularly valuable in these patients. By judicious comparison of appropriate pulse sequences, normal and hypertrophic liver may be distinguished from atrophic, neoplastic, or otherwise abnormal hepatic parenchyma. Chemical shift (lipid-sensitive) techniques allow definitive identification of fatty liver, including focal fatty infiltration or focal sparing. T2-weighted and T2*-weighted images allow identification of iron overload, depicting malignancies as focal masses without iron. Analysis of signal intensity and internal morphology allows confident distinction between regenerative nodules and hepatocellular carcinoma in most instances, and allows diagnosis of early carcinoma within regenerative nodules. MR imaging provides capabilities for noninvasive characterization of liver tissue beyond those available with other noninvasive modalities.
...
PMID:Focal manifestations of diffuse liver disease at MR imaging. 911 25

Several data indicate that iron may be involved in the pathogenesis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). A high prevalence of HCC has been reported in patients with genetic hemochromatosis and the risk of HCC appears to be related to the amount and duration of iron overload. Iron, which has been demonstrated to facilitate persistent hepatitis B or C infection, could also act as a co-factor in the pathogenesis of HCC in patients with hepatitis B or C. Among the possible mechanisms by which iron could exert its cancerogenetic potential, free radicals production responsible for heritable genetic alterations appears to be one of the most important, although the fibrogenetic capability of iron, potentially leading to cirrhosis, cannot be underestimated.
...
PMID:Iron in the pathogenesis of hepatocellular carcinoma. 166 94

This study of hepatocellular carcinoma in a homogeneous rural Transkeian population at high risk consisted of: evaluation of liver biopsies of 246 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma using routine histology and immunoperoxidase for HBV stains; collection of reliable data on alcohol consumption, blood HBsAg and ALT status in asymptomatic controls from an adequate population sample; assessment of maize intended for human consumption for contamination by carcinogenic fungi. Tumour histology of rural Blacks did not differ from those described in other studies. Cirrhotic livers were present in 45.1% and iron overload in 68% of cases. Tissue HBsAg was detected in 57% (45% of non-cirrhotic and 59% of cirrhotic livers). Asymptomatic controls showed 9.5% of HBsAg positivity, 3.5% had elevated ALT and 41.3% admitted to alcohol abuse. Maize had insignificant contamination by Aspergillus flavus and very frequent contamination by Fusarium moniloforme. This study suggests a multifactorial aetiology of hepatocellular carcinoma, with viral infection being of the most importance.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma in a rural population at risk. 166 22

Genetic haemochromatosis is characterised by an inappropriately high rate of iron absorption by the small intestine. The disease is transmitted as an autosomal recessive condition. The gene frequency in the Caucasian population is approximately 1 in 20 and the disease frequency is 1 in 400. Excessive iron deposition occurs in the liver, pancreas, heart, pituitary and joints and hepatic iron concentrations above approximately 400 mumol/g dry weight are always associated with fibrosis and usually with cirrhosis and progressive liver failure. Accurate diagnosis depends upon the demonstration of elevated hepatic iron stores. An hepatic iron index [hepatic iron concentration (in mumol/g dry weight) divided by patient age] of greater than 2.0 distinguishes homozygous subjects from the other conditions in which slight increases in hepatic iron concentration may occur, e.g. in a subject heterozygous for haemochromatosis or alcoholic liver disease. If cirrhosis is present, patients are at a high risk of developing hepatocellular carcinoma. Therefore, they should undergo regular abdominal ultrasound and alpha-fetoprotein estimation. In the absence of cirrhosis, phlebotomy restores life expectancy to normal. Venesection should be continued until all excess iron stores are removed as judged by failure of a rise in haemoglobin concentration on cessation of phlebotomy. Screening of first degree relatives should commence from a young age (e.g. 10 years). If serum ferritin or transferrin saturation are abnormal, liver biopsy should be undertaken. HLA typing of the family allows for the identification of those siblings who are most likely to develop the disease. Secondary iron overload is often multifactorial in origin. Iron chelation therapy with subcutaneous deferoxamine (desferrioxamine) should only commence after careful consideration of the potential benefits in each individual patient.
...
PMID:Current concepts in rational therapy for haemochromatosis. 171 64

Iron is essential for life, but iron overload is toxic and potentially fatal. The liver is a major site of iron storage and is particularly susceptible to injury from iron overload, especially when (as in primary hemochromatosis) the iron accumulates in hepatocytes. Iron can be taken up by the liver in several forms and by several pathways including: (1) receptor-mediated endocytosis of diferric or monoferric transferrin or ferritin, (2) reduction and carrier-facilitated internalization of iron from transferrin without internalization of the protein moiety of transferrin, (3) electrogenic uptake of low molecular weight, non-protein bound forms of iron, and (4) uptake of heme from heme-albumin, heme-hemopexin, or hemoglobin-haptoglobin complexes. Normally, pathway 2 is probably the major one for uptake of iron by hepatocytes. Iron is stored in the liver in the cores of ferritin shells and as hemosiderin, an insoluble product derived from iron-rich ferritin. Iron in hepatocytes stimulates translation of ferritin mRNA and represses transcription of DNA for transferrin and transferrin receptors. The major pathologic effects of chronic hepatic iron overload are: (1) fibrosis and cirrhosis, (2) porphyria cutanea tarda, and (3) hepatocellular carcinoma. Although precise pathogenetic mechanisms remain unknown, iron probably produces these and other toxic effects by increasing oxidative stress and lysosomal lability. Vigorous efforts at diagnosis and treatment of iron overload are essential since the pathologic effects of iron are totally preventable by early vigorous iron removal and prevention of iron re-accumulation.
...
PMID:Iron and the liver. 184 76

A case of hepatocellular carcinoma in idiopathic hemochromatosis is discussed to illustrate the possible advantages of MR imaging. Since hepatic iron overload provides a natural source of paramagnetic contrast enhancement MRI should performed in preference to other investigative procedures to detect small and curative resectable hepatocellular carcinomas in patients with hemochromatosis.
...
PMID:[Magnetic resonance tomography in hepatocellular carcinoma and idiopathic hemochromatosis]. 217 39

Using an indirect immunoperoxidase technique on frozen sections with the monoclonal antibody 96.5, we investigated the in situ distribution of melanotransferrin, a transferrin (Tf) and transferrin receptor (TfR) related glycoprotein, in human liver. Specimens included normal liver, liver in iron overload, hepatocellular carcinoma, angioma and foetal liver. On light microscopy, immunoreactivity was almost exclusively present on sinusoidal lining cells, apparently endothelial cells; the pattern was similar in normal and in iron-loaded liver. A gradient of more enhanced staining in acinar zone II and III was observed. The endothelial localization of the staining was supported by the positivity of the central vein endothelium and of the angiomas. Immunoelectron microscopy on three liver specimens showed positivity on sinusoidal endothelial cells but not on Ito and Kupffer cells. In addition, positivity on rough endoplasmic reticulum vesicles of some hepatocytes was also present. Four hepatocellular carcinomas showed an intense staining in tumour cells, 3 were weakly positive and 3 were negative. In the foetal livers, the central vein endothelium was positive from 21 weeks of gestation onward and additional positivity of zone III sinusoidal endothelial cells was present from 27 weeks on. The present results show that in the liver melanotransferrin has a localization different from Tf and the TfR. These latter molecules are predominantly localized in parenchymal cells. In addition, there does not appear to be a coordinate regulation secondary to iron storage, between melanotransferrin, Tf and the TfR. The observed gradient in the staining pattern in foetal and adult liver specimens further supports the heterogeneity of the endothelial cell population in the liver and suggests a developmental relationship between endothelial cells of sinusoids and central vein.
...
PMID:In situ localization of melanotransferrin (melanoma-associated antigen P97) in human liver. A light- and electronmicroscopic immunohistochemical study. 254 Mar 89


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>