Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (hepatomegaly)
5,798 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sixty-seven cases of alcoholic liver disease were histologically classified into 4 groups: alcoholic liver cirrhosis (ALC), alcoholic hepatitis (AH), alcoholic liver fibrosis (ALF) and alcoholic fatty liver (AFL). They were statistically reclassified by the likelihood method using age, total alcohol intake, hepatomegaly and 12 liver function tests. A score table for likely diagnosis was constructed from the incidences of each range. The cases were re-evaluated using the score table, with an overall correct diagnosis rate of 73%. The best combination of 5 parameters included the indocyanine green plasma disappearance rate, total alcohol intake, cholesterol, choline esterase and glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase/glutamic pyruvic transaminase ratio. A correct diagnosis rate of 75% was attained using these 5 parameters, and 94% of patients were correctly diagnosed by the first or the second likelihood diagnosis. Differential diagnosis of alcoholic liver diseases was easily and confidently obtained with the likelihood score table.
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PMID:Comparative diagnosis of alcoholic liver diseases by multivariate and histological analysis. 398 78

A patient who abstained from alcohol consumption but who had asymptomatic chronic progressive hepatomegaly, mild disturbance of liver function tests and hepatitis resembling alcoholic hepatitis (nonalcoholic steatohepatitis) developed glucose intolerance several years after the hepatitis was diagnosed. The patient had a family history of both diabetes and chronic liver disease. A lesion resembling alcoholic hepatitis in a patient who denies alcohol consumption, may be diabetic or pre-diabetic in aetiology and such a patient should be followed up with glucose tolerance tests.
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PMID:Diabetic hepatitis preceding the onset of glucose intolerance. 398 46

Clinical features and liver biopsy findings were studied in six patients with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis associated with hyalin. A comparative study was made on the ultrastructure of the hyalin in one patient with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis and in one patient with alcoholic hepatitis. The patients, all over 50 years old, comprised two females and one male with steatohepatitis and three females with micronodular cirrhosis. They showed obesity, hepatomegaly, and mild abnormalities on laboratory tests. Three of them showed maturity-onset diabetes. The hyalin was found in the cytoplasm of swollen hepatocytes of the centrilobular or in the peripheral region of nodules and was accompanied by necrosis. Ultrastructurally, the hyalin comprised filamentous structures and vesicular or angular structures resembling disorganized circular or branched rough endoplasmic reticulum. It resembled that found in the liver of patients with alcoholic hepatitis.
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PMID:Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis and cirrhosis with Mallory's hyalin with ultrastructural study of one case. 617 90

A study of 510 patients in Scotland and northeastern England with histological evidence of alcohol-induced liver disease showed no difference in the age of presentation between males and females. Single men and widowed females were particularly susceptible to alcoholic liver disease. The social class distribution was similar to the population in general. Women were more reluctant to volunteer a history of alcoholism than men, they had a higher incidence of previous psychiatric illness (usually due to alcohol abuse) and they developed liver disease at lower consumption thresholds of alcohol than men. Patients under 40 years of age were more likely to have alcoholic fatty liver and less likely to have active cirrhosis than those over 40. Most often, the presenting symptoms were non-specific and tended to be related to the gastrointestinal system, particularly in women. Five per cent of patients were asymptomatic and 14% came to hospital for conditions other than alcoholic liver disease. Important clues to asymptomatic alcoholic liver disease included hepatomegaly, clubbing of the fingers and abnormal liver function tests. Gastro-oesophageal varices accounted for 40% of instances of haemorrhage and the mortality from upper gastrointestinal bleeding was 17%. Anaemia was the most common haematological abnormality. Alcoholic hepatitis was observed more frequently in the Glasgow area then elsewhere.
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PMID:Alcoholic liver disease in Scotland and northeastern England: presenting features in 510 patients. 660 94

We have noticed that functional disorders of the liver characterized by hepatomegaly and an increase in serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase develop in patients with prostatic cancer who are placed under longterm therapy with massive doses of estrogen after castration. We performed laparoscopy in six cases of prostatic cancer with hepatomegaly so that we could study the morphology of the liver. Our findings were as follows. In five, the histological features of the liver biopsies were very similar to those seen in alcoholic hepatitis. In spite of this fact, two of the five had no history of alcohol consumption. Furthermore, in one other case, liver damage resembling alcoholic hepatitis developed during abstinence. The findings in these three cases suggested that long-term, massive doses of synthetic estrogen may lead to liver injury similar to alcoholic hepatitis in nonalcoholics. The ultrastructural findings of the liver cells were also suggestive of the adverse effect of treatment. All cases were negative for hepatitis B surface antigen. Recent reports have demonstrated some nonalcoholics with histological features of the liver indicative of alcoholic hepatitis. This particular condition was termed "nonalcoholic steatohepatitis" by Ludwig et al. It is quite likely that synthetic estrogen is also responsible for "nonalcoholic steatohepatitis" when it is used in massive doses.
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PMID:"Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis" induced by massive doses of synthetic estrogen. 687 94

In conclusion, the studies presented suggest that two factors commonly occurring in the alcoholic, namely, an increased rate of ethanol metabolism and hepatomegaly, may have important pathogenic implications in alcoholic liver disease. An increased rate of ethanol metabolism is linked to a greater oxygen demand, thus resulting in greater susceptibility to hypoxia in Zone 3 of the liver acinus, a factor which might be responsible for hepatocellular necrosis in alcoholic hepatitis. Propylthiouracil has been shown to have a protective effect against hypoxic necrosis in alcohol-fed animals and has been found to be most effective in accelerating the rate of recovery of alcoholics with active liver disease. On the other hand, hepatocyte expansion in hepatomegaly, in the face of a semi-rigid liver capsule, leads to constriction of extracellular volume and to an increase in intrahepatic and portal pressure. The latter, in turn, could produce a variety of haemodynamic alterations as those found in the alcoholic. To what extent the mechanisms described are responsible for or might add to the myriad of other disturbances observed in alcoholic disease should be further analysed.
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PMID:Hepatocyte demand and substrate supply as factors in the susceptibility to alcoholic liver injury: pathogenesis and prevention. 701 48

The clinical, laboratorial and histological aspects of 50 cases of alcoholic hepatitis were analysed, as well as the follow-up of 24 patients. The mean age of the 50 patients was 42,9 years (range: 25 to 65 years); 44 were males. The beginning of the symptomatology was insidious in great number of cases. The hepatomegaly was most habitual clinical signal (92% of cases). The jaundice was observed in 58% of the cases. Twenty six per cent of the patients had not manifestation of advanced hepatopaty at the moment of diagnosis. The most constant laboratorial alteration (except the increase of gama-glutamil-transpeptidase, dosed in rare cases) was the increase of SGOT (94%). Histological examination showed necrosis and inflammatory exudate in all cases; steatosis in 98%; Mallory bodies in 78%; fibrosis in 84%; cirrhosis in 44%. In the group of patients that came to the obit at the first internation, jaundice, digestive bleeding, encephalopathy, infection, leucocitosis and decreased prothrombin activity. The follow-up of 24 cases (3 months to 5 years) showed aggravation of illness and frequent evolution to cirrhosis in patient that maintained the alcohol ingestion.
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PMID:[Alcoholic hepatitis: clinical, laboratorial and histological study of 50 cases]. 718 21

The clinical and histological symptoms of alcoholic hepatitis diagnosed from liver biopsies are investigated and the results compared with the extent of the histological lesions classified as small, medium or large. Nonspecific symptoms were variable and were not found to be related to the histological damage. The only recurring symptom was hepatomegaly, which was present in 95% of the patients studied. Histo-clinical comparison showed the clinical symptoms to be very variable, and it is concluded that accurate diagnosis and knowledge of the severity of the lesion can only be obtained from liver biopsy samples.
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PMID:[Alcoholic hepatitis: histo-clinical evaluation]. 724 97

Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis is a poorly understood and hitherto unnamed liver disease that histologically mimics alcoholic hepatitis and that also may progress to cirrhosis. Described here are findings in 20 patients with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis of unknown cause. The biopsy specimens were characterized by the presence of striking fatty changes with evidence of lobular hepatitis, focal necroses with mixed inflammatory infiltrates, and, in most instances, Mallory bodies; Evidence of fibrosis was found in most specimens, and cirrhosis was diagnosed in biopsy tissue from three patients. The disease was more common in women. Most patients were moderately obese, and many had obesity-associated diseases, such as diabetes mellitus and cholelithiasis. Presence of hepatomegaly and mild abnormalities of liver function were common clinical findings. Currently, we know of no effective therapy.
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PMID:Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis: Mayo Clinic experiences with a hitherto unnamed disease. 2901 67

In 70 alcoholic patients the amount of collagen in the space of Disse was compared, using an electron microscopic graded score, to the height of the intrahepatic pressure. A highly significant correlation was found between the amount of collagen and intrahepatic pressure in the group as a whole (r = 0.84; p < 10(-6)), as well as in subgroups of 30 alcoholic patients with normal livers or steatosis (r = 0.83; p < 10(-6)), 9 patients with alcoholic hepatitis (r = 0.81; p < 0.01), and 31 with cirrhosis (r = 0.86; p < 10(-6)). A nonparametric correlational analysis for the complete group also showed a significant relationship (rho = 0.85; p < 10(-6)) between collagen scores and intrahepatic pressure. In 60 patients hepatocyte surface area was measured in the biopsies. In these, hepatocyte surface area significantly correlated with intrahepatic pressure (r = 0.68; p < 10(-7)). No correlation was found between intrahepatic pressure and fat, alcoholic hyalin, or terminal hepatic vein sclerosis. Only with necrosis (r = 0.38; p < 0.001) and inflammation (r = 0.29; p < 0.05) was there a significant relationship with intrahepatic pressure. Chronic ethanol administration for 4 wk in liquid diets to young Wistar rats produced a 50% hepatomegaly due to an increase in hepatocyte size. Intrahepatic pressure in the rats receiving alcohol (19.3 +/- 2.3 mmHg) was significantly higher than in the controls on sucrose (10.4 +/- 0.9 mmHg) (p < 0.01). A highly significant correlation was found between hepatocyte surface area and intrahepatic pressure (r = 0.70; p < 0.005). There was no increase in collagen in the Disse space in these animals. Therefore, hepatomegaly in the absence of an increase in collagen in the Disse space may result in increased intrahepatic pressure. These studies may indicate a sequence of events: hepatomegaly, portal hypertension, and collagenization in the Disse space, which could occur in alcoholic liver disease.
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PMID:Correlation of intrahepatic pressure with collagen in the Disse space and hepatomegaly in humans and in the rat. 745 Apr 45


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