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)

The clinicopathologic features and natural history of primary sclerosing cholangitis were reviewed in 53 patients followed at the Yale Liver Center during the past 30 yr. At presentation, the mean age of patients was 46 yr, and the male to female ratio was 1.4:1. Biliary sclerosis was limited to the intrahepatic ductal system in 21% of the patients. Fifty-three percent of the patients had mild disease without portal hypertension at presentation, and 25% had no symptoms attributable to their liver disease. Long-term follow-up was available for 42 patients and averaged 56 mo. Over this period, 16 patients remained mildly symptomatic, and 11 were asymptomatic. Survival was calculated by a Kaplan-Meier life-table analysis and demonstrated that 75% of the patients were alive 9 yr after the diagnosis of primary sclerosing cholangitis. A multivariate analysis of clinical features revealed that hepatomegaly and a serum bilirubin level greater than 1.5 mg/dl at the onset of disease were independent discriminators of a poor prognosis. Patients referred to this university medical center displayed different clinical characteristics than previously reported in primary sclerosing cholangitis. A higher percentage were older, female, and asymptomatic, and more had disease limited to the intrahepatic ductal system. Survival was also considerably improved in this group of patients and suggests that the long-term prognosis for patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis may be considerably better than previously believed.
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PMID:Improved survival with primary sclerosing cholangitis. A review of clinicopathologic features and comparison of symptomatic and asymptomatic patients. 356 62

Eleven patients of Chinese origin experienced spontaneous reactivation of chronic active hepatitis B. Eight HBsAg-positive patients were followed for an average of 15 months prior to, while three others presented during reactivation. Fatigue, hepatomegaly and jaundice were frequent findings. Elevation of both serum ALT (average = 1,212 units per liter) and hepatitis B virus DNA levels were noted in all patients, and reactivation lasted an average of 4.4 months. During resolution, clinical symptoms abated, serum ALT levels reverted toward normal, and in nine patients, the hepatitis B virus DNA values became undetectable. All patients lacked evidence for acute hepatitis A, Epstein-Barr Virus, cytomegalovirus or hepatitis delta virus infection. Histologic findings of liver tissue from eight patients showed piecemeal necrosis and fibrosis. Within the parenchyma, varying degrees of hepatocytolysis with cuffing, perivenular necrosis and acidophilic bodies were noted. Ground-glass cells and regenerative changes also were observed. Cirrhosis was not present in any of the liver biopsies. These findings suggest that spontaneous reactivation of hepatitis B occurs in heterosexual patients with chronic active hepatitis B and contributes to chronic inflammation and to the progression of their liver disease.
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PMID:Spontaneous reactivation of hepatitis B in Chinese patients with HBsAg-positive chronic active hepatitis. 361 49

Forty-one black patients aged 21 to 75 years with hepatic tuberculosis diagnosed at liver biopsy were studied prospectively. The liver varied in size and consistency and was tender in 44 per cent of patients. Abdominal symptoms, weight loss, pyrexia, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly and anaemia were absent in 54, 39, 37, 5, 68 and 27 per cent of patients respectively. Twenty-two per cent of chest radiographs were normal. Liver function tests were of little diagnostic value and hepatic imaging techniques often gave normal results. Acid-fast bacilli, caseation and coexistent liver disease were detected in 59, 51 and 37 per cent of patients respectively. Since there was no consistent clinical pattern a high index of suspicion is necessary if this disease is to be detected in communities in which tuberculosis is endemic. In patients with unexplained hepatomegaly or hepatosplenomegaly or pyrexia of unknown origin liver biopsy provides the only means of making this diagnosis.
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PMID:A prospective study of hepatic tuberculosis in 41 black patients. 365 66

The clinical, biochemical, and histological features of 27 children with syndromic paucity of the interlobular bile ducts are described. All presented in the first 5 months of life, 21 with jaundice, two with spontaneous bleeding due to vitamin K malabsorption in addition to jaundice, two with pruritus, and two with failure to thrive. Interlobular bile ducts were abundant in liver biopsies from five (18% of cases) in the first 6 months of life. The degree of portal fibrosis and cellular infiltrate was mild in all except three patients. Clinically significant heart lesions occurred in 52% but only 22% had peripheral pulmonary stenosis. Characteristic facial appearances were present in only 70%; embryotoxon and vertebral anomalies were present in 56 and 33%, respectively. Two infants died of cardiovascular complications, one of alimentary bleeding and one of progressive liver disease. Complications of vitamin K deficiency occurred in 15%, vitamin D deficiency in 30%, and vitamin E deficiency in 37%. Survivors at ages of 19 months to 16.5 years had considerable morbidity with pruritus occurring in 70%, jaundice in 48%, xanthomas in 30%, 74% having hepatomegaly and 63% splenomegaly. All had abnormal biochemical tests of liver function, 90% had growth retardation, and 50% developmental delay. We conclude that differentiation from extrahepatic biliary atresia can be difficult if biliary flow cannot be demonstrated. Prevention of fat-soluble vitamin deficiency is essential. Further research is required to decrease the morbidity associated with this syndrome in infancy.
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PMID:Syndromic paucity of the intrahepatic bile ducts: diagnostic difficulty; severe morbidity throughout early childhood. 368 72

To assess the spectrum of hepatic abnormalities in acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), we reviewed clinical, biochemical, and pathological material in 32 patients with AIDS. Eight-four percent of AIDS cases had a history of intravenous drug abuse. Ninety percent of AIDS patients has some liver biochemical abnormality at the first presentation of illness. During the course of AIDS, significant (p less than 0.05, paired Student's t test) rises in alkaline phosphatase and bilirubin occurred, without rises in aminotransferases. Mean abnormalities were mild, reflecting approximately 2-fold increases over baseline. Liver failure was not believed to contribute to the death of any AIDS patient. Pathological findings in AIDS included specific infectious diagnosis in 26%, granulomas in 16%, hemosiderosis in 26%, nonspecific abnormalities in 39%, cirrhosis in 23%, and chronic active hepatitis in 3%. AIDS cases were also compared to 10 selected age, sex, and epidemiologically similar non-AIDS patients. Although granulomas or infections were not seen in our comparison group, only the incidence of chronic active hepatitis was significantly different between the groups. If only those with intravenous drug abuse were studied, then none of 24 AIDS patients versus four of eight non-AIDS cases (p less than 0.005) had chronic active hepatitis. AIDS patients with specific hepatic infections tended to have a higher alkaline phosphatase and aspartate aminotransferase (p less than 0.05) than noninfected cases. However, substantial overlap existed, and no difference in hepatomegaly was noted. Ninety percent of AIDS patients were ingesting at least one potentially hepatotoxic drug. We conclude that AIDS patients have a high incidence of underlying hepatic abnormalities. However, clinical and biochemical abnormalities are similar in our selected liver biopsy patients with intravenous drug abuse with or without AIDS. As expected, AIDS patients have a higher incidence of hepatic granulomas and infections, but these patients were not clearly distinguishable from other AIDS cases. Histological examination showed a wide array of changes by light microscopy, but no specific lesion of AIDS was noted. The low incidence of chronic active hepatitis in this AIDS population may imply that the altered T lymphocyte function in AIDS could influence the course of liver disease in these patients.
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PMID:The liver in acquired immune deficiency syndrome: emphasis on patients with intravenous drug abuse. 382 29

A 54-year-old woman with obesity, type II diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, and massive hepatomegaly was found to have severe steatosis and cirrhosis on liver biopsy. Complete evaluation led to the diagnosis of fatty cirrhosis associated with obesity and diabetic mellitus. She underwent four months of fasting with a protein-carbohydrate and vitamin-mineral liquid supplement to control her weight and metabolic abnormalities and to evaluate the effect of this diet on her liver disease. She lost 40 pounds to ideal body weight, normalized her serum glucose and lipids, and decreased total liver height by one third. Liver biopsy at the completion of her diet showed inactive cirrhosis and complete resolution of steatosis. Supplemented fasting with only modest weight loss can safely resolve fatty liver in obese diabetics with nonalcoholic steatosis and cirrhosis. Aggressive dietary approaches to achieve long-term weight loss deserve study in this subgroup of diabetics with unexplained chronic liver disease.
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PMID:Steatosis and cirrhosis in an obese diabetic. Resolution of fatty liver by fasting. 382 84

Compound LY171883 caused dose-related and reversible hepatomegaly in male Fischer 344 rats. Histological examination revealed hepatocellular hypertrophy with no other evidence of liver disease. There were only minor changes in serum glucose, total bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, and alanine transaminase which were generally unrelated to dose and dissociable from the hepatomegaly. Total liver DNA increased but the DNA concentration decreased, indicating that liver growth involved a combination of hypertrophy and hyperplasia. Total liver protein and RNA increased. Hepatic mitochondrial protein content increased but cytochrome oxidase activity was not changed. There were minor changes in mitochondrial respiratory parameters; however, all the values were in the normal range and there was no indication of mitochondrial toxicity. Microsomal protein, drug-metabolizing activity, and cytochrome P-450 increased, but glucose-6-phosphatase activity was not changed. The induction of drug-metabolizing enzymes and absence of toxicity were evidence that the hepatomegaly was an adaptation to an increased functional load in the liver. An increase in catalase activity suggested that the response may have also involved peroxisomes. In addition to rats, LY171883 administration caused hepatomegaly in mice and hamsters at daily exposures exceeding 100 mg/kg. The response was not observed in guinea pigs, beagle dogs, or rhesus monkeys given maximum tolerated doses, indicating LY171883-induced hepatomegaly is not a response common to all species. The doses required to elicit hepatomegaly greatly exceeded doses that produce pharmacological efficacy in animals and those that are expected to be used clinically. Since humans will not receive doses comparable to those given rodents, and considering that the primate species tested did not experience hepatomegaly, it is unlikely that the effect observed in rodents can be extrapolated to humans.
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PMID:Characterization of liver enlargement induced by compound LY171883 in rats. 384 Jan 8

Liver disease occurring as a manifestation of secondary syphilis is unusual, and this association is not readily recognized or considered in the differential diagnosis of obscure hepatic disease, thereby causing delay in treatment. We describe a case of liver involvement in secondary syphilis with computed-tomography and ultrasound findings. This entity should be considered in patients with hepatomegaly coexisting with the clinical stigmata of secondary syphilis, as treatment with penicillin results in rapid improvement in both the clinical and biochemical findings.
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PMID:Computed tomography and ultrasound appearance of liver disease in secondary syphilis. 388 10

Five patients had amiodarone hepatotoxicity detected on routine biochemical monitoring. Symptoms attributable to hepatotoxicity were minimal or absent; reversible hepatomegaly was seen in two patients, whereas three patients had signs of nonhepatic amiodarone toxicity before or with hepatotoxicity. Serum aminotransferase levels were elevated in all patients and alkaline phosphatase levels in four; no patient had hyperbilirubinemia or prolongation of the prothrombin time. Light microscopy showed steatosis, cellular degeneration, and cellular necrosis in the biopsy samples of four patients, whereas the fifth patient's sample had a granulomatous injury pattern. Electron microscopic study of liver tissue done in two patients showed phospholipid-laden lysosomal lamellar bodies. These findings suggest that both toxic and hypersensitivity liver injury can occur in response to amiodarone. The presence of phospholipid-laden lysosomal lamellar bodies may help differentiate amiodarone hepatotoxicity from alcoholic liver disease or other causes of hepatic steatosis.
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PMID:Amiodarone hepatotoxicity. A clinicopathologic study of five patients. 394 78

In the past 10 years we have examined 20 children with inflammatory liver disease associated with high serum titers of anti-liver-kidney microsome antibody (anti-LKM). The first hepatic symptoms were progressive fatigue and jaundice, the fortuitous finding of hepatomegaly or splenomegaly with raised transaminase activity, or an acute hepatitis-like illness. At the time of diagnosis, hepatomegaly was present in 18 children, splenomegaly in 16, jaundice in nine, and ascites in two. Serum alanine transferase activities were elevated in all but two, who had already received steroids. Serum total gammaglobulin values were greater than 2.0 gm/dl in 16 children, prothrombin activity less than or equal to 60% in six, and serum titer of anti-LKM between 1:100 and 1:100,000. All children but one had cirrhosis, and histologic signs of aggressivity were present in 14. In 11 children one or more extrahepatic diseases were present, including type 1 diabetes, vitiligo, glomerulonephritis, autoimmune hemolytic anemia, hypoglycemia with hyperinsulinism, autoimmune thyroiditis, chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis with hypoparathyroidism, and multiple cutaneous and visceral telangiectasias. Treatment with prednisone and azathioprine improved the liver condition in 16 of the 18 patients given treatment. In eight of them discontinuation of treatment resulted in rapid relapse; 14 are still receiving treatment and have stable hepatic function with follow-up from 8 months to 6 1/2 years. Only two are free of treatment. Four children died, two in spite of immunosuppressive therapy, one during a relapse, and one of extrahepatic disease. These results indicate that this autoimmune inflammatory liver disease may have onset early in life, with several clinical patterns; is frequently associated with certain types of extrahepatic manifestations of autoimmune origin; and is a potentially fatal disease for which immunosuppressive treatment must be started early.
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PMID:Liver disease associated with anti-liver-kidney microsome antibody in children. 395 Aug 19


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