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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixty-four patients admitted with
acute alcoholic hepatitis
, with or without underlying
cirrhosis
, were randomized regardless of encephalopathy to receive a controlled diet either alone, or supplemented orally, nasogastrically, or intravenously as necessary, with 2000 kCal and 10 g nitrogen daily. Whether this came from a conventional protein source or a branched chain amino acid enriched formulation was also randomly determined. In the absence of renal failure, nitrogen intakes of 10 g or more daily were invariably associated with positive nitrogen balance, but complications of liver dysfunction prevented the attainment of significantly more positive balance in the supplemented groups than in controls. Neither in the series as a whole, nor in any identifiable subgroup of patients, was mortality affected by treatment. Changes in prothrombin time and in measured nutritional parameters during the study did not differ between supplemented and control groups, and the observed changes in midarm muscle circumference appeared to reflect changes in degree of fluid retention. Neither enteral nor parenteral branched chain amino acids showed any consistent effect upon encephalopathy.
...
PMID:Controlled trial of nutritional supplementation, with and without branched chain amino acid enrichment, in treatment of acute alcoholic hepatitis. 393 9
Infraclinical myocardial lesions were searched for in patients with various types of liver disease due to chronic alcoholic intoxication. During a single procedure, a transjugular liver and right endoventricular biopsy and hemodynamic evaluation were performed in 26 patients without clinical evidence of cardiac involvement. Patients were classified into 5 groups: I, no liver disease (n = 4); II, fatty liver (n = 7); III,
acute alcoholic hepatitis
(n = 3); IV,
cirrhosis
(n = 7); V,
cirrhosis
with alcoholic hepatitis (n = 5). The study also included the determination of the serum thiamine level, a 24 h non-stop EKG recording and a M mode echocardiography. The cardiac-thoracic ratio, the EKG and Holter monitoring were normal. The serum thiamine levels decreased regularly from group I to group V, but there was no significant difference between patients with
cirrhosis
(group IV and V) and the others (group I to III). The same findings applied to the echocardiographic data. At rest, hemodynamic data were normal in all patients. Various degrees of myocardial lesions were present in 86 p. 100 of the cases. They included: cellular hypertrophy, contraction bands, interstitial fibrosis, fibroblastic infiltrate, perinuclear, cellular and or interstitial edema. Although frequent, these lesions were moderate and not specific. No correlation was found between the myocardial lesions and the type of liver disease. Myocardial lesions without cardiac manifestations have therefore been observed in vivo in nearly all patients with chronic alcoholic intoxication. These lesions were not correlated with the stage of alcoholic liver disease.
...
PMID:[Latent myocardiopathy in chronic alcoholic patients with or without hepatic involvement]. 399 13
Peripheral blood T lymphocytes and T lymphocytes subsets have been quantified by an indirect immunofluorescence technique using monoclonal antibodies, in 10 patients with fatty liver, 8 with
acute alcoholic hepatitis
(AAH), 10 with inactive
cirrhosis
and 7 with
cirrhosis
and AAH. Twenty normal subjects were studied as controls. As compared to controls (1.81 +/- 0.56 10(9)/l), we found a reduced number of peripheral T lymphocytes (OKT3+) in patients with inactive
cirrhosis
(0.98 +/- 0.45, p less than 0.001) and in patients with
cirrhosis
and AAH (1.22 +/- 0.51, p less than 0.02). The OKT4 to OKT8 ratio was normal in patients with fatty liver or inactive
cirrhosis
, but it was significantly higher in patients with AAH with or without
cirrhosis
(2.83 +/- 0.79, p less than 0.01, and 2.10 +/- 0.56, p less than 0,02, respectively) than in controls (1.68 +/- 0.24). In both groups, this increased ratio was due to a decreased proportion of OKT8+ circulating lymphocytes (19.2 +/- 6.7 p. 100, p less than 0.01, and 21.8 +/- 4.6 p. 100, p less than 0.02, respectively) when compared to controls (27.1 +/- 4.1 p. 100). The T-cell imbalance observed in patients with liver cell necrosis may be of importance in the pathogenesis of alcoholic liver disease.
...
PMID:[Phenotype study of blood T lymphocytes in alcoholic hepatopathies]. 639 17
The frequency of HLA-B40 was significantly increased in 30 patients with
acute alcoholic hepatitis
with
cirrhosis
(63%) and in 60 patients with alcoholic cirrhosis with or without
acute alcoholic hepatitis
(48%) compared with its frequency in 234 healthy blood donors (18%). The HLA-B40 frequency was not increased in 20 patients with
acute alcoholic hepatitis
without
cirrhosis
(0%), in 41 patients with fatty liver infiltration (12%), or in 67 alcoholics with moderate biochemical abnormalities (19%). The association between HLA-B40 and alcoholic liver cirrhosis and
acute alcoholic hepatitis
with
cirrhosis
favors the idea that these disorders might be genetically determined. There was, however, no difference in the distribution of the HLA antigens in 54 patients with different degrees of alcoholic liver disease and an elevated carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) value of greater than or equal to 5.0 micrograms/l compared with 61 alcoholics with different degrees of liver disease and a normal CEA value. Thus, the results of HLA-A and -B typing gave no evidence of genetic susceptibility to develop a CEA elevation in patients with alcoholic liver disease.
...
PMID:Association between HLA-B40 and acute alcoholic hepatitis with cirrhosis and the lack of relation between carcinoembryonic antigen and HLA antigens in alcoholic liver disease. 667 57
The efficacy of methylprednisolone (1 g daily or three days), which is effective in reversing transplant rejection, was assessed in a randomised controlled trial of 55 patients with severe
acute alcoholic hepatitis
, 34 of whom had encephalopathy. The clinical progress, frequency of bleeding and sepsis, and cause of death were similar in the treatment (27 patients) and control groups (28 patients). There was no significant difference in mortality rate between the two groups: 57% of the control group and 63% of the treatment group died during the study. Patients' survival depended on the presence of absence of the following features: encephalopathy, serum bilirubin concentration more than 340 micromol/l, serum creatinine concentration more than 250 micromol/l, and histological evidence of
cirrhosis
as well as severe
acute alcoholic hepatitis
.
...
PMID:Controlled trial of methylprednisolone therapy in severe acute alcoholic hepatitis. 703 99
Six main types of histopathological changes were found in 463 patients with chronic alcoholism admitted during the 10-year period from 1966 to 1975: group I, normal liver in 2.6%; group II, fatty liver in 8.4%; group III,
acute alcoholic hepatitis
(AAH) in 7.6%; group IV,
cirrhosis
with or without steatosis in 68.7%; group V,
cirrhosis
with AAH in 12.8%; group VI, liver cell carcinoma (LCC) in 1.9% (all of the latter patients were also included in group IV). Seventy-three % were males and 27% were females. Females tended to be older than males.
Cirrhosis
was found in 68% of the group between 21 and 30 yr and in 85% between 51 and 60 yr. Normal histology or steatosis was less frequent after the age of 50 yr. Ascites and jaundice were more frequent in patients with AAH than in patients with steatosis. The majority of patients had SGOT under 100 karmen units/ml; SGPT was normal in 80% of patients with
cirrhosis
and higher than 100 karmen units/ml in 10%. SGPT was higher than SGOT in only 11.9% of the patients. Mortality was 46.7% according to the followup until 1978. Survival was 38.4% at the end of the first year and decreased very slowly afterwards to 32.8% in males and 11.5% in females after a 5-yr period.
...
PMID:Alcoholic liver diseases in Portugal. Clinical and laboratory picture, mortality, and survival. 704 74
Plasma amino acids were compared in three groups of patients with alcoholic liver disease including stable
cirrhosis
,
acute alcoholic hepatitis
without portal-systemic encephalopathy, and
cirrhosis
with encephalopathy. In addition, plasma amino acids were correlated with nitrogen balance in patients with
acute alcoholic hepatitis
and with clinical improvement in patients with encephalopathy. Significant differences in plasma amino acids within these groups were present. Plasma amino acids did not change with improvement in portal-systemic encephalopathy, and abnormalities of plasma amino acids did not prevent maintenance or attainment of positive nitrogen balance in patients with
acute alcoholic hepatitis
.
...
PMID:Relationship of plasma amino acids to nitrogen balance and portal-systemic encephalopathy in alcoholic liver disease. 707 4
Antibodies reacting with a liver membrane lipoprotein (LSP) have been detected by radioimmunoassay in the sera of 15 (27%) of 55 patients with alcohol-related liver lesions. There was a close association between the presence of the anti-LSP antibody and the findings on liver biopsy of a lymphocytic infiltrate in the portal tracts together with piecemeal necrosis of periportal hepatocytes. These histological features are characteristically found in the autoimmune disorder of chronic active hepatitis, in which anti-LSP antibodies are almost invariably present. It is suggested that in these cases of alcoholic liver disease there is loss of tolerance, and continued production of anti-LSP could promote periportal inflammation and accelerate the progression to
cirrhosis
. In the cases of
acute alcoholic hepatitis
without periportal inflammation studied, anti-LSP was not detected demonstrating that production of this autoantibody is not simply secondary to liver damage.
...
PMID:Autoimmunity to a liver membrane lipoprotein and liver damage in alcoholic liver disease. 721 46
Clinical and laboratory observations were made on 220 chronic alcoholics, regularly taking at least 150 g of alcohol daily. Haematological data concerning white blood cells, platelets and red cells counts, mean corpuscolar volume, hemoglobin and serum iron in these patients were compared with control values obtained from 150 healthy teetotal subjects. Hematological changes in chronic alcoholics were correlated with histological liver damages in transcutaneous needle-biopsies. No statistical differences were evident for white cells and platelets counts and for serum iron content; however, in chronic alcoholics, serum iron content showed a great dispersion around the mean. Mean corpuscolar volume (MCV) was significantly increased (P less than 0,001) in chronic alcoholics (even in those with a normal liver biopsy) but there was no significant difference in the degree and the incidence of macrocytosis between patients showing normal liver appearances or fatty changes only, and those showing more severe damage, i.e,
acute alcoholic hepatitis
(with or without steatosis), central hyaline-sclerosing necrosis and or hepatofibrosis,
cirrhosis
and hepatocarcinoma. No significant difference was seen between male and female alcoholics. Macrocytosis may be considered as an early marker for alcoholism but it does not correlate with the type of histological liver damage. Hemoglobin levels were significantly reduced in chronic alcoholics (P less than 0,01): the degree and incidence of anemia were more severe in those patients with advanced liver diseases and in female alcoholics. There is no statistically significant correlation between macrocytosis and anemia.
...
PMID:[Macrocytosis and anemia in chronic alcoholism. Correlation with the results of hepatic needle biopsy]. 724 21
To deliniate the histopathological features of liver diseases seen in Japanese alcoholics, 130 Japanese alcoholic patients were studied in comparison with 238 American alcoholic patients. In Japan female alcoholic patients were extremely rare. The male to female ratio was 127 to 3 in Japan and 152 to 89 in U.S.A. Although all aspects of alcoholic liver disease did exist in Japan, typical cases of
acute alcoholic hepatitis
with alcholic hyalins were remarkably smaller in number (9.2% in Japan versus 39.5% in the U.S.A.). The severity based on histopathological findings was also less in the Japanese cases. In contrast to this, 46 percent of Japanese alcoholic patients had chronic hepatitis, and the incidence of multilobular
cirrhosis
was much greater in Japan wherewith higher prevalence of viral hepatitides.
...
PMID:Morphologic spectrum of liver diseases among chronic alcoholics. A comparison between Tokyo, Japan and Cincinnati, U.S.A. 741 34
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