Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Liver specimens from 103 patients with various hepatic diseases and from 297 consecutive liver biopsies examined routinely were stained with orcein after oxidation of the tissue sections with potassium permanganate. Orcein-positive dark brown cytoplasmic material could be demonstrated in 27 cases with long-standing cholestasis. These patients had either primary biliary cirrhosis, the cholestatic liver disease of ulcerative colitis or chronic active hepatitis, advanced alcoholic cirrhosis or secondary biliary cirrhosis due to extrahepatic biliary obstruction. Orcein-positive material could not be demonstrated in congenital disorders of bilirubin metabolism or in hemochromatosis. Similarly, it could not be found in acute, toxic, alcoholic or chronic persistent hepatitis.
...
PMID:The occurrence of orcein-positive hepatocellular material in various liver diseases. 6 38

The serum alpha-fetoprotein level was measured by radioimmunoassay in 200 patients when admitted to hospital, 63 with idiopathic hemochromatosis and 137 with liver cirrhosis. In addition, repeated controls were performed in 19 subjects of each group for a mean period of 11 months (range 3--18 months). Elevated alpha-fetoprotein levels were observed initially or during the study period in 15 patients, a malignant liver tumor being demonstrated in 12 of them. In 4 of these patients, the abnormal alpha-fetoprotein concentration was the clue to the diagnosis of an unsuspected malignant hepatoma, but in none of these cases could the tumor be resected. The present results indicate that screening the serum alpha-fetoprotein level may contribute to the detection of malignant hepatoma in high-risk clinical groups, but the practical interest of such screenings may keep limited until more efficient therapeutic methods are developed.
...
PMID:alpha-Fetoprotein screening in patients with idiopathic hemochromatosis and liver cirrhosis. 7 12

In 74 patients admitted to hospital for primary hemochromatosis, the authors observed in 5 cases, the development of primary carcinoma of the liver. The frequency of this complication was definitely greater than in alcoholic or post-hepatitic cirrhosis, whether one considers patients in hospital or on autopsy. The best signs of malignant change are alterations in the surface of the liver and the development of hemorrhagic ascites. Using modern methods of clinical investigation, it is possible to make the diagnosis during the patient's life. Laparoscopy, permitting biopsy under direct vision, is the best investigation but it is not always possible. A search for alpha 1 foeto-protein was positive in one third of cases and the demonstration by hepatic arteriography of characteristic vascular abnormalities and, perhaps in future, information supplied by ultra-sonic echography, usually permit one to make the diagnosis. The course was fatal within a few months, and it seems that metastases and vascular spread are less frequent than in carcinoma developing on cirrhosis due to other causes.
...
PMID:[Idiopathic hemochromatosis and primary cancer of the liver]. 17 70

Hemochromatosis is a disorder characterized by the association of portal cirrhosis with deposition of excess amounts of iron in the parenchymal cells of many organs. Arthralgia and arthritis occur in about 50% of patients. The role of the radiologist is often significant in the recognition of this condition because hemochromatosis may be unsuspected clinically since the hepatic cirrhosis is frequently inactive at the time the arthritis develops. The possibility of hemochromatosis should be considered when the characteristic involvement of the metacarpophalangeal, radiocarpal, and proximal interphalangeal joints of the hand and wrist is present. In addition, articular and fibrocartilage calcification is often noted, particularly in the knee, triangular cartilage of the wrist, hip, elbow, symphysis pubis, and shoulder. Although localized chondrocalcinosis may be seen in association with many disorders, as well as in asymptomatic elderly persons, generalized chondrocalcinosis is a significant finding and is commonly associated with hemochromatosis. Recognition of the typical distribution of the arthropathy plus its characteristic roentgenographic features should aid in the identification of patients with the disorder who do not demonstrate the typical clinical features of hemochromatosis.
...
PMID:Hemochromatosis: a disease often silent but not invisible. 17 3

A 65 years old, female patient with acquired aplastic anemia secondary to frequent exposure to hair dye. While on treatment with anabolic steroids hormone became jaundiced and developed hepatomegaly eight months later. During laparotomy the liver was enlarged, hard, with multiple whitish nodules on its surgace but was otherwise normal. Liver biopsy showed hepatocellular carcinoma, there were not cirrhosis niether hemochromatosis. A review of the related literature was done and discussed on the experimental and clinical evidences that suggested that androgens may play same role on the etiology of liver cancer.
...
PMID:[Androgenic therapy and hepatocellular carcinoma. Report of a case]. 22 17

Four cases of hepatic angiosarcoma are reported with a review of 99 other cases in the English literature. Angiosarcoma of the liver is associated with chronic exposure to thorotrast, vinyl chloride, arsenicals, radium and possibly copper and with chronic idiopathic hemochromatosis. Although 40% of patients have hepatic fibrosis or cirrhosis at autopsy, the nature of the association between chronic liver disease and hepatic angiosarcoma is unknown. The clinical presentation of hepatic angiosarcoma is nonspecific with abdominal pain, weakness and weight loss common complaints and with hepatomegaly, ascites and jaundice common findings. Liver function tests are usually abnormal but there is no one liver function test or set of tests specific for the tumor. The occurrence of thrombocytopenia and disseminated intravascular coagulation is characteristic of hepatic angiosarcoma and may be related to local consumption of clotting factors and formed blood elements in the tumor. Catastrophic intraabdominal bleeding is also characteristic and occurs in one-fourth of all cases. This complication is likely related to the high incidence of clotting abnormalities and the vascular nature of the neoplasm. Selective hepatic arteriogram and open liver biopsy are the foundations of diagnostic evaluation. Percutaneous liver biopsy should be avoided. Failure to appreciate the possibility of hepatic angiosarcoma in the proper clinical setting, leading to blind percutaneous biopsy, may result in failure to make the diagnosis at the cost of significant morbidity and mortality. Survival of patients with hepatic angiosarcoma is brief; only 3% live longer than 2 years. Treatment of the tumor to date is empirical. There are probably a few patients who might benefit from radical surgery with curative intent. For all others chemotherapy is indicated. Adriamycin is active against hepatic angiosarcoma, but optimal dose and mode of administration require further investigation. Further study is also required to delineate the cause of hepatic angiosarcoma in the 60% of cases without definite epidemiologic association.
...
PMID:The clinical features of hepatic angiosarcoma: a report of four cases and a review of the English literature. 36 8

To clarify further the etiology of the carbohydrate intolerance in idiopathic hemochromatosis, we investigated the glucose, insulin, C-peptide, and glucagon responses to arginine (0.5 g/kg) infused during 30 min in lean normal subjects; in insulin-requiring subjects with hemochromatosis, genetic diabetes, and total pancreatectomy; and in nondiabetic cirrhotic subjects without portosystemic shunting. Serum insulin, C-peptide, and glucagon responses (30K antibody) were determined by RIA, and glucose level was determined by a glucose oxidase technique. Hemochromatotic and genetic diabetic subjects had similar basal glucose (157 +/- 25 vs. 168 +/- 40 mg/dl) and C-peptide (0.73 +/- 0.42 vs. 0.65 +/- 0.22 ng/ml) values, with subnormal C-peptide peak responses to stimulation (1.05 +/- 0.38 and 1.40 +/- 0.83 vs. 3.95 +/- 0.4 ng/ml in normals; P less than 0.05). No glucagon or C-peptide response to arginine was seen in any pancreatectomized subject. Similar but excessive glucagon levels were present in hemochromatosis, diabetes, and cirrhosis under basal conditions (166 +/- 24, 232 +/- 111, and 263 +/- 116 vs. 76 +/- 15 pg/ml; P less than 0.05) and after arginine stimulation (782 +/- 80, 834 +/- 123, and 902 +/- 275 vs. 489 +/- 81 pg/ml; P less than 0.05) when compared with normals. The excessive glucagon levels found in hemochromatosis, diabetes mellitus, and cirrhosis contrast to the absent response in pancreatectomized subjects and indicate that generalized islet cell destruction is not the major factor in diabetic hemochromatotic subjects.
...
PMID:Pancreatic alpha-cell function in diabetic hemochromatotic subjects. 38 22

Rare cases of hemochromatosis have been reported in patients who underwent prolonged oral iron therapy for hemolytic anemia or prolonged self-treatment with iron pills. A proportionately large segment of the South African Bantu tribe, who ingest large quantities of an alcoholic beverage brewed in iron pots, are found to have the disease. Reports of health fadists developing hemochromatosis due to excessive dietary iron intake, however, are extremely rare. This report presents clinical considerations and pathologic findings in a compulsive health fadist who consumed large numbers of vitamins containing iron. Clinical findings included the development and progression of cirrhosis of the liver, bronzing of the skin, and diabetes mellitus, all consistent with a diagnosis of hemochromatosis. Light microscopy of liver biopsies taken late in the course of the disease revealed a massive buildup of iron in the hepatocytes, less in the Kupffer cells, and sparse deposition in the epithelial cells of the bile duct. Minimal periportal fibrosis was noted. Electron microscopy showed numerous pleomorphic siderosomes with varying degrees of crystallization and ferritin attached at uniform intervals to the membranes of residual bodies. Abundant free ferritin was observed in most cells. The aggregated and membrane-associated ferritin was verified by non-dispersive x-ray analysis. An additional finding, noted only by electron microscopy, was the presence of many fat-storing cells of Ito, which are thought to be involved in the onset of fibrosis.
...
PMID:Hemochromatosis caused by excessive vitamin iron intake. 47 11

A Hungarian family with four heterozygotes for Hb Lepore Washington is described. One, a 43-year-old male, had high levels of serum iron, saturated iron-binding capacity, and ferritin, and normal levels of folic acid and vitamin B12. Liver biopsy showed slight cirrhosis and marked iron deposition in parenchymal cells and in cells of the reticuloendothelial system. Heavy iron deposition was also found in the bone marrow. The patient is not an alcoholic and has no disease that requires blood transfusion. The hemochromatosis thus seems to be of idiopathic nature.
...
PMID:Hemoglobin Lepore Washington and hemochromatosis in a Hungarian patient. 47 79

Deferoxamine-chelatable iron was measured in 103 patients with known or suspected iron overload. All of 34 patients with untreated hemochromatosis had distinctly elevated values for deferoxamine-chelatable iron. The mean value in these cases was significantly greater than that in patients with cirrhosis, who had little or no stainable hepatic iron. In 15 patients with hemochromatosis who were tested sequentially during the course of phlebotomy therapy, deferoxamine-chelatable iron proved a reliable index of the degree of reduction of storage iron. In 22 additional patients with partially treated hemochromatosis and 14 with iron overload accompanying chronic anemia, this test correlated well with the magnitude of iron deposits in liver or bone marrow. In patients with unexplained elevations of serum iron, normal or only slightly elevated deferoxamine-chelatable iron correctly indicated that storage (hepatic) iron was not excessive. The test was more reliable than determination of serum iron or transferrin saturation as an indicator of increased storage iron. Elevated values could not be attributed to disturbed liver function. Determination of deferoxamine-chelatable iron is a safe, practical, and useful procedure for identifying persons with increased iron stores and for assessing the effect of phlebotomy therapy.
...
PMID:Deferoxamine-chelatable iron in hemochromatosis and other disorders of iron overload. 62 26


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