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

In a 22-year followup of 3686 San Francisco longshoremen, the roles of physical activity, cigarette smoking habit, and systolic blood pressure level were evaluated independently in relation to risk of death from a broad range of diseases. Smoking pattern and blood pressure status were established in 1951 and job activity was assessed annually during the followup period. Lower levels of energy expenditure predicted increased risk of fatal heart attack and perhaps of stroke. Heavy cigarette smoking predicted increased risk of death from heart attack, cancer, chronic obstructive respiratory disease, and pneumonia. Higher levels of systolic blood pressure were associated with death from all cardiovascular diseases, diabetes mellitus, and cirrhosis. Tacit to these findings: sedentary living takes its toll largely through heart disease and stroke; the toxicity of cigarette smoking is associated with a broader range of diseases, including heart attack, cancer, and respiratory disease; and higher level of blood pressure related to an even broader range of cardiovascular disease than either of the other characteristics studied.
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PMID:Energy expenditure, cigarette smoking, and blood pressure level as related to death from specific diseases. 68 71

Ascitic fluids from patients with cancer, cirrhosis, and congestive heart failure and from a patient with noninfectious tuberculosis contain measurable levels of tissue polypeptide antigen (TPA). Only the cancer patients had levels higher than 2.0 microgram TPA per ml. The average TPA levels of 29 cancer patients was 6.4 microgram/ml compared to 0.9 microgram/ml for the controls. Seventeen of 22 cancer ascitic fluids and 7 of 9 fluids from patients with liver disease were immunosuppressive as measured by the inhibition of [3H]thymidine incorporation into phytohemagglutinin-stimulated lymphocytes. Fluids from a patient with congestive heart failure and a patient with noninfectious tuberculosis were not suppressive. We were unable to obtain a significant correlation coefficient between immunosuppression and TPA levels in these fluids. In addition, TPA levels remained constant over a period of 18 months of testing, whereas the in vitro immunosuppressive activity was lost in 9 to 10 months. Sephadex G-200 fractionation of the ascitic fluid resulted in the TPA and immunosuppressive activity eluting in the first large molecular weight peak from the column. Although the 2 activities eluted together in this fractionation, the data suggest that TPA is not responsible for the immunosuppression.
Cancer Res 1978 Oct
PMID:Immunosuppressive activity and tissue polypeptide antigen content of human ascitic fluids. 68 26

Attributes of age, tobacco use, and alcohol consumption were studied in order to elucidate their roles in the increased risks of blacks for selected neoplasms. Black cancer patients with and without liver cirrhosis were compared by cancer sites, age, tobacco usage, and alcohol consumption. Subsequently, non-cirrhotic blacks and whites with cancer were characterized on the same variables.Black males with cancer and liver cirrhosis, when compared with similar males without liver cirrhosis, were significantly younger and had more than triple the frequencies of esophageal and hepatic cancers but less than one fourth the frequencies of gastric and prostatic cancers. Cirrhotic patients were rarely nondrinkers but drank whiskey excessively. Noncirrhotic blacks, when compared with noncirrhotic whites, had very high risks of liver, stomach, and prostate cancers and smoked less heavily but drank significantly more whiskey. Hence, factors associated with patterns of smoking cigarettes and drinking, especially whiskey, if not these habits themselves, are probably related to the increased risks of blacks for stomach and liver cancers when compared with non-cirrhotic whites and for esophageal and hepatic cancers when compared with non-cirrhotic blacks.
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PMID:Liver cirrhosis, tobacco, alcohol, and cancer among blacks. 70 90

A modified method of catheterization of the umbilical vein differs from other methods, for at the dismissal of the patient from the hospital the peripheral end of the polyvinylchloride catheter filled with maiodil is sealed and inserted under the skin, which permits to keep the catheter in the umbilical vein for several years, taking out its end periodically from under the skin for introduction of necesary drugs in case of cancer and liver cirrhosis. The catheter does not cause any discomfort and prevents the umbilical vein and surrounding tissues against infection. The suggested method has been applied in 64 patients without any related complications.
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PMID:[Modified method for catheterization of the umbilical vein]. 71 35

Thyroid explorations were made in 57 patients complaining of serious illnesses in order to identify "low T3 syndrome". All these patients were clinically euthyroid as assessed by normal values of T4 concentration, RT3U ratio and FT4I. However, all the patients included in this study had significantly low serum T3 (42 +/- 29 ng/100 ml) and FT3I (0,44 +/- 0,30). Low T3 syndrome was particularly frequently seen in patients with cancer (8/10), hepatic cirrhosis (5/6), renal failure (6/7), old age (5/8) and in serious systemic diseases (6/12). Nevertheless, at adverse with other authors, we have observed less frequently the low T3 syndrome in anorexia nervosa (4/6) as well as during fasting (1/8). In 31 out of 35 patients with low or normal low T3 concentrations, the serum TSH values observed were within the normal limits in 28 cases. The etiologies of isolated decreased T3, mainly the deviation of peripheral conversion of T4 to reverse T3, are discussed. Normal metabolic state and normal TSH concentration encountered in the low T3 syndrome are equally commented.
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PMID:[Low triiodothyronine syndrome in non thyroidal diseases. Distribution and serum TSH concentration studies (author's transl)]. 73 16

This study was designed to evaluate the ability of a specifically programmed computer to select those biochemical substances most capable of distinguishing "cirrhotic ascites" from "malignant ascites". After simultaneously performing selected biochemical and electrophoretic studies on fresh unstored serum and ascites of 23 patients with documented cirrhosis and 18 patients with proven malignancies, computerized step-wise discriminant analysis of the multiple input revealed that the serum-to-ascites LDH ratio was able to distinguish "cirrhotic ascites" from "malignant ascites" with greater than 86% accuracy. Assignment to proper groups was increased to 89% with the addition of the ratio to serum total protein-to-ascites total protein. The predictive value of a positive result was 100%; specificity was 100%; the predictive value of a negative result was 85%. This type of computer analysis also permits incorporation of both additional cases and new substances thus increasing predictability and reducing type II statistical errors.
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PMID:Distinguishing between malignant and cirrhotic ascites by computerized step-wise discriminant functional analysis of its biochemistry. 74 3

Grey-scale ultrasonography was performed without access to detailed clinical information in a prospective study of 55 jaundiced patients. Forty-one were eventually proved to have an extrahepatic obstructive cause, and 14 had intrahepatic "medical" disease. Satisfactory ultrasound images were obtained in 54 patients, and the bile duct calibre was correctly reported in 53 (96%). All 14 medical cases were correctly identified. Two patients with gallstones (one with a normal sized duct) were incorrectly classified as medical. A specific and correct disease diagnosis was given in five of the 14 medical cases (one metastases, four cirrhosis), and in 23 of the 41 obstructive cases (12/14 pancreatic cancer, 5/15 gallstones), 5/5 bile duct compression, 1/3 bile duct cancer. Ultrasonography is safe, cheap, and acceptable to patients. It should be the first imaging investigation in jaundiced patients, providing remarkable diagnostic accuracy and important guidance for further management.
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PMID:Grey-scale ultrasonography in cholestatic jaundice. 76 37

Our knowledge of the cellular changes that lead to liver cell carcinoma in humans is limited by proper and necessary ethical restriction on clinical research. We know rather more about risk factors, the most important of which is cirrhosis, it seems that both the causative agent and the time of duration of the cirrhotic process are relevent to the magnitude of this risk. According to present knowledge, alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency, alcoholism, naturally occurring carcinogens, drugs, and the hepatitis B virus seem to carry the greatest risk of cancer developing in a cirrhotic patient. Cirrhosis, however, is not an essential prerequisite, and some or possibly all of these agents can also induce cancer without cirrhosis. Bile duct carcinoma commonly follows infestation with liver flukes. Cirrhosis is usually absent but duct epithelial hyperplasia is present prior to the development of cancer. Many cellular changes have been observed in patients and among populations considered to be at risk from liver cancer. Of these, liver cell dysplasia is the most striking and studies of its prevalence, natural history, and association with cirrhosis suggest that it is a precancerous change.
Cancer Res 1976 Jul
PMID:Precursor lesions for liver cancer in humans. 77 94

The influence of alimentation on the digestive pathology is very important. In this report the authors review the principal results of epidemiologic studies and animals experimentations. According to this survey of the literature it can be stated that some presumptions exist for: -- the responsibility of diet without vegetal fibers in the frequency of constipation, colonic divercitular disease, piles and hiatal hernia. The comparison of the alimentary habits in the western Europe with rural Africa is very instructive on that matter; -- the responsibility of alcohol consumption, use of hypercaloric regimen and hyperlipidic ingestats as causative factors for chronic pancreatitis; -- the importance of an hypercaloric, hyperlipidic and low residue regimen as etiologic factors in biliary gallstones; -- the role of denutrition and alcoholism in liver steatosis and cirrhosis in developed country; -- more important, perhaps, is the suspicion of the role of nutrition in the development of digestive cancer: alcohol will facilitate oesophageal cancer, alimentary nitrites gastric cancer meanwhile fiberless regimen and biles salts will promote colonic cancer. Impairments of nutrition observed after digestive resections in case of inappropriate alimentation are also analyzed as well as the principal alimentary disturbances related to allergy or enzymatic deficiency.
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PMID:[Dietary behavior and digestive diseases]. 82

The general death rate rises during business booms and falls during depressions. The causes of death involved in this variation range from infectious diseases through accidents to heart disease, cancer, and cirrhosis of the liver, and include the great majority of all causes of death. Less than 2 percent of the death rate-that for suicide and homicide-varies directly with unemployment. In the older historical data, deterioration of housing and rise of alcohol consumption on the boom may account for part of this variation. In twentieth-century cycles, the role of social stress is probably predominant. Overwork and fragmentation of community through migration are two important sources of stress which rise with the boom, and they are demonstrably related to the causes of death which show this variation.
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PMID:Prosperity as a cause of death. 83 36


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