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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma-GT) level was estimated in 132 patients with different liver diseases (chronic persistent and chronic active hepatitis, postnecrotic
cirrhosis
, chronic alcholic hepatitis and alcoholic cirrhosis,
cholestasis
syndrome, fatty liver, Gilbert disease) and malignancies with and without liver involvement. The gamma-GT levels were compared with the values for serum bilirubin, transaminases (GOT, GPT) and alkaline phosphatase in the same patients. gamma-GT values were normal in chronic persistent hepatitis and increased in chronic active hepatitis. Very high activities were measured in chronic alcoholic cirrhosis in contrast to postnecrotic
cirrhosis
. gamma-GT proved to be more sensitive than alkaline phosphate as an index of
cholestasis
and liver involvement in malignancies. It is suggested that gamma-GT activity offers valuable aid in differential diagnostics of liver-diseases. gamma-GT being an inducible enzyme, its activity may be raised by enzyme inducing drugs also in subjects without liver disease.
...
PMID:Serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase: its clinical significance. 2 44
The interpretation of the morphological features of alcoholic hepatitis is discussed in terms of a comparison with the results of an ultrastructural and histoenzymological study of the liver biopsies of nine patients. In these patients liver biopsies were performed in the initial stage of the illness and fifteen days after five were re-biopsied, when the clinical and biological signs were improved. The correlations between morphological and biological data were good, especially for the levels of serological and histoenzymological alkaline phosphatase and gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase evaluations. However, when histological appearances had returned to normal, after two weeks of abstinence from alcohol several histological and ultrastructural features of the initial hepatitis persisted. The presence of evolving
cirrhosis
was a contributing factor to the severity of the changes seen. Morphologically, apart from the changes due to chronic alcoholic intoxication (steatosis, mitochondrial alteration), the hepatitic lesions comprise Mallory's bodies, cytoplasmic oedema and mitochondrial swelling.
Cholestasis
was invariably present. Histo-enzymologically there was a reduction in ATPase activity suggesting a metabolic failure in the energy producing pathways. In addition, in the periphery of lobules an active cirrhotic process was present, with tubular de-differentiation of hepatocytes and an increase in gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase on the cytoplasmic membrane. Because of the absence of any topographical relationship between hepatitis and
cirrhosis
, the presence of lymphocytes in the neighbourhood of the ductules suggested an indirect relationship between both processes, perhaps an autoimmune response initiated by Mallory's bodies.
...
PMID:[The hepatocyte in acute alcoholic hepatitis. Histoenzymological and ultrastructural analysis (author's transl)]. 3 Oct 27
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
CH50 and the concentrations of C3, C4, C1 INH and factor B have been measured in sera from 34 control subjects and 178 patients with various hepatobiliary diseases, including primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), chronic active hepatitis (CAH), cryptogenic
cirrhosis
(CC), alcoholic liver disease (ALD), Wilson's disease (WD), large duct biliary obstruction (LDBO) and viral hepatitis (VH). CH50 was decreased in CAH and CC. C3 was increased in PBC, LDBO and VH and decreased in CAH and CC. C4 was decreased in PBC, CAH, ALD and WD. C1 INH was increased in PBC, CAH, ALD, LDBO and VH. Factor B was increased in LDBO and VH and decreased in CC. In none of the patient groups was the mean C4 level increased or the mean C1 INH level decreased. All 5 indices of serum complement were lower in ascitic than nonascitic patients. Data on serum complement were similar in HBsAg positive and negative VH. Discriminant analysis facilitated separation of all the patient groups on the basis of complement data, except PBC and VA. Analysis of data using a within-group correlation matrix revealed a significant negative correlation between C4, the most discriminating variable of serum complement in CAH, and gamma-globulin concentration in CAH. The possible contribution of factors such as activation of complement, impaired hepatic synthesis of complement components, an acute phase response and
cholestasis
to altered serum complement profiles in different hepatobiliary diseases is discussed.
...
PMID:Profiles of serum complement in patients with hepatobiliary diseases. 8 74
Morphological, histochemical, and chemical study of three necropsy specimens of liver in the terminal stage of Indian Childhood
Cirrhosis
revealed a strikingly high copper content. it is proposed that excess accumulation of copper in the cytoplasm of hepatocytes disturbs the microtubular system, causing hydropic swelling and the formation of Mallory's hyalin. Copper and copper-binding protein showed topographical association with Mallory's hyalin. Diffuse cytoplasmic staining and the lysosomal copper distribution also suggested that copper had a cytotoxic effect. The pattern of copper distribution in Indian Childhood
Cirrhosis
differs from that in Wilson's disease and in prolonged
cholestasis
with excessive hepatic copper deposition, indicating a different mechanism of the copper accumulation.
...
PMID:Cytoplasmic copper and its toxic effects. Studies in Indian childhood cirrhosis. 8 76
A histochemical study was carried out on orcein-positive hepatocellular material in 111 cases, 27 of which were stained positively by orcein. Orcein-positive material was very frequently found in protracted viral hepatitis and in chronic active hepatitis, as well as in other liver diseases with or without
cholestasis
; it was absent in
liver cirrhosis
. In all the cases considered the orcein-positive material was mainly formed of proteins, rich in amino acids with sulfhydryl and disulphide radicals, tryptophan and, to a lesser extent, of NH2 alpha amino acids. The orcein-positive substance was apparently carbohydrate-free. The presence of copper was also confirmed.
...
PMID:Histochemical study of orcein-positive hepatocellular material in paraffin sections of liver biopsy samples in the course of various liver diseases. 9 Nov 88
A histopathological study was carried out on 27 patients with chronic inflammatory liver disease and clinical and/or biochemical evidence of
cholestasis
who had either mitochondrial antibodies against mitochondrial antigen fractions of 1.19 density ("PBC antigen"; 14 cases) or of 1.13 density ("CAH-PBC mixed-type antigen"; 13 cases). For comparison, the liver biopsies of 17 patients with chronic-aggressive hepatitis (CAH) and antinuclear and/or anti-smooth muscle antibodies but without
cholestasis
and mitochondrial antibodies, were evaluated. The 14 patients with mitochondrial antibodies against the PBC antigen showed the typical histological features of primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC). The 13 patients with mitochondrial antibodies against the CAH-PBC mixed-type antigen had heterogenous liver alterations. In 11 cases highly active CAH and/or active postnecrotic
cirrhosis
(AC) were found both with augmented ductular proliferation. Some of these cases showed distinct criteria of PBC as early bile duct lesions or absence of regular bile ducts. The liver histology of one case corresponded to classical PBC; another case to chronic persistent hepatitis. The CAH-patients without
cholestasis
and mitochondrial antibodies only occasionally showed bile duct proliferation. In conclusion, a high correlation was found between mitochondrial antibodies against the CAH-PBC mixed-type antigen and highly active CAH or early AC with augmented ductular proliferation. This represents an overlapping of CAH and PBC. In contrast, the cases with antibodies reacting to the PBC antigen showed the slowly progressive liver changes of typical PBC.
...
PMID:Histopathological features in mixed types of chronic aggressive hepatitis and primary biliary cirrhosis. Correlations of liver histology with mitochondrial antibodies of different specificity. 13 50
The authors report 3 cases and report the diagnostic usefulness of two signs of minor
cholestasis
described by one of them in 1966. A relative increase, in the absence of obvious virus hepatitis or
cirrhosis
, of the serum bilirubin, cholesterol, lipids and alkaline phosphatase, together with B.S.P. excretion. suggest minor
cholestasis
. The sign of "metacritical aggravation" when there is some suspicion of minor
cholestasis
, the supervision of the course of the disease, or a retrospective inquiry, permit, in the presence of minor symptoms, such as, pain, fever, jaundice, or pruritus, one to make the diagnosis of minor
cholestasis
. The latter is due either to the presence of small gall stones in the common bile duct, or to inflammation of the ampulla of Vater, or sphincter of Oddi, a Vaterian ampulloma, pancreatitis, or following damage to the common bile duct. In practice, liver biopsy confirms the diagnosis, and intravenous cholangiography, by the perfusion method, is usually able to demonstrate obstruction of the common bile duct.
...
PMID:[Relative increase and metacritic aggravation in the diagnosis of anicteric cholestasis]. 16 83
Extrahepatic and intrahepatic biliary obstruction of different etiology were studied in 62 patients, who were investigated for the presence of lipoprotein X (Lp-X). It was found present in 19 of 20
cholestasis
by lithiasis, in all three primary biliary cirrhosis patients, in 2 of 4
cirrhosis
, in 5 of 13 hepatitis, in all three benign recurrent intrahepatic cholestasis and in 1 of 2 recurrent juandice of pregnancy. It was found in a Dubin Johnson. Lp-X disappeared in 4 patients within two weeks after relief of the obstruction. It was found in patients with cholestatic hepatitis during the first week of jaundice. It was found in the first 48 hours in three patients with
cholestasis
by lithiasis. Lp-X does not help in differential diagnosis between extrahepatic and intrahepatic biliary obstruction, but the time of its appearance could contribute to it in some cases. A word of caution is raised in indicating surgery in a cholestatic patient without the presence of Lp-X.
...
PMID:LP-X in cholestasis. 17 23
The change in plasma cyclic adenosine-3', 5'-monophosphate (AMP) was measured after intravenous injection of 1 mg of glucagon in 10 normal subjects and 30 patients with various forms of liver disease. Patients with
cirrhosis
and those with intrahepatic
cholestasis
responded normally but in patients with extrahepatic obstruction the plasma cyclic AMP response was considerably increased. Six of the eight patients with
cirrhosis
and a surgically created portacaval shunt had very reduced responses. This test may prove to be diagnostically important, particularly in differentiating surgical from non-surgical jaundice.
...
PMID:Plasma cyclic adenosine-3', 5'-monophosphate response to glucagon in patients with liver disease. 17 99
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