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)

Abnormalities of Hageman factor dependent pathways have been described in a wide variety of human disease states. Congenital deficiencies of factor XII (Hageman trait) prekallikrein (Fletcher trait) and high molecular weight kininogen (Williams, Fitzgerald and Flaujeac traits) although resulting in profound in vitro changes, do not cause in vivo difficulties. In contrast, deficiency of C1 esterase inhibitor (hereditary angioedema) results in significant morbidity and mortality. Acquired diseases may exhibit decreased synthesis of these three proteins in cirrhosis and dengue fever. In vivo activation of factor XII initiated pathways occur in septic shock, disseminated or localized intravascular coagulation, typhoid fever, polycythemia vera, hyperbetalipoproteinemia, coronary artery disease, nephrotic syndrome, transfusion reactions, hemodialysis and extracorporeal bypass. Activation of both the intrinsic system and tissue mediators contribute to the vasomotor phenomena in carcinoid syndrome and postgastrectomy dumping. Roles for factor XII, prekallikrein and kininogen have been suggested in gouty arthritis, allergic disorders and cystic fibrosis but the evidence is not yet convincing in these disorders.
...
PMID:Participation of Hageman factor dependent pathways in human disease states. 34 10

Although early survival following transplantation for primary hepatic cancer is excellent, previously reported high recurrence rates have generally discouraged liver replacement for this indication. Since the inception of the Boston Center for Liver Transplantation (BCLT) in 1983, 33 of 383 (8.6%) liver allograft recipients have undergone orthotopic transplantation as definitive treatment for otherwise unresectable cancer. Diagnoses included hepatocellular carcinoma (HCCA) in 24 patients (73%), and cholangiocarcinoma (CHCA) in 9 patients (27%). Actuarial survival rates for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma were 71%, 56%, and 42% at 1, 2, and 3 years, respectively. The actuarial survival rates for patients with cholangiocarcinoma were 89% at 6 months, and 56% at 1, 2, and 3 years. Of the nine patients with cholangiocarcinoma, 56% (5/9) developed recurrent disease. Although this recurrence rate is disheartening, because of the lack of other morbidity, long-term survival in these patients is comparable to patients with HCCA. In contrast, recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma developed in 25% of recipients (5/20) who survived longer than 3 months posttransplantation. Other causes of death in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma included perioperative complications, 16.6% (4/24); sepsis, 8.3% (2/24); coronary artery disease, 4.2% (1/24); and lymphoma, 4.2% (1/24). Favorable prognostic factors included: primary tumor less than 3 cm in size and absence of associated cirrhosis. These results emphasize that orthotopic liver transplantation can provide a long-term cure for approximately 50% of patients whose primary hepatic malignancy is unresectable by conventional procedures.
...
PMID:Liver transplantation for primary hepatic cancer. 131 Aug 23

Pharmacokinetic studies show that isosorbide mononitrate is rapidly absorbed after oral administration, reaches peak concentrations within an hour, undergoes no significant first-pass metabolism, and is virtually 100% bioavailable. The half-life is approximately 5 hours, the volume of distribution is 0.62 liter/kg, and the systemic clearance is 115 mL/min. Only 1-2% of an orally administered dose is excreted unchanged in the urine, with the remainder being eliminated as inactive metabolites. Isosorbide mononitrate follows dose-linear kinetics after single and multiple doses. Its pharmacokinetic profile is consistent and highly reproducible and is unchanged in the elderly and in patients with coronary artery disease, renal failure, or liver cirrhosis. An asymmetrical dosage regimen of isosorbide mononitrate has been shown to provide antianginal efficacy for at least 12 hours. Because asymmetrical dosing creates irregular, sawtooth-like changes in plasma concentrations and a fall below a critical threshold level during the night, tolerance does not develop.
...
PMID:Pharmacokinetics of isosorbide mononitrate. 144 2

Plasma concentrations of the recently isolated potent vasoconstrictory peptide endothelin were measured in 382 patients. The investigations were performed by means of a sensitive radioimmunoassay specific for Endothelin-1, 2. The results from 110 healthy volunteers displayed a normal range of 44.67 +/- 3.51 pg/ml. Significantly raised levels were found in 33 patients with chronic end-stage renal failure both before and after hemodialysis. In contrast, 35 patients with compensated renal insufficiency did not differ from the normals. Sixty-five patients after kidney transplantation revealed significantly elevated levels, as did 27 patients with acute myocardial infarction, 8 after coronary bypass surgery, and 5 with liver cirrhosis. The mean values of 27 patients with untreated hypertension, 22 with secondary hypertension, of various causes and 16 with coronary artery disease were comparable to the normal population. The values were significantly decreased in 9 pregnant women with hypertension and proteinuria. A marked decline was found in 5 patients with systemic lupus erythematodes, while 20 patients with rheumatoid arthritis demonstrated only a slight decrease. The pathophysiological role of endothelin as a local or circulating hormone in regulating systemic blood pressure or release of other hormones remains to be determined.
...
PMID:[Plasma endothelin in normal probands and patients with nephrologic-rheumatologic and cardiovascular diseases]. 221 2

Much progress has recently been made in understanding the biochemistry and physiology of endogenous fibrinolysis. As a result, a better understanding of the mechanisms and clinical consequences of disordered fibrinolysis has emerged. Increased fibrinolytic activity is an uncommon but important cause of hemorrhagic disease. Congenital disorders of fibrinolysis which cause bleeding include increased plasma plasminogen activator activity and deficiency of alpha-2 antiplasmin. Acquired disorders associated with increased fibrinolytic activity and bleeding include liver cirrhosis, amyloidosis, acute promyelocytic leukemia, some solid tumors, and certain snake envenomation syndromes. Increased fibrinolysis is important to recognize because epsilon-aminocaproic acid (EACA) may be required to prevent or control bleeding. Diminished fibrinolytic activity has been associated with a variety of thrombotic disorders, but a direct cause-and-effect relationship has yet to be established. Congenital abnormalities of fibrinolysis associated with thrombosis include plasminogen deficiency, decreased endothelial generation of plasminogen activator activity, and certain abnormal fibrinogens. Thrombosis in these disorders is effectively managed with warfarin. Diminished fibrinolysis has also been reported in "idiopathic" venous thrombosis, oral contraceptive-induced and post-operative venous thrombosis, coronary artery disease, cerebrovascular disease, systemic lupus erythematosus, and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura, but the significance of abnormal fibrinolysis in these disorders is uncertain. Large, prospective studies of fibrinolytic variables as risk factors for vascular and thrombotic disease are needed to determine whether pharmacologic augmentation of impaired fibrinolysis could be useful in the prevention or treatment of these disorders.
...
PMID:Clinical disorders of fibrinolysis: a critical review. 252 71

Arterial and hepatovenous concentrations of circulating prostaglandin E2 and prostaglandin F2 alpha, the stable metabolites of prostacyclin and thromboxane A2 were measured in patients with chronic liver disease and compared with those in control patients with coronary artery disease but without hepatic dysfunction. Specific radioimmunoassays were used after extraction on octadecyl C 18-silica gel columns and thin-layer chromatography. While low levels of all cyclooxygenase products were found in hepatic arterial blood in patients with proven cirrhosis (n = 10) and fibrosis (n = 8), significantly higher concentrations were detected in the hepatic vein. A similar concentration profile was observed in controls (n = 4). Thus, there is a marked but comparable release of prostanoids from the normal as well as the diseased liver. Hepatovenous prostaglandin E2 was 11.6-fold, prostaglandin F2 alpha was 7.5-fold, prostacyclin was 12.2.-fold and thromboxane B2 was 3.9-fold above the level in the artery in both groups of patients. The hepatovenous concentrations of all arachinodate metabolites were unrelated to changes of liver morphology, biochemical abnormalities or the presence of ascites. No correlation could be demonstrated between hepatic venous pressure gradient and the concentration of prostanoids in the hepatic vein with the exception of thromboxane B2 (r = 0.55, p less than 0.05). The occurrence of esophageal varices was not associated with a specific pattern of circulating prostanoids in the posthepatic vasculature. Moreover, the portal-venous concentrations of all prostanoids (five patients: two with fibrosis, three with cirrhosis) exceeded the level in the hepatic vein substantially.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Release of prostanoids into the portal and hepatic vein in patients with chronic liver disease. 353 Sep 46

The object of this study was to investigate clinical conditions in which increased production of prostacyclin (PGI2) has been reported. 6-Oxo-prostaglandin F1 alpha (6-oxo-PGF1 alpha) is the stable hydrolysis product of PGI2 and was measured in plasma from patients undergoing hepatic or cardiac surgery and in unoperated patients with vascular and hepatic disease, using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. Blood obtained simultaneously from portal and peripheral veins, during emergency surgery for bleeding oesophageal varices in six patients with cirrhosis of the liver, contained very high concentrations of 6-oxo-PGF1 alpha (range 99-11,485 pg/ml of plasma). 6-Oxo-PGF1 alpha was higher in portal than in peripheral blood in five out of six patients. Six unoperated patients with cirrhosis and oesophageal varices which were not bleeding all had normal peripheral plasma concentrations of 6-oxo-PGF1 alpha less than 2 pg/ml (normal up to 5 pg/ml). Seventeen patients with severe vascular disease had normal basal plasma 6-oxo-PGF1 alpha concentrations (less than 2 pg/ml). Eighteen subjects with atheromatous coronary artery disease underwent aorta-coronary artery grafting, and plasma concentrations of 6-oxo-PGF1 alpha were markedly elevated during surgery (range 55-1207 pg/ml). We conclude that surgery stimulates PGI2 production substantially, and argue that the function of PGI2 may be to limit intravascular extension of thrombus from sites of haemostasis. Inappropriate PGI2 synthesis may contribute to the massive haemorrhage characteristic of oesophageal variceal bleeding.
...
PMID:Prostacyclin in the circulation of patients with vascular disorders undergoing surgery. 353 59

Recent reports in the literature have promulgated nonresective treatment of abdominal aortic aneurysm as a safer procedure than conventional aneurysmectomy with graft replacement in high-risk patients. This review of 106 high-risk patients who underwent conventional aneurysm repair between 1980 and 1985 was undertaken to compare the relative risks, perioperative morbidity, and operative mortality of these patients to that reported for patients treated by nonresective therapy. Excluded were those patients who had rupture initially or underwent a concomitant renovascular procedure. Patients were considered to be at high risk if they met one or more of the following criteria: age equal to or greater than 85 years; receiving oxygen at home, PO2 less than 50 torr, or forced midexpiratory flow less than 25% of predicted; serum creatinine equal to or greater than 3 mg/dl; biopsy-proven cirrhosis with ascites; retroperitoneal fibrosis; or New York Heart Association functional class III-IV angina, left ventricular ejection fraction less than 30%, recent congestive heart failure, complex ventricular ectopy, large left ventricular aneurysm, severe valvular disease, recurrent congestive heart failure or angina after coronary artery bypass grafting, or severe unreconstructed coronary artery disease confirmed by angiography. The mortality rate for conventional aneurysm repair in high-risk patients was 5.7%, compared with a reported 7% mortality rate for nonresective therapy. In those patients with severe cardiac dysfunction, intraoperative pharmacologic manipulation and the selective use of intra-aortic balloon counterpulsation appeared helpful in achieving survival.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Conventional repair of abdominal aortic aneurysm in the high-risk patient: a plea for abandonment of nonresective treatment. 370 38

alpha 1-Antitrypsin is a serum protein protease inhibitor. The homozygous deficiency state for alpha 1-antitrypsin is associated with the development of chronic obstructive lung disease and liver cirrhosis. Familial hypercholesterolemia is a genetic defect in which the nonhepatic tissues of affected persons are partially or completely deficient in cellular receptors for low-density lipoproteins, the major plasma cholesterol transport protein. Homozygotes and heterozygotes for familial hypercholesterolemia experience premature coronary artery disease. We have identified a young patient who manifested heterozygous deficiencies for both of these gene products. The occurrence of these defects in tandem has not been previously reported.
...
PMID:Heterozygous defects in alpha 1-antitrypsin and low-density lipoprotein receptor. Simultaneous occurrence in a pediatric patient. 625 88

Scytalidium hyalinum is a hyaline species of the genus Scytalidium. It first was described as a cause of skin and nail infection in humans. In this report, the authors describe the first case of subcutaneous hyphomycosis with multiple cyst formation caused by this fungus. The patient is a 54-year old man who has Reiter's syndrome, liver cirrhosis, and coronary artery disease. He was receiving azathioprine and prednisone for arthritis. The pathology, mycology, and clinical course are discussed.
...
PMID:Subcutaneous hyphomycosis caused by Scytalidium hyalinum. 654 May 17


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next >>