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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Differences between patients with
cirrhosis
of liver, nephrotic syndrome,
coronary heart disease
and normal subjects in laser Raman spectra of erythrocyte membranes have been found. In regions of 1000-1140 cm-1 and 2840-3000 cm-1, the ratios I1130/I1080 and I2890/I2850 in patient membranes are higher than those in normal ones respectively. These results mean that erythrocyte membrane fluidity of these patients is reduced. This reduction may be attributed to the possibility that erythrocyte membrane of patients get more cholesterol from their plasma and resulted in the modification of the ratio of cholesterol/phospholipids in the membranes.
...
PMID:Study on erythrocyte membrane fluidity by laser Raman spectroscopy. 338 49
High alcohol consumption is one of the major risk indicators for premature death in middle-aged men. An indicator of alcohol abuse--registration with the social authorities for alcoholic problems--was used to evaluate the role of alcohol in relation to general and cause-specific mortality in a general population sample. Altogether 1,116 men (11%) out of a total population of 10,004 men were registered for alcoholic problems. Total mortality during 11.8 years' follow-up was 10.4% among the non-registered men, compared to 20.5% among men with occasional convictions for drunkenness and 29.6% among heavy abusers. Fatal cancer as a whole was not independently associated with alcohol abuse, but oropharyngeal and oesophageal cancers together were seven times more common in the alcohol-registered groups. Total
coronary heart disease
(
CHD
) was significantly and independently associated with alcohol abuse, but nearly all the excess
CHD
mortality among the alcohol-registered men could be attributed to sudden coronary death. Cases with definite recent myocardial infarction were not more common in the alcoholic population. A combined effect of coronary arteriosclerosis and heart muscle damage secondary to alcohol abuse is suggested. Other causes of death strongly associated with registration for alcohol abuse include pulmonary embolism, pneumonia and peptic ulcer, as well as death from
liver cirrhosis
and alcoholism. Of the excess mortality among alcohol-registered subjects, 20.1% could be attributed to
CHD
, 18.1% to violent death, 13.6% to alcoholism without another diagnosis and 11.1% to
liver cirrhosis
.
...
PMID:Alcoholic intemperance, coronary heart disease and mortality in middle-aged Swedish men. 342 75
The calcium antagonists diltiazem, nifedipine and verapamil are widely used in the treatment of
coronary heart disease
, arterial hypertension, certain supraventricular tachyarrhythmias and obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. During recent years their pharmacokinetic properties and metabolism have been studied in more detail. Although these 3 calcium antagonists exhibit great diversity in chemical structure, they exhibit common pharmacokinetic properties. These drugs are extensively metabolised and only traces of unchanged drugs are eliminated in urine. Their systemic plasma clearances are high and dependent on liver blood flow. Therefore, their bioavailabilities (diltiazem 40 to 50%; nifedipine 40 to 50%; verapamil 10 to 30%) are low despite almost complete absorption following oral administration. During long term treatment, oral clearance decreases and bioavailability increases due to saturation of hepatic first-pass metabolism. Pronounced intra- and inter-individual variations in clearance and bioavailability are observed. In patients with
liver cirrhosis
the various pharmacokinetic parameters are grossly altered. Clearance decreases, elimination half-life is substantially prolonged, and bioavailability more than doubles. In addition, the volume of distribution increases. Whereas renal disease has no impact on the pharmacokinetics of diltiazem and verapamil, elimination half-life of nifedipine increases in relation to the degree of renal impairment due to an increase in volume of distribution. Systemic clearance, however, remains unchanged. The data so far available indicate that the plasma concentrations of these drugs correlate with both their electrophysiological and haemodynamic effects. However, no effective therapeutic plasma concentration range has been firmly established. As reliable clinical end-points are available for dose titration of calcium antagonists, it is doubtful whether therapeutic drug monitoring will be of great value. Calcium antagonists are often administered in combination with a variety of other drugs. Thus, the potential for both pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic drug interaction exists. The interaction between digoxin and these drugs is of clinical importance. Verapamil and diltiazem cause a significant increase in plasma digoxin concentrations. In contrast, nifedipine does not lead to a significant increase in the plasma digoxin concentration. The mechanism responsible for this interaction is inhibition of both renal and non-renal digoxin clearance.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Clinical pharmacokinetics of verapamil, nifedipine and diltiazem. 354 36
The relation of alcohol consumption to mortality was examined in a cohort of 1,910 employed men aged 38-55 years, enrolled in the Albany Study, a prospective investigation of factors related to cardiovascular disease. Two follow-up periods were examined, one between 1953-1954 and 1971-1972 and the other after 1971-1972. In both periods, there was a positive relation between the rate of alcohol consumption and noncoronary heart disease death, not assignable to any specific cause.
Coronary heart disease
death was not associated with drinking during the initial follow-up but was negatively associated with drinking in the later follow-up. All-cause mortality was positively associated with alcohol consumption in the earlier follow-up, because of the greater cigarette use among drinkers, but not in the later follow-up. There was a significant positive relation of drinking to deaths from
liver cirrhosis
and diabetes but not to deaths from motor vehicle accidents.
...
PMID:Drinking and mortality. The Albany Study. 381 32
The relationship between drinking habit surveyed in 1965 and cause-specific mortality over 19 years was investigated in 5135 male Japanese physicians taking into account smoking habit and separating ex-drinker from non-drinker. As compared with non-drinkers, daily drinkers with high consumption had a significantly increased mortality from all causes. Drinking was significantly related to the so-called alcohol-related causes of death; upper aerodigestive cancer, liver cancer and
liver cirrhosis
. Mortality from acute myocardial infarction was inversely related to drinking, whereas other
coronary heart disease
showed a somewhat higher mortality among men consuming a large amount of alcohol than among non-drinkers. There was a weak, but significant, association between stroke and drinking, and the relation did not differ between haemorrhagic stroke and other stroke. No obvious relationship with drinking was observed for cancers of the stomach, large bowel, pancreas and lung.
...
PMID:Alcohol and mortality: a cohort study of male Japanese physicians. 381 61
The plasma and 24-hr urinary levels of cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate and of cyclic guanosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cGMP) were determined for 19 healthy normal patients, 54 patients with six types of nonneoplastic diseases (cholelithiasis, peptic ulcer,
coronary heart disease
, hypertension, regional ileitis, and
cirrhosis
), and 54 patients with five types of neoplastic disease (cancers of the lung, colon, and breast, acute myelocyte leukemia, and Hodgkin's disease). The cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate levels of urine and plasma in normal subjects, in noncancer subjects, and in cancer subjects did not differ significantly. The cGMP levels in the noncancer group were similarly unchanged from those in the normal group. However, mean cGMP levels in the urine and plasma of patients with neoplastic diseases were, respectively, 2- and 3-fold greater than the normal values (p less than 0.005 for urine and p less than 0.05 for plasma). Pharmacokinetic studies with [3H]cGMP in nine healthy controls and 15 patients with neoplasia showed that the mean production rate of this nucleotide in patients with metastatic cancer was elevated when compared to normal patients, but many values fell within the normal range. In acute leukemia, the production rate was seven times normal, with four of five patients having values clearly outside the normal range. The plasma clearance rate in patients with neoplasia was not decreased when compared to that in normal patients. It is proposed that an increased production rate, rather than any change in plasma clearance, accounts for the increased levels of cGMP in the plasma and urine of some patients with neoplastic disease.
...
PMID:Elevated plasma and urinary guanosine 3':5'-monophosphate and increased production rate in patients with neoplastic diseases. 625 69
Based on the survey in 1965 on smoking and drinking habits of physicians in western Japan, the mortality pattern among 5139 male Japanese physicians over 12.7 years was examined in terms of drinking habit. Among six groups with different drinking habits: ex-drinker, non-drinker, occasional drinker and daily drinker whose intake of alcohol was equivalent to below 1, 1-1.9 or 2 and more go of sake (1 go of sake congruent to 27 ml of alcohol), ex-drinkers had the highest risk of dying. Mortality from all causes among non-drinkers was higher than that among occasional drinkers or the lowest daily drinkers, but the differences were not significant. Among daily drinkers, total mortality was significantly increased with the amount of alcohol. As for cause-specific mortality, cancer and stroke showed a significant positive association with alcohol. No significant inverse relationship was noted for heart disease or
coronary heart disease
, although non-drinkers had higher mortality than occasional or daily drinkers. There was no obvious effect of alcohol on mortality from either
liver cirrhosis
or accidents, but deaths from these causes were few.
...
PMID:The relationship between alcohol and mortality among Japanese physicians. 665 64
In a prospective study of more than 10000 Yugoslav men it was found that consumption of alcoholic beverages was inversely related to non-sudden death from
coronary heart disease
(
CHD
) and positively related to death from trauma. The consequence was an apparently U-shaped relation between alcohol consumption and death, the lowest mortality being among moderate drinkers. Excess mortality from trauma was evident only among men under 55 and only for those who reported at entry to the study that they had been drunk during the preceding week. Alcohol consumption as reported at entry was unrelated to subsequent mortality from
liver cirrhosis
or any form of cancer. An enlarged liver, however, was associated with higher death rates for
liver cirrhosis
. This raises the possibility that some of the men were heavy drinkers preceding their entry to the study but were no longer drinking heavily at the time of entry. Enlarged liver, however, was also related to hypertension and to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and thus was not a specific indicator of alcohol abuse in this population. Recent drunkenness but not frequency of drinking was related to death from trauma and
liver cirrhosis
and to sudden
CHD
death. In short, both the pattern of drinking and the usual level of alcohol consumption appear to be related to mortality in this population.
...
PMID:Drinking habits and death. The Yugoslavia cardiovascular disease study. 687 7
In order to study the role and metabolism of high density lipoprotein (HDL) subfractions, the serum HDL2-cholesterol (HDL2-C) and HDL3-cholesterol (HDL3-C) were measured by the new method using high performance liquid chromatography in the normal subjects and patients with various diseases. It was highly characteristic that the serum HDL3-C levels of the patients with
liver cirrhosis
(LC) were remarkably lower than those of the normal subjects. The result suggests that HDL3 may be produced in the liver. Both the serum HDL2-C and HDL3-C levels were significantly lower in the patients with
coronary heart disease
(
CHD
) or cerebral thrombosis (CT) than in the normal subjects (P less than 0.001). In the normal subjects, the changes in the serum HDL-cholesterol (HDL-C) levels were mainly due to those in the serum HDL2-C levels. On the other hand, in the patients with atherosclerotic diseases (
CHD
, or CT) the changes in the serum HDL-C levels Were attributed to those of both the serum HDL2-C and HDL3-C levels. So it is suggested that in the atherosclerotic diseases, in which the HCL-C is usually lower, the HDL3-C also may play an important role in the regulation of the total HDL-C and its anti-atherogenetic effect.
...
PMID:Role and metabolism of high density lipoprotein subfractions--analysis of serum HDL2-cholesterol and HDL3-cholesterol in patients with various diseases by high performance liquid chromatography. 695 38
Analysis of patterns of male mortality in Australia during 1968-1978 shows elevated death rates from
liver cirrhosis
, alcoholism and alcoholic psychosis in various rural, service, and "blue-collar" occupations. The risks of mortality from lung cancer and cancers of the upper alimentary tract and larynx--sites influenced by alcohol and tobacco consumption--are raised in the latter two groups. In contrast, the risks of mortality from cancer of the colon, thought to be influenced by dietary "affluence", are consistently higher for professional and "white-collar" groups. As reported in other populations, stomach cancer mortality risks are higher for service and blue-collar groups. The risks of mortality from
coronary heart disease
and cerebrovascular disease are also higher, albeit moderately, for these two groups. The consideration of personal behaviour as a reflection of socioeconomic and subcultural influences is a prerequisite to effective community health education.
...
PMID:Mortality risks in Australian men by occupational groups, 1968-1978: variations associated with differences in drinking and smoking habits. 708 48
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