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)

By cytofluorometric method, a study was made of the total glycogen and its two fractions in liver parenchymal cells both in the donors (20 men) and in patients with cirrhosis of different etiology (39 men). The examination was performed on preparations--smears of isolated hepatocytes, obtained from the live functional liver biopsies. The quantitative analysis has shown an increase in the total glycogen content in hepatocytes of patients with cirrhosis by 3 times compared to the norm, and this increase is independent on the etiology of liver cirrhosis. To study the mechanism of the discovered glycogenosis, the activity of key enzymes of glycogenolyses was determined. It was shown that glucose-6-phosphatase and glycogen-phosphorylase activity in the liver with cirrhosis was lower than in the norm. The most considerable changes were shown in hepatocytes of patients with liver cirrhosis in fractional glycogen composition and, even more significant, in the content of a hard soluble fraction. The hard soluble fraction portion was higher in hepatocytes of the patients with liver cirrhosis of alcohol etiology. The quantitative analysis of glycogen fraction contents in liver cells may be the best marker in the differential diagnosis of symptomless elapsing liver cirrhosis.
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PMID:[Cytofluorimetric research on the content of glycogen and its fractions in the hepatocytes of patients with liver cirrhosis of different etiologies]. 130 90

Orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) has been proposed to treat patients with type IV glycogenosis because of early progressive cirrhosis. Reports have shown absence of disease progression in other organs after OLT and even regression of cardiac amylopectin infiltration in one case. We describe a 15-month-old child in whom a liver transplant was performed for type IV glycogenosis. There were no clinical signs of extrahepatic disease before OLT. Nine months later, the patient developed progressive cardiac insufficiency and died from cardiac failure. Because of massive amylopectin deposits, decreased myofibrils in cardiac cells, and exclusion of other causes of cardiac failure, death was attributed to amylopectionosis. Our observation contrasts with the Pittsburgh experience and suggests that cardiac amylopectionosis may progress after OLT.
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PMID:Progressive cardiac failure following orthotopic liver transplantation for type IV glycogenosis. 160 Oct 12

The Hospital for Sick Children's initial 2-year experience with pediatric liver transplantation is reviewed. Patients are divided into high- and low-risk groups according to certain criteria. The high-risk group includes patients under 10 kg in weight, those with extrahepatic biliary atresia (EHBA), those with portal vein atresia or thrombosis, and those in hepatic coma. All others were considered low risk. Twenty-nine patients were assessed for transplantation: 18 were transplanted and 6 (21% of total referred) died while on the waiting list. Eighteen patients received 23 transplants. Of the 18 recipients, nine had EHBA, four had fulminant hepatic failure, two had tyrosinemia, one had glycogen storage disease, one had Indian childhood cirrhosis, and one had idiopathic cirrhosis. Seven of the 13 patients in the high-risk group survived (55% survival) with 1 to 23 month follow-up. Survival was significantly higher (80%) in the low-risk group (P less than 0.05). Four patients were retransplanted and two survived. Early deaths occurred from prolonged warm ischemia, recurrent portal vein thrombosis, and brain death in a patient who had been transplanted in hepatic coma. Late deaths occurred from cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease (2 patients), acute rejection (1 patient), and myocardial infarction (1 patient). The incidence of primary nonfunction was 4.3% (1 of 23) and of arterial thrombosis was 13% (3 of 23). Survival in patients transplanted for EHBA (67%) was slightly higher than it was for the rest of the group, although not as good as it was in the low-risk group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Liver transplantation in children: the initial Toronto experience. 255 8

The case of a 17-year-old female with a rare form of type VIII glycogenosis who developed cirrhosis of the liver and hepatocellular tumor is reported. Laparoscopy showed a tumor 50 mm in diameter in the lower portion of the right lobe of the liver. The tumor was biopsied under ultrasonic guidance, and tentatively diagnosed as adenomatous hyperplasia. The patient was also diagnosed as having type VIII glycogenosis (phosphorylase kinase deficiency).
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PMID:A female case of type VIII glycogenosis who developed cirrhosis of the liver and hepatocellular tumor. 255 39

Type IV glycogenosis is due to branching enzyme deficiency and is usually manifested clinically by progressive liver disease with cirrhosis and hepatic failure between the second and fourth years of life. We describe a 5-year-old boy who, following an acute febrile illness at 2 years of age, was first noted to have hepatomegaly with mildly elevated serum transaminase levels. Liver biopsy revealed hepatic fibrosis with periodic-acid Schiff-positive, diastase-resistant inclusions in hepatocytes and fibrillar inclusions characteristic of amylopectin by electron microscopy. Enzymatic assay revealed deficient hepatic branching enzyme activity with normal activity of glucose-6-phosphatase, debranching enzyme and phosphorylase activities. During the succeeding 3 years, he grew and developed normally with apparent resolution of any clinical evidence of liver disease and only intermittent elevation in serum transaminase levels associated with fever and prolonged fasting. Repeat liver biopsy at 4 years of age showed persistence of scattered hepatocellular periodic-acid Schiff-positive, diastase-resistant inclusions, but no progression of hepatic fibrosis in spite of persistent deficiency of hepatic branching enzyme activity. Skeletal muscle and skin fibroblasts from the patient also showed deficient enzyme activity. Skin fibroblasts from both parents exhibited half the normal control activity, suggesting a heterozygote state. This is the first documented patient with deficiency of branching enzyme but without evidence of progressive hepatic disease. This patient, coupled with reports of other patients with late onset hepatic or muscle disease with branching enzyme deficiency, suggests that the defect resulting in Type IV glycogen storage disease is more heterogenous and possibly more common than previously suspected.
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PMID:A new variant of type IV glycogenosis: deficiency of branching enzyme activity without apparent progressive liver disease. 316 25

Forty-one children with liver disease were studied by ultrasound scan at King Khalid University Hospital, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Diagnoses were confirmed either by liver biopsy or specific laboratory tests. Sonograms were studied for liver size, beam penetration, echogenicity, vascularity, and biliary tree abnormalities. Different liver diseases, such as chronic hepatitis, biliary cirrhosis, Wilson's disease, familial idiopathic cirrhosis, type III glycogen storage disease, and secondary haemochromatosis revealed non-specific disease patterns. Four cases of biliary cirrhosis and two cases of glycogen storage disease showed periportal fibrosis. Two cases of familial idiopathic cirrhosis and a case of Wilson's disease revealed thickening of the gall bladder wall, which has not been described in the literature.
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PMID:Ultrasound findings in childhood chronic liver parenchymal diseases. An analysis of 41 patients. 332 32

One hundred seventy orthotopic liver transplants were performed under conventional immunosuppression with azathioprine and steroids with 1- and 5-year survivals of 32.9 per cent and 20.0 per cent, respectively. Since the introduction of cyclosporine-prednisone therapy in March 1980, 313 primary orthotopic liver transplants have been performed. Actuarial survivals at 1 and 5 years have improved to 69.7 per cent and 62.8 per cent, respectively. Biliary atresia is now the most common indication for liver replacement. In adults, primary biliary cirrhosis and sclerosing cholangitis have become more common indications for transplantation, and alcoholic cirrhosis and primary liver malignancy as indications have declined. Early enthusiasm for liver transplantation in patients with hepatic cancer has been tempered by the finding that recurrence is both common and rapid. An increasing number of patients with inborn errors of metabolism originating in the liver are receiving transplants, including patients with Wilson's disease, tyrosinemia, alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency, glycogen storage disease, familial hypercholesterolemia, and hemochromatosis. Survival in this group of patients has been excellent (74.4 per cent at 1 and 5 years). A hemophiliac who received a transplant for postnecrotic cirrhosis has survived and may have been cured of his hemophilia. About 20 per cent of patients require retransplantation for rejection, technical failure, or primary graft failure. Only four of the patients receiving retransplants under conventional immunosuppression survived beyond 6 months, and all died within 14 months of retransplantation. Sixty-eight patients have received retransplants under cyclosporine-prednisone. Thirty-one patients are surviving, all for at least 1 year. Six of the twelve patients requiring a third transplant are alive 2 to 3 years after the primary operation. An aggressive approach to retransplantation in the patient with a failed graft is justified.
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PMID:Indications for liver transplantation in the cyclosporine era. 352 Aug 95

A method based on broad-band amplitude for obtaining attenuation and echogenicity estimates from homogeneous phantoms and tissues is described. Although a number of assumptions about the beam and scattering properties must be made, the attenuation results are as accurate as those obtained by the spectral-difference method and show less variability. The method was applied to the livers of 18 healthy volunteers and 76 patients with liver disease, including 29 patients with chronic hepatitis and 30 patients with Gaucher disease. Patients with chronic hepatitis formed a bimodal distribution, with one group having lower than normal attenuation and echogenicity values and another having elevated values. Six patients with type I glycogen storage disease and fatty infiltration of the liver had highly attenuating, echogenic livers as did patients with fatty livers from other causes. This finding confirms the subjective impressions already reported in the literature. In contrast to previous literature reports, patients with cirrhosis had normal attenuation and echogenicity values. Reasons for this discrepancy are discussed.
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PMID:Quantitative estimation of liver attenuation and echogenicity: normal state versus diffuse liver disease. 353 54

To assess whether hepatic peptidyl prolyl hydroxylase (PPH) activity could serve as a practical quantitative indicator of hepatic fibrosis or aid in the categorization, diagnosis or prognosis of hepatobiliary disorders in infancy and childhood, the activity of this enzyme has been determined prospectively by a tritium release method in 97 biopsies from 94 infants and children with the following conditions: acute hepatitis of infancy, 10 patients; extrahepatic biliary atresia, 13; previous hepatitis of infancy, 8; alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency, 6; chronic active hepatitis, 17; chronic persistent hepatitis, 5; glycogen storage disease, 5; and 25 patients with a miscellanea of other liver disorders. PPH activity was considered in relation to diagnosis, biochemical and histological abnormality and subsequent prognosis over a 4-year period. Five liver biopsies which showed no histological abnormality were considered as "controls" having PPH values of 0.72 +/- 0.47 (mean +/- S.D.). PPH activity was significantly elevated in acute hepatitis of infancy, 9 of the 10 infants having PPH greater than 1.66 units (i.e., mean +/- 2 S.D. of the "control" value). Nine infants (70%) with extrahepatic biliary atresia also had PPH activity above this value, as did two with alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency and 12 patients all in different diagnostic categories. PPH activity did not correlate with hepatic fibrosis as indicated by hepatic hydroxyproline concentration or by histological assessment, or with biochemical tests of liver function within any diagnostic group or in the series as a whole. PPH activity was similar in biopsies with and without histological features of cirrhosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Hepatic peptidyl prolyl hydroxylase activity and liver fibrosis--a prospective study of 94 infants and children with hepatobiliary disorders. 632 86

Two cases of type III glycogen storage disease are reported in adults; the occurrence of cirrhosis in one case illustrates the potential development of chronic liver disease in this condition. The other was the oldest patient with this condition found in a review of published reports. Electron microscopy of peripheral blood leucocytes to demonstrate excess glycogen was found to be a quick and useful aid to diagnosis. Histology of these adult cases showed a distribution of hepatocyte vacuolation which has not been previously recorded.
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PMID:Type III glycogenosis presenting as liver disease in adults with atypical histological features. 657 29


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