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)

The noradrenaline (NA) that has diffused from sympathetic synapses into plasma can be assayed accurately and reliably in plasma, as it is the best index of sympathetic activity. A considerable advance has been achieved by using infusions of tritium-labelled exogenous NA, such infusions being devoid of functional effect. By measuring simultaneously blood NA levels and circulating tritiated NA levels the amplitude of synaptic spillover and therefore of sympathetic activity can be evaluated and the metabolic NA clearance can be measured. Synaptic NA spillover and NA metabolic clearance were measured in 24 physiological, pathological and pharmacological situations, providing an accurate definition of the sympathetic states explored. By combining these techniques with selective vascular catheterization, the sympathetic activity of the organs explored can be assessed, and regional sympathetic activities are currently being mapped. Such regional studies are of great value to understand the mechanisms involved in heart failure, cirrhosis or arterial hypertension. Sympathetic system regulations result from a central influence and from peripheral adjustments that are potentially specific to each organ.
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PMID:[Plasma noradrenaline. Significance and practical value of its determination]. 253 59

Alterations of the gallbladder wall is a well known sonographic sign of acute cholecystitis. But thickening of the gallbladder wall is also found in patients without intrinsic gallbladder disease. We present our experience on this regard in patients with cirrhosis, acute viral hepatitis, infectious mononucleosis, halothane hepatitis, fulminant hepatic failure, malaria due to plasmodium falciparum, heart failure, severe malnutrition due to gastric obstruction, septicemia, pyogenic hepatic abscess, amoebic hepatic abscess and in a 14 years old patient with fracture of the skull-acute anemia-shock. Most of these diseases affected the liver directly or indirectly. Knowledge of these alterations of the gallbladder wall in these circumstances are important in order to avoid a the erroneous diagnosis of acute cholecystitis.
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PMID:[Ultrasonographic changes in the gallbladder wall in non-gallbladder diseases]. 253 57

Chylous ascites is a well-documented sequelae of traumatic rupture of the thoracic duct and mechanical obstruction of the lymphatic system due to neoplastic, inflammatory, or congenital anomalies. Less commonly, chylous ascites results from altered hemodynamics and lymphatic flow, as seen in cirrhosis and constrictive pericarditis. Rarely, severe right-sided heart failure from a variety of causes has also resulted in chylous ascites or a protein-losing enteropathy. We report a case of chylous ascites due to dilated cardiomyopathy with autopsy findings. The pathophysiology of chylous ascites formation in right heart failure will be discussed, with a review of the literature.
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PMID:Dilated cardiomyopathy associated with chylous ascites. 259 59

Red lunulae are associated with rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, alopecia areata, cardiac failure, hepatic cirrhosis, lymphogranuloma venereum, psoriasis, carbon monoxide poisoning, twenty-nail dystrophy, and reticulosarcoma. We examined four patients with red lunulae. Three had chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Two of these three were alcohol abusers and were without any of the conditions previously associated with red lunulae. Two of the four also had palmar erythema. Histopathologic examination of the red lunula in one of the four cases did not show signs of neovascularization. We report our findings in these patients, which suggest that red lunulae result from increased arteriolar blood flow, a vasodilatory capacitance phenomenon, or changes in the optical properties of the overlying nail so that normal blood vessels become more apparent.
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PMID:Red lunulae revisited: a clinical and histopathologic examination. 264 22

Cirrhosis is associated with several circulatory abnormalities. A hyperkinetic circulation characterized by increased cardiac output and decreased arterial pressure and peripheral resistance is typical. Despite this hyperkinetic circulation, some patients with alcoholic cirrhosis have subclinical cardiomyopathy with evidence of abnormal ventricular function unmasked by physiologic or pharmacologic stress. Florid congestive alcoholic cardiomyopathy develops in a small percentage, but the concurrent presence of cirrhosis seems to retard the occurrence of overt heart failure. Even nonalcoholic cirrhosis may be associated with latent cardiomyopathy, although overt heart failure is not observed. Tense ascites is associated with some cardiac compromise, and removing or mobilizing ascitic fluid by paracentesis or peritoneovenous shunting results in short-term increases in cardiac output. Cirrhosis also appears to be associated with a decreased risk of major coronary atherosclerosis and an increased risk of bacterial endocarditis. Small hemodynamically insignificant pericardial effusions may be seen in ascitic patients. The release of atrial natriuretic peptide appears to be unimpaired in cirrhosis, although the kidney may be hyporesponsive to its natriuretic effects.
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PMID:Cardiac abnormalities in liver cirrhosis. 269 Apr 63

Sodium and water retention is characteristic of edematous disorders including cardiac failure, cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome and pregnancy. In recent years the use of a sensitive radioimmunoassay for plasma vasopressin has implicated the role of nonosmotic vasopressin release in the water retention of these edematous disorders. In experimental studies and studies in humans it has been found that the nonosmotic release of vasopressin is consistently associated with activation of the sympathetic nervous and renin-angiotensin-aldosterone systems. Moreover, the sympathetic nervous system has been shown to be involved in the nonosmotic release of vasopressin (carotid and aortic baroreceptors) and activation of the renin-angiotensin system (renal beta-adrenergic receptors). These findings have led to our proposal that body fluid volume regulation involves the dynamic interaction between cardiac output and peripheral arterial resistance. In this context neither total extracellular fluid (ECF) volume nor blood volume are determinants of renal sodium and water excretion. Rather, renal sodium and water retention is initiated by either a fall in cardiac output (e.g. ECF volume depletion, low-output cardiac failure, pericardial tamponade or hypovolemic nephrotic syndrome) or peripheral arterial vasodilation (e.g. high-output cardiac failure, cirrhosis, pregnancy, sepsis, arteriovenous fistulae and pharmacologic vasodilators). With a decrease in effective arterial blood volume (EABV), initiated by either a fall in cardiac output or peripheral arterial vasodilation, the acute response involves vasoconstriction mediated by angiotensin, sympathetic mediators and vasopressin. The slower response to restoring EABV involves vasopressin-mediated water retention and aldosterone-mediated sodium retention. The renal vasoconstriction which accompanies those states that decrease EABV, by either decreasing cardiac output or causing peripheral arterial vasodilation, limits the distal tubular delivery of sodium and water thus maximizing the water-retaining effect of vasopressin and impairing the normal escape from the sodium-retaining effects of aldosterone. The elevated glomerular filtration rate and filtered sodium load in pregnancy allows increased distal sodium and water delivery in spite of a decrease in EABV, thus limiting edema formation during gestation.
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PMID:Pathophysiology of vasopressin in edematous disorders. 269 4

A study of mortality among alcoholics was carried out involving patients discharged from the alcoholic ward of a Hamamatsu University-affiliated hospital from 1972 to 1984 (1021 patients). The average age at death was 48.4 years. The causes of death were divided into three groups; 'diseases', 'accidents', 'suicide and homicide', accounting for 73.5%, 10.5% and 7.3% of 257 deaths, respectively. Death rates per 1000 persons for the years at risk were compared with the expected rates for the general population. Briefly, the death rates for patients were more than 10 times as large as those in the general population. Our results showed that liver cirrhosis and heart failure ranked high among the causes of death in alcoholics. Among patients who died, only 3.1% were total abstainers after discharge from hospital, which was an extremely low proportion in comparison with the average cross-total abstinence rate of 25.8% among patients after discharge.
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PMID:Mortality among alcoholics discharged from a Japanese hospital. 270 84

Application of isolated ultrafiltration (IUF) of blood in 70 out of 100 patients with refractory heart failure (HF) made it possible, acting on some mechanisms of water excretion disorders, to attain the compensation for the HF signs. At the same time the correction of the manifestations of secondary hyperaldosteronism, hypoproteinemia, hyperbilirubinemia, and azotemia was attained only thanks to the presence of the functional reserves of the liver and kidneys. In 35 patients with cachectic HF, IUF failure was determined by marked cardial liver cirrhosis together with depletion of the functional reserves of the cardiovascular system. The lack of sufficient diuresis, hyponatremia, hypoproteinemia, and hyperbilirubinemia may be unfavourable prognostic signs despite the reduction of HF intensity consequent on IUF.
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PMID:[The efficacy of isolated ultrafiltration of the blood in patients with refractory heart failure]. 276 1

Contemporary theories of oedema formation are often based on the idea that "effective" blood volume is reduced, and that sodium retention and oedema are a result of the kidney responding, as in haemorrhage, to a perception by receptors in the circulation that blood volume is inadequate. This idea has enhanced understanding of the pathophysiology of such conditions as cardiac failure and cirrhosis, but has obscured the fact that blood volume is almost always increased in oedematous states. Evidence is presented that an increase in renal venous pressure can cause sodium retention by a direct action on the kidney: a rise in venous pressure could thereby initiate a vicious circle by causing sodium retention, expansion of plasma volume, and further increase in venous pressure. This sequence of events may be crucial in the pathophysiology of cor pulmonale, and an exacerbating factor in other oedematous states.
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PMID:Raised venous pressure: a direct cause of renal sodium retention in oedema? 289 77

The diuretic effect of the supine position was evaluated in six patients with cirrhosis and ascites and six with congestive cardiac failure. All patients received 1 mg bumethanide intravenously and were randomly assigned to either bed rest in the supine position or normal daily activity in the upright position for the next six hours. The diuretic response was similar in patients with heart failure and cirrhosis, and was significantly greater in the supine than in the upright position: mean 1,133 v 626 ml/6 h (p less than 0.01). The natriuresis was similarly greater during recumbency: mean sodium 96 v 45 mmol (mEq)/6 h (p less than 0.01), and the excreted potassium in six hours was similar in both postures. The glomerular filtration rate was 100 and 66 ml/min (p less than 0.01) and the heart rate 76 and 83 beats/min (p less than 0.05) in the supine and upright positions, respectively. Plasma concentrations of noradrenaline, renin, and aldosterone rose significantly during the upright position. The results suggest that the attenuated response to intravenous bumethanide in the upright position and during normal daily activity may be due to the activation of several, homoeostatic mechanisms which may reduce the excretion of water and salt.
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PMID:[Effect of posture on the diuretic treatment of decompensated cirrhosis and heart failure]. 291 77


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