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)

Acute alcoholic hepatitis is an anatomical (fatty liver with sclerosing hyaline necrosis) and a clinical (hepatomegaly with a variety of symptoms of hepatic failure) entity arising out of chronic alcoholism, and of a typically 'pre-cirrhotic' state. Although fatal in 25% of acute cases due to failure of homeostasis, it often leaves a centrilobular scarring necrosis which in more than 60% of cases progresses to nodular cirrhosis. Continued alcoholism worsens the prognosis. Alcoholic hepatitis may be confused with acute abdominal catastrophes or with a hepatoma. The characteristic Mallory bodies found on liver biopsy are found rarely in non-alcoholic hepatitis. There is no effective treatment for this disease except reduction of alcohol intake; indeed, the disease may become self-perpetuating.
...
PMID:[Acute alcoholic hepatitis]. 92 58

A model has been developed for the administration to rats and baboons of ethanol as part of a nutritionally adequate liquid diet. With this regimen, ethanol intake was much higher than with conventional procedures. All animals gained or maintained their body weight, and liver morphology was normal in the controls. Isocaloric substitution of carbohydrate by ethanol (36% of total calories in rats and 50% in baboons) resulted in the production of fatty liver in all animals, while the baboons also developed alcoholic hepatitis and cirrhosis with increased activities of serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase. Inebriation and manifestation of dependence on withdrawal of the diet were observed in baboons and quantitated in the rat. Chemical alterations produced by ethanol at the fatty liver stage were characterized by hyperlipemia, striking triglyceride accumulation in the liver, and enhanced activities of microsomal drug metabolizing enzymes, including the microsomal ethanol oxidizing system (MEOS). In showing that all aspects of liver injury observed in alcoholics can be reproduced in animals by the feeding of pure ethanol with an adequate diet, this study incriminates ethanol itself as a cause for the hepatic complications. This new experimental model is proposed as a tool for the study of the pathogenesis and treatment of alcoholic liver injury and dependence.
...
PMID:Animal models of ethanol dependence and liver injury in rats and baboons. 94 46

The specific activity of coumarin-7-hydroxylase was measured in liver microsomes from normal subjects and patients with liver disease. Liver specimens were obtained by needle biopsy and the microsomal fraction was separated by differential centrifugation. Its freedom from mitochondria was demonstrated by the absence of succinic dehydrogenase, a marker enzyme for mitochondria. Liver from healthy subjects showed variation in the specific activity of coumarin-7-hydroxylase from 0.16 to 0.65 nmol-mg-1-min-1, which is probably due to genetic factors. Patients with cirrhosis of the liver, chronic fatty hepatitis (chronic alcoholic hepatitis) and chronic active hepatitis showed a significantly lower mean hydroxylase activity. There was no significant difference in the mean level of hydroxylase between patients with subacute viral hepatitis or chronic persistent hepatitis and the normal controls.
...
PMID:Coumarin-7-hydroxylase activity in microsomes from needle biopsies of normal and diseased human liver. 96 89

Alcoholism is the most common form of drug abuse and alcoholic liver disease is a major health problem which in terms of increasing incidence is only rivaled by viral hepatitis. Cirrhosis of the liver, most of which is probably alcoholic, is among the leading causes of morbidity and mortality between the ages of 25 to 65 in Western countries. Alcoholic liver disease includes adaptive and toxic ultrastructural alterations, alcoholic fatty liver, alcoholic hepatitis and alcoholic cirrhosis, later accompanied by hepatoma.
...
PMID:[Biochemical and clinical aspects of alcoholic liver damage]. 100 21

Liver biopsies obtained from 100 alcoholic patient attending a clinic primarily for the management of their alcoholism, have been reviewed. The morphological appearances have been correlated with histories of alcohol consumption and with clinical and biochemical findings. There were 77 men and 23 women. Eight biopsies appeared normal, 62 showed fatty liver with or without fribrosis, 17 had alcoholic hepatitis with or without fibrosis and 13 had alcoholic hepatitis with established cirrhosis. Patients with fatty liver had drunk as long and as heavily as those with alcoholic hepatitis, suggesting that some other factor in addition to alcohol is of importance in the development of alcoholic hepatitis. Clinical and biochemical abnormalities showed no constant relationship to histological findings. Thus liver biopsy would seem to be an essential part of the full clinical assessment of the alcoholic patient.
...
PMID:The spectrum of liver diseases in alcoholism. 105 13

Serum free proline and free hydroxyproline were determined in 71 patients with liver disease and in 62 control subjects. The group with liver disease included 60 patients with liver cirrhosis and 11 with chronic active liver disease. Forty-five of the cirrhotic patients were alcoholics, 9 of which were studied during an episode of alcoholic hepatitis. The control group consisted of 24 healthy volunteers, 19 primary malnourished patients, and 19 severely ill patients without liver disease. The values obtained in normal subjects were quite constant; no differences related to sex or age were detected. In patients with malnutrition, and especially in severely ill patients, the proline values were always below the normal limit. Patients with nonalcoholic cirrhosis or chronic active liver disease had serum proline and hydroxyproline values similar to those of normal subjects. However, the patients with alcoholic liver cirrhosis had proline and hydroxyproline values significantly higher than the normal group. Furthermore, in patients with alcoholic hepatitis the serum free proline values were significantly higher than in the other groups. The results suggest that alcohol might have a direct effect on proline metabolism or facilitate its release from the liver cell.
...
PMID:Serum free proline and free hydroxyproline in patients with chronic liver disease. 112 2

On the basis of morphological studies of 130 puncture material of the liver in 100 patients with chronic alcoholism the three morphological forms of its lesion were identified: dystrophic changes in hepacytes; alcoholic hepatitis (acute and chronic); cirrhosis of the liver. It is suggested that the morphological forms mentioned above represent the stages of one process--developing alcoholic hepatopathy. Progressing of the process in the liver in chronic alcoholism is connected with necroses of hepacytes as a result of toxic effect of alcohol with a subsequent reaction of the cells of the portal stroma and sinusoids. Gravity of lesions of the liver depends largerly on individual sensitivity to alcohol, one of the main factor of which may be the capacity of the liver to reproduce ADG.
...
PMID:[Alcoholic lesions of the liver (morphology and several questions concerning pathogenesis)]. 113 Oct 59

The role of liver in the peripheral conversion of thyroxine (T4) to triiodothyronine (T3) was studied in normal subjects and patients with alcoholic liver disease by measurement of thyrotrophin (TSH) and total and free T4 and T3 in randomand serial serum samples. Also, T4 to T3 conversion rates and T3 disposal rates were compared by noncompartmental analysis. While the mean total serum T4 values were similar for the two groups, 8.6 and 8.1 mug/kl, the mean free T4 value was significantly higher in the cirrhotic patients (3.3 ng/dl) than in the normal subjects (2.1 ng/dl, P less than 0.001). The mean serum T3 value, 85 ng/dl, was significantly reduced in the hepatic patients as compared to a mean serum T3 value of 126 ng/dl in the normal subjects (P less than 0.001), while the free T3 value was 0.28 ng/dl in both groups. The reduction of the serum total and free T3 values were closely correlated with the degree of liver damage, as indicated by elevation of serum bilirubin (r equal -0.547) and reduction of serum albumin (r equal 0.471). The mean serum TSH level was 3.1 muU/ml in the normals and 7.1 muU/ml in the cirrhotic aptients ( less than 0.001). 15% of the hepatic patients had serum TSH values above 10 muU/ml, which, however, did not correlate with any of the four liver function tests studied. Serial blood sampling from two convalescing patients with alcoholic hepatitis showed a gradual normalization of serum TSH and T3 levels as the liver function improved. After oral T4 administration, 0.25 mg/day for 10 days, three of four cirrhotic patients studied failed to raise their serum T3 values. The mean T4 to T3 conversion rate of seven normal subjects was 35.7%. The mean T4 to T3 conversion rate of four cirrhotic patients studied was significantly reduced to 15.6% (P less than 0.001). The mean disposal rates of T4 and T3 of the normal subjects were 114 and 34 mug/day, respectively. The ratio of T4 disposal to T3 disposal was 3.5. In contrast, the mean T4 disposal rate, 82 mug/day, and the mean T3 disposal rate, 10 mug/day, were both reduced in the cirrhotic patients. Their ratio of T4 disposal to T3 disposal was 7.9. These findings suggest that impairment of T4 conversion in patients with advanced hepatic cirrhosis may lead to reduced T3 production and lowered serum T3 level. Therefore, the liver is one of the major sites of T4 conversion to T3.
...
PMID:Reduced peripheral conversion of thyroxine to triiodothyronine in patients with hepatic cirrhosis. 115 78

Percutaneous liver biopsies obtained from patients with a history of chronic alcoholism and normal liver, fatty liver, alcoholic hepatitis, or active cirrhosis were incubated with tritiated proline to determine the pattern of collagen biosynthesis in these conditions. Incorporation of labeled proline and hydroxyproline into salt-soluble and insoluble fractions of collagen was evaluated by radiochemical analysis and tissue localization documented by autoradiography. Biopsy specimens of alcoholic hepatitis and cirrhosis exhibit a significant increase in the amount of radioactive proline and hydroxyproline in salt-soluble and insoluble collagen. Marked accumulation of radioactivity occurred over bile ducts, fibroblasts, and collagen fibers in the portal area and over hepatocytes, fibroblasts, and collagen fibers in the centrilobular area. Fatty liver is associated with an increase in uptake of proline and hydroxyproline in the salt-soluble fraction of collagem; silver grains appear in the periphery of fat-laden cells and in areas of focal inflammation. Digestion by collagenase indicates that labeling over fibroblasts and collagen reflects active synthesis, whereas, entry of proline into the cell protein pool is responsible for accumulation of radioactivity in other sites. In vitro ethanol causes a significant increase in the incorporation of proline and hydroxyproline into collagen in biopsy specimens of alcoholic hepatitis or active cirrhosis, but has no effect on collagen synthesis by normal or fatty liver.
...
PMID:Collagen biosynthesis in liver disease of the alcoholic. 117 Feb 67

Malnutrition is common among alcoholics because alcohol displaces protein-, vitamin-, and mineral-containing foods in the diet, and chronic alcohol consumption results in maldigestion and malabsorption of essential nutrients. In addition, alcohol exerts direct toxic effects on both the liver and gut, resulting in structural alterations in the intestine and the development of fatty liver, alcoholic hepatitis, and cirrhosis. Liver injury is preceded by an adaptive phase characterized by accelerated metabolism of drugs (including ethanol), and hyperlipemia, secondary to hypertrophy and hyperactivity of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum. Side effects include enhanced hepatotoxicity of CCI4 and possibly energy wastage. Alcoholics should not be led to beleive that correction or prevention of nutritional deficiency will prevent liver damage in the face of continued alcohol abuse.
...
PMID:Alcohol and malnutrition in the pathogenesis of liver disease.. 117 54


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>