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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The constant failure to produce a
liver cirrhosis
that can be ascribed to alcohol in the rat promoted the present study in guinea-pigs. The animals were given 40 per cent of calories as ethanol during 8 months. However, no
alcoholic hepatitis
or
cirrhosis
developed. Triglycerides and cholesterol increased in the liver and in serum. The persistance of liver triglyceride increase in spite of a rather low fat content of the diet is in contrast to experiences in the rat. A slight depression of coagulation factors II, VII, X and XI was observed in the ethanol-fed animals.
...
PMID:Effects on lipids, coagulation factors and liver histology of long-term ethanol administration to guinea-pigs. 117 46
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 upon 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). Ultrastructural changes of the mitochondria and the endoplasmic reticulum were already present at the fatty liver stage and persisted throughout the hepatitis and
cirrhosis
. The lesions were similar to those observed in alcoholics (including the inflammation and the central sclerosis), and differed strikingly from the alterations produced by other models of liver injury. 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:Alcoholic liver injury: experimental models in rats and baboons. 123 25
A total of 42 biopsy specimens of the liver (blind and spot) in 32 patients with alcoholic cirrhosis of the liver were investigated. Morphological, portal, postnecrotic, and mixed types of
cirrhosis
were established. The portal type of
cirrhosis
is most common. On the basis of repeated analyses of biopsy materials of the liver it may be assumed that the development of
cirrhosis of the liver
of alcoholic etiology is connected with multiple attacks of acute alcoholic hepatitis. Abstention from alcohol consumption resulted in stifestations of exacerbation of
cirrhosis
. On the other hand, continuation of alcohol consumption contributed to progressing of
cirrhosis
, which following several attacks of
alcoholic hepatitis
, may change its morphological type: portal cirrhosis "transforms" into the postnecrotic or mixed type. The data obtained clarified the role of ethanol in progressing alcoholic cirrhosis of the liver, which according to the initial mecranisms of its development in postnecrotic, since every attack of acute alcoholic hepatitis is accompanied by coagulative (fields of alcoholic hyaline, or Mallory's bodies), or by colliquative (balloon dystrophy) necrosis of hepacytes.
...
PMID:[The morphology and morphogenesis of alcoholic cirrhosis of the liver]. 127 77
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) markers were studied with Sorin RIA kits in serum samples from 390 patients suffering from histologically confirmed chronic liver disease. On the basis of negative HBsAg, anti-HBs, anti-HBc tests, HBV infection was excluded in 235 of the cases. The diagnosis was fatty liver and/or
alcoholic hepatitis
in 52%, while chronic active hepatitis and/or
liver cirrhosis
only in 21.7%. Part or present HBV infection was proven in 155. In 53% of these cases the diagnosis was chronic active hepatitis and/or
liver cirrhosis
, whereas fatty liver and
alcoholic hepatitis
occurred in 27.7%. Detailed HBV marker analysis was performed in 76 patients. Previous infection without replication (positive anti-HBs and/or anti-HBc and/or anti-HBe) was proven in 48 cases, 12 patients had active HBV infection (positive HBsAg, HBe, IgM anti-HBc), while in 16 cases HBV integration (positive HBsAg, anti-HBc, anti-HBe) was proven. HBsAg-IgM complex seropositivity was shown in every case with active HBV replication. Because of therapeutic, prognostic and epidemiologic reasons, the significance of detailed HBV serology in chronic liver diseases is stressed.
...
PMID:The significance of detailed hepatitis B virus serology in chronic liver diseases. 129 81
To investigate the prevalence of antibody to hepatitis C virus (anti-HCV) in heavy drinkers with liver disease in Japan, we tested serum samples from 113 heavy drinkers with liver disease and 121 without liver disease. All were negative for HBsAg with no history of blood transfusion. These subjects had consumed more than 80 g of ethanol daily for 5 years or more. Findings for anti-HCV determined by recombinant immunoblot assay testing were positive in 14 (35.9%) of the 39 patients with
liver cirrhosis
, 14 (58.3%) of the 24 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and in 8 (53.3%) of the 15 patients with chronic hepatitis. The anti-HCV positive rate in the drinkers with these liver diseases was significantly higher than in those with such disorders as fatty liver (0/10), hepatic fibrosis (0/22), and
alcoholic hepatitis
(0/3), as well as in the alcoholics without liver disease (5/121, 4.2%). Considering histologic findings in the anti-HCV positive cirrhotics, the occurrence of lymph follicle formation (71.4%), piecemeal necrosis (78.6%) and loose fibrosis (64.3%) were observed to a significantly higher extent than in cirrhotics who were negative for anti-HCV. These findings suggest that advanced chronic liver disease among heavy drinkers in Japan, especially of hepatocellular carcinoma, is closely associated with HCV infection. In the livers of heavy drinkers who were positive for anti-HCV, histologic findings indicated the possibility of viral infection.
...
PMID:High prevalence of antibody to hepatitis C virus in heavy drinkers with chronic liver diseases in Japan. 131 67
The presence of antibody to the hepatitis C virus was determined in 254 alcoholic patients with non-B chronic hepatitis and a titre of antinuclear antibodies of 1/40 or lower.
Alcoholic hepatitis
was present in 12 patients, steatohepatitis in 20, active chronic hepatitis in 22,
cirrhosis
in 181, and hepatocarcinoma in 19. Twenty patients had previously received blood transfusion alone or during surgery, 49 had undergone previous surgery without transfusion, a clinical episode of hepatitis could be traced in 14, 4 patients were drug addicts, 41 had received blood transfusion after the diagnosis was made, and 128 presented with alcoholism alone. Anti-hepatitis C antibody was found in 20 out of 2,000 blood donors (1%) in our hospital. Anti-hepatitis C antibody was found in 87 patients (34.2%) in our series, a figure unaltered by past medical history. Patients with anti-HC antibody had higher levels of AST, ALT, total proteins, gamma-globulin, and IgG. The incidence of active chronic hepatitis was higher among patients with anti-HC antibody, whereas the incidence of steatohepatitis was higher among patients without anti-HC. Regarding findings on liver biopsy, the incidence of anti-HC was significantly higher (p less than 0.001) among patients with active chronic hepatitis (72.7%) than in any other group; no significant differences were found between patients with
cirrhosis
(33.3%), hepatocarcinoma (31.5%), steatohepatitis (15%), or
alcoholic hepatitis
(16.7%). Among HBsAg-negative patients, the incidence of anti-HC was similar between those with (39.7%) and without other serum markers of HB (32.9%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Prevalence and significance of the C virus antibody in chronic hepatopathy not related to B virus in alcoholics]. 131 33
The prevalence of hepatitis virus markers in patients with chronic liver diseases from two countries has been studied: 68 patients (38
alcoholic hepatitis
or
cirrhosis
, 30 chronic HBsAg-positive hepatitis) from Hungary as well as 109 patients (55 alcoholic liver disease, 45 chronic hepatitis or cryptogenic
cirrhosis
and 9 hepatoma) from Romania were examined for HBsAg, anti-HBs, anti-HBc, anti-HCV and anti-HDV, using the corresponding Abbott Elisa test systems. In alcoholic liver disease HBsAg occurred in 6/38 patients from Hungary and in 22/55 patients respectively, that is HBV markers occurred with significantly higher frequency in alcoholic patients from Romania (p less than 0.05). In the Hungarian group a total of 36 patients were HBsAg positive and out of them 5 had anti-HDV (13.9%), while out of 21 Romania HBsAg carriers 10 patients had anti-HDV (47.6%). Among 9 hepatoma patients 4 had HBsAg, 6 anti-HBs and 7 anti-HBc and 4 had anti-HCV and 3 had anti-HDV. One patient with hepatoma had both HBsAg and anti-HCV plus anti-HDV as well. Results suggest that the infection with hepatitis viruses in alcoholic liver diseases is more common in Romania than in Hungary, and the prevalence of delta virus infection in HBV carriers is also significantly higher in Romania than in Hungary.
...
PMID:[Hepatitis virus (HBV, HCV, HDV) markers in chronic liver diseases. Comparative studies in two East-Central European countries]. 132 99
The authors applied a silver colloid technique to identify Argyrophilic Organiser Region (AgNOR) to 8 groups of hepatic lesions:
alcoholic hepatitis
with dysplasia (3 cases); chronic active hepatitis with dysplasia (4 cases);
cirrhosis
with dysplasia (5 cases); focal nodular hyperplasia (4 cases) and hepatocellular carcinomas (3 cases of grade I, 3 cases of grade II and 5 cases of grade III of Edmondson). Four cases of non-specific reactive hepatitis were used as control. This work suggests the simplicity and utility of simultaneous application of clumps per cell, AgNORs per clump and total AgNORs counts in the evaluation of neoplastic and preneoplastic lesions of the liver. The results show, in hepatocellular carcinomas, a relationship between the number of clumps, the AgNORs per clump, the total number of AgNORs and the grading of Edmondson. The nodular lesions that can be considered in the differential diagnosis with carcinoma are sufficiently well discriminated using the two parameters AgNORs per clump and total number of AgNORs.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma and preneoplastic lesions of the liver: evaluation of argyrophilic nucleolar organizer regions (AgNORs). 133 18
The present paper is devoted to overview the basic concepts of ethanol-induced hepatic injury and therapeutic modalities by which alcoholic liver disease can be alleviated. The role of alcohol dehydrogenase of both hepatic and gastric origin as well as the importance of the number one metabolite acetaldehyde are discussed, furthermore the effects of microsomal ethanol oxidizing system are also described. The features of the major clinicopathological consequences of alcohol abuse fatty liver,
alcoholic hepatitis
are briefly outlined, and the basic pathogenetic mechanisms that lead to
cirrhosis
--cell necrosis, regeneration and fibroplasia--are shown. The understanding of the pathophysiology of alcohol-induced liver injury may improve the therapy with drugs and nutritional factors, and allow successful prevention through the early recognition of heavy drinkers before their social or medical disintegration. In the management of alcoholic liver diseases, among the true hepatoprotective agents a naturally occurring flavonoid silymarin and an active methyl-donor metabolite S-adenosyl-L-methionine seem to be promising. An antifibrotic treatment with colchicine might also be of importance. Further prospective, well-designed, controlled clinical trials are still warranted to evaluate real efficacy of these drugs. The hepatic consequences of alcohol abuse may be treatable, however, prevention would be the true resolution of the major global health problem of alcoholism.
...
PMID:Pathogenesis and management of alcoholic liver injury. 134
Phenotypic expression of sialylated Lewis(x) antigen by means of the monoclonal antiserum SNH3 was studied in 87 livers, which included normal and steatotic livers and livers with chronic persistent and chronic active hepatitis,
alcoholic hepatitis
, allograft rejection, focal nodular hyperplasia, hepatocellular carcinoma, cholangiocarcinoma, metastatic carcinoma,
cirrhosis
of various causes (autoimmune, alcoholic, viral, drug induced, Wilson's disease, and primary biliary cirrhosis). The biotin-streptavidin-peroxidase method was used on formaldehyde-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections. Sialylated Lewis(x) antigen was not demonstrated in normal livers. Hepatocellular expression in a diffuse or perinodular honeycomb pattern was seen in
cirrhosis
, irrespective of cause. Sialylated Lewis(x) antigen was also observed in hepatocytes around metastatic carcinoma in the absence of inflammation,
cirrhosis
, or regeneration. Some bile ductules, most likely ductular hepatocytes, but not bile ducts, expressed sialylated Lewis(x) antigen. Sialylated Lewis(x) antigen was seen diffusely in fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinoma, focally in other hepatocellular carcinomas, and either focally or diffusely in cholangiocarcinomas.
...
PMID:Expression of sialylated Lewis(x) antigen in chronic and neoplastic liver diseases. 135 99
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