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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During a 23 year period at Memorial Hospital, the diagnosis of liver cell carcinoma was made in 42 patients who were 11 to 40 years old. Ninety per cent were Caucasian, mostly born in the United states. No occupational hazard was detected. Serum hepatitis antigen was demonstrated in only one patient. Alpha fetoprotein was found in the serum of 55 per cent of nine patients tested. Eight-three per cent were Rh positive, 43 per cent were ABO groups, A or O, respectively. Twenty-three per cent of 13 patients with sufficient material for study had an associated
cirrhosis
. Of these, active hepatitis with
cirrhosis
was present in one patient; postnecrotic
cirrhosis
was present in another. Approximately 7 per cent had a history of previous liver disease. One patient had infectious mononucleosis, and nearly 13 per cent gave a family history of cancer. Weight loss or pain in the right upper abdominal quadrant was present in 65 per cent, and hepatomegaly was found in 88 per cent. Only one patient presented with hemoperitoneum simulating an acute condition within abdomen. The liver profile examinations characteristically revealed an elevation in serum alkaline phosphatase, 5 nucleotidase, and Bromsulphalein retention with normal bilirubin level. The most common finding, upon roentgenographic examination, was an elevated right hemidiaphragm. Selective celiac and superior mesenteric angiography and 99mTc sulfur colloid liver scans were both done in 13 patients. There was a 75 per cent accuracy rate in localization of the tumor. At laparotomy, the tumor was found to be confined to one lobe in seven patients and involved both lobes in ten. Twenty-seven patients were thought to have multicentric tumors and 15 unicentric lesions. Only ten were found to be candidates for hepatic lobectomy. Five and ten years survival rates were 20 per cent; the operative mortality rate was 40 per cent. Twenty per cent died within a year, ten per cent, one patient, is alive with disease at 28 months and another is free of disease at 31-months. Paraneoplastic syndromes were erythrocytosis in two patients, terminal stage of
hypoglycemia
in one patient, and hypocholesterolemia with associated excess beta globulin in one patient.
...
PMID:Liver cell carcinoma during the prime of life. 17 34
To investigate the development of diabetes mellitus in patients with thalassemia major, plasma glucose and immunoreactive insulin (IRI) levels following oral glucose and intravenous tolbutamide and glucose disappearance rates following intravenous insulin were measured in 10 patients before and during five years on a high transfusion program (HTP). Plasma immunoreactive glucagon (IRG) levels following oral glucose, intravenous insulin, and arginine were measured during the sixth year. Serial percutaneous liver biopsies were performed on seven patients. The oral glucose tolerance tests (OGAT) and mean peak IRI levels were normal in nine of 10 patients before HTP. After HTP was begun a progressive deterioration of OGTT occurred despite normal IRI levels. Following tolbutamide, the mean per cent fall in plasma glucose in the patients before HTP was significantly less than in controls (p less than 0.01) and similar to that of controls during five years of HTP in spite of higher than normal peak IRI levels. Of seven survivors after six years of HTP, three had normal OGTT and four had chemical diabetes; mean peak IRI levels were normal, but fasting IRG levels were significantly higher than in controls (p less than 0.05). In all seven patients, plasma IRG failed to increase following insulin-induced
hypoglycemia
and was significantly higher than in controls after arginine (p less than 0.01); after oral glucose, plasma IRG fell significantly below that of fasting only in the patients with chemical diabetes (p less than 0.03). Following intravenous insulin, the mean per cent fall in glucose before and during HTP was significantly less than in controls (p less than 0.01). Hemosiderosis and
cirrhosis
were present in all biopsied patients. Four patients died; two had chemical and two had nonketotic insulin-dependent diabetes. These data suggest that diabetes mellitus occurs frequently in patients with thalassemia on HTP and that insulin resistance and hyperglucagonemia, possibly due to
cirrhosis
, are important etiologic factors.
...
PMID:Carbohydrate metabolism and pancreatic islet-cell function in thalassemia major. 32 76
Fasting gastrinemia in cirrhotics (48.35 +/- 2.77 pg/ml) was higher than in normal controls (32.93 +/- 0.75 pg/ml; P less than 0.001). After insulin-induced
hypoglycemia
, the mean increase of gastrin above basal level was 42.29 +/- 1.92 pg/ml in controls and 10.85 +/- 5.05 pg/ml in
cirrhosis
(P less than 0.001). BAO was 2.53 +/- 0.36 mEq/h in controls and 0.42 +/- 0.004 mEq/h in cirrhotics (P less than 0.001). After i.v. insulin, TAO was 8.42 +/- 0.72 mEq/h in controls and 3.06 +/- 0.26 mEq/h in cirrhotics (P less than 0.001). The authors suggest that the lack of an adequate gastrin and acid response to the hypoglycemic stimulus in cirrhotics might be accounted for by a decreased insulin sensitivity.
...
PMID:Gastrin response to insulin in patients with cirrhosis of the liver. 38 37
The case histories are reported of two patients with the relatively rare association of
hypoglycaemia
with
liver cirrhosis
. The recent literature on
hypoglycaemia
as a consequence of liver disease is reviewed and the frequent absence of typical clinical symptoms in this form of
hypoglycaemia
is pounted out.
...
PMID:[Hepatic hypoglycaemia (author's transl)]. 62 36
It is evident that ethanol by itself or one of its metabolites produces alterations in transport, metabolism and disposition of carbohydrates. Ethanol acts via changes in the redox state of co-factors; e.g. ethanol-induced
hypoglycemia
is due, partly, to the inhibition of hepatic gluconeogenesis by ethanol as a consequence of the increased NADH2/NAD ratio in patients whose glycogen stores are already depleted. On the other hand, hyperglycemia has also been described in patients with alcoholism. Although its mechanism is still obscure, abnormal hormonal secretion of insulin, catecholamines and glucocorticoids has been incriminated. Finally, structural changes of the liver and pancreas such as
cirrhosis
and pancreatitis produced by chronic alcohol consumption should also be considered as pathogenetic factors in a variety of clinical states involving deranged carbohydrate metabolism.
...
PMID:Alcohol induced changes of carbohydrate metabolism [author's transl]. 70 66
Most forms of liver disease are probably associated with impaired gluconeogenesis, although
hypoglycaemia
is rarely an important clinical feature. Blood concentrations of the gluconeogenic precursors, lactate, glycerol and alanine are elevated although, in certain situations, alanine levels may be decreased. Abnormal glucose tolerance is present in both acute and chronic liver disease, but is usually not of clinical importance. The mechanism of glucose intolerance remains uncertain, with diminished hepatocyte mass, portal diversion and insulin resistance the major postulates. Indeed, the importance of the liver in disposing of an oral glucose load, is still questioned. Both hyperinsulinism and hypoinsulinism are found in liver disease, with hyperinsulinism common in
cirrhosis
and acute viral hepatitis. This is accompanied by insulin resistance. The hyperinsulinism is probably due to defective hepatic clearance of insulin rather that to over-production. The cause of the insulin resistance remains to be established. Glucagon levels are raised and may contribute to this resistance. Growth hormone levels are also increased but are associated with low somatomedin levels and the role of growth hormone in insulin resistance is therefore questionable. Future developments include use of new animal models, studies of biopsy specimens and studies of hepatic hormone receptors.
...
PMID:Carbohydrate metabolism in liver disease. 79 84
Ethanol metabolism and its influence on serum lactate/pyruvate ratio was studied after intravenous infusion of ethanol in 17 patients: 4 controls, 5 alcoholics with
cirrhosis
, 4 non-alcoholic cirrhotics and 4 alcoholics without liver disease. All refrained from the use of alcohol and drugs 4 weeks prior to the experiment. After maximal ethanol blood levels were achieved at the end of the infusion, ethanol removal occurred at two different rates. This was probably due to the fact that different volumes of ethanol were distributed with time: a fast period (30 to 60 min) and a slow period (60 to 180 min). The rates of disappearence in the two periods were similar in all groups which suggests that
liver cirrhosis
, independent of clinical severity and/or chronic alcoholism with previous abstinence from alcohol, does not modify ethanol metabolic rates in the liver. The relation lactate/pyruvate doubled in all cases but it occurred within 30 minutes in the groups without liver disease and within 60 minutes in the cirrhotics. This could account for the decreased liability of cirrhotic patients to alcohol
hypoglycemia
.
...
PMID:Ethanol metabolism in liver cirrhosis and chronic alcoholism. 121 Oct 63
In glycogen storage disease type III (glycogen debranching enzyme (DE) deficiency), the activities of serum alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase and lactate dehydrogenase may be strikingly elevated during childhood but are low during adult life. To determine the pattern of the elevated serum enzyme activities in relationship to diet, the biochemical subtype and clinical symptoms, 13 patients with DE deficiency were studied. Activities of serum aspartate and alanine transaminases, lactate dehydrogenase, and alkaline phosphatase were markedly elevated during infancy. Continued elevation of enzyme activities during childhood appeared to be related to DE deficiency in liver, but unrelated to DE deficiency in muscle. Activity elevations correlated inconsistently with diet and poorly with childhood growth rate or the presence of
hypoglycaemia
. The serum enzyme activities declined around puberty concomitantly with a decrease in liver size. Although periportal fibrosis and micronodular
cirrhosis
indicated the presence of hepatocellular damage during childhood, the decline in serum enzyme activities with age and the absence of overt hepatic dysfunction suggest that the fibrotic process may not always progress.
...
PMID:Glycogen debranching enzyme deficiency: long-term study of serum enzyme activities and clinical features. 129 83
We report a case of severe
hypoglycemia
and hepatic masses suspected to be an insulin-like growth factor-II (IGF-II)-producing hepatocellular carcinoma. A 62-year-old man presented with mental disorder in the night and early morning associated with extremely low blood sugar levels (less than 21 mg/dl). Computerized axial tomography and ultrasonography revealed a massive tumor in the right lobe of the liver with multiple secondary nodules, and a tumor thrombus in the portal vein. At autopsy 107 days after admission, the liver weighed 3070 g, histologically showing an Edmondson type II tumor with
liver cirrhosis
. IGF-II in plasma (899 ng/ml) and tumor tissue (2.4 micrograms/g) was higher than that in normal plasma (374-804 ng/ml) and non-tumor liver tissue (0.2 micrograms/ml), while IGF-I (14 ng/ml) was significantly reduced. IGF-II, probably produced by the liver tumor, appeared to be involved in the mechanism of
hypoglycemia
.
...
PMID:Primary hepatocellular carcinoma with severe hypoglycemia: involvement of insulin-like growth factors. 132 Jan 77
Galactosemia in newborns and infants is associated with the following symptoms: jaundice, hepatomegaly, failure to thrive, feeding difficulties,
hypoglycemia
, convulsions, lethargy, amino-aciduria, cataracts,
hepatic cirrhosis
, ascites, and mental retardation. If the preliminary evaluation indicates galactosemia, there is high risk for E. coli sepsis and death. Strong consideration should therefore be given for early antibiotic therapy in infants with suspected galactosemia in spite of the absence of clinical signs or symptoms of sepsis.
...
PMID:Association of Escherichia coli sepsis and galactosemia in neonates. 156 28
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