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 pathology of the liver in 19 cases of malabsorption is reported. Five of these were proven to have adult coeliac disease, in the others that diagnosis was presumed by exclusion of other causes of malabsorption and by the coincidence of other conditions known to be associated with coeliac disease. Of these cases, three had liver changes of chronic hepatitis and two of these were in the proven coeliac group, including a case with cirrhosis and a hepatoma. In addition, less severe liver changes such as portal tract fibrosis and portal tract infiltration by inflammatory cells were present greatly in excess to that of the controls. The reasons for the occurrence of liver damage in coeliac disease are outlined and discussed in relation to the liver disorders associated with jejunoileal bypass used in the treatment of obesity. Possible mechanisms of liver injury in coeliac disease are described.
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PMID:The liver in coeliac disease. 21 Jan 3

Obstructive jaundice, pruritus, and malabsorption developed in twin brothers in infancy. Early liver biopsy specimens showed intracellular and canalicular cholestasis with normal bile ducts. By the age of 3 years, both had cirrhosis and portal hypertension. Each died during the teen years from hepatocellular carcinoma. These brothers represent the tenth reported family with familial cholestatic cirrhosis, and they are the first patients with this syndrome in whom hepatoma developed.
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PMID:Hepatoma in familial cholestatic cirrhosis of childhood: its occurrence in twin brothers. 21 1

Magnesium deficiency can occur in congestive heart failure, after diuresis with furoxemide, ethacrynic acid and mercurials, and with digitalis intoxication, diabetic acidosis, acute and chronic alcoholism, delerium tremens, cirrhosis, malabsorption syndromes, protracted postoperative cases, open heart surgery, the diuretic phase of acute tubular necrosis, and with hypoparathyroidism, primary aldosteronism, juxta-glomerular hyperplasia and pancreatitis. Two cases of serious ventricular arrhythmias associated with magnesium depletion are described. Clinical manifestations are vague but center around neurologic symptoms such as weakness, tremors, stupor, coma, nausea, vomiting and anorexia. Serious cardiac arrhythmias also occur with magnesium depletion. Magnesium appears to be very useful in hypomagnesemic or digitalis-toxic tachyarrhythmias. Magnesium may also be valuable in normomagnesemic tachyarrhythmias. Ten to fifteen milliliters of a 20 percent magnesium sulfate solution, given intravenously over 1 minute, followed by a slow 4 to 6 hour infusion of 500 ml of 2 per cent magnesium sulfate in 5 per cent dextrose in water is recommended. Recurrence of arrhythmias is common and a second infusion of magnesium sulfate may be necessary. Hypermagnesemia occurs frequently in renal insufficiency, and magnesium therapy may then be contraindicated. Serum levels above 5.5 meq/liter should be avoided. Loss of deep tendon reflexes and a decrease in respiratory rate can be used as guides to magnesium therapy. A plea is made for frequent analysis of serum magnesium so that more knowledge can be gained regarding this important biologic element in cardiovascular disorders.
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PMID:Magnesium deficiency and cardiac disorders. 80 29

Excretion of oxalic acid in urine was measured in 28 healthy and 97 patients with gastrointestinal diseases. We found significantly higher values in the following groups: patients after resection of parts of the small intestine, patients with sprue and other diseases with malabsorption, patients with M. Crohn of the small intestine, colitis ulcerosa and granulomatosa, patients with chronical diseases of the pancreas gland and patients with cirrhosis of the liver. In 4 patients after resection of parts of the small intestine or pancreas urolithiasis could be verified. Reduction of fat and food without ballast reduced the excretion of oxalic acid in urine. Hyperoxaluria correlied significantly with the following parameters: excretion of fat in feces, exhalation of 14CO2 in the glykocholate breath test, resorption of vit. B12 and the length of resected small intestine. This form of hyperoxaluria is caused by hyperresorption of oxalic acid from food. The mechanism of this hyperresorption is not clarified yet, an important factor seems to be ill resorption of fat.
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PMID:[Hyperoxaluria in intestinal and liver diseases]. 83 13

Evaluation of stored iron by means of DFOX-induced sideruria in 101 subjects with various degree of hyposideraemia with or without anaemia, is reported. Three groups were examined: 49 patients with chronic loss of blood and malabsorption and urinary iron values up to 1 mg/24hr; 43 with non-bleeding neoplasia, collagen disease, lymphoma, cirrhosis of the liver etc. and values of 1-2mg/24 hr; 9 with rheumatoid arthritis and cirrhosis of the liver and values over 2 mg/24 hr. The reasons why hyposideraemia may accompany incipient of frank tissue hypo-, normo- or hypersiderosis are discussed.
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PMID:[Desferrioxamine in the diagnosis of hypo-, normo-, and hypersiderotic hyposideremia]. 84 86

The relation between malabsorption of bile acids, the bile lipid composition, and biliary stones was examined in 8 patients subjected to ileal resection (particularly for Crohn's disease), 6 with ileal bypass for morbid obesity, and 10 healthy controls. The 1-14C-cholylglycine breath test was employed to detect of the absorption and deconjugation of bile acids. Bile lipid composition was expressed according with Metzger's saturation index. Healthy subjects gave normal findings in all respects, whereas ileal resection was accompanied by malabsorption, increased deconjugation, and faecal loss of 14C. These changes, particularly malabsorption, were more evident after ileal bypass. Preoperative saturation values rose to more than 1 in all cases, especially after resection. Liver disease (steatosis and cirrhosis) 6 months after bypass, together with cholesterol lithiasis in 2/6 patients.
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PMID:[Correlation of malabsorption of bile acids, bile lipid composition and calculi]. 90 52

Three adults with alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency are described. In two of the cases the deficiency was genetically determined (cases 1 and 2), and each demonstrated unusual features of the disease. The liver in case 1 (homozygous) showed cholangiolar hyperplasia which has been recorded only once before. Case 2 (heterozygous) had emphysema and cirrhosis, a combination not previously documented in a heterozygote, in addition to malabsorption. Case 3 represents a case of spurious alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency with cirrhosis included to emphasize the diagnostic improtance of phenotyping in such cases.
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PMID:Adult alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency. 108 Nov

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.
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PMID:Alcohol and malnutrition in the pathogenesis of liver disease.. 117 54

It is reported on the estimation of the vitamin A absorption test in 17 patients with chronic liver diseases, 26 patients with diseases of the extrahepatic biliary system, and in 12 patients with diseases of the stomach. In the latter there are no changes in the vitamin A test. On the contrary patients with diseases of the liver and biliary system show differences in the serum vitamin A levels. A separate consideration of active liver cirrhosis and active cholangitis indicates individualities in the constellation of the 3 and 6 hour values after vitamin A ingestion: in liver cirrhosis the first value is normal while the 6 hour value seems significant lowered so that the maximum vitamin A concentration is found near 3 hours. In active cholangitis both values are reduced, the first one more than the second one. The reason is to be seen in a decrease of the conjugated bile acids, whereas in the group of liver diseases an interpretation is somewhat problematic. It is to discuss whether these results depend on the development of portal hypertension, while the intestinal absorption seems normal and liver damage only of secondary importance. The fact that this test is influenced by diseases of the liver and biliary system shortens its significance as a screening test for malabsorption or maldigestion though a further differentiation between sprue and pancreatic insufficiency seems possible.
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PMID:[Vitamin A absorption test. II. Diseases of the liver, the extrahepatic biliary system and the stomach (author's transl)]. 118 79

Mild to moderate fat malabsorption is frequently present in patients with liver cirrhosis. We investigated the influence of lactulose or lactitol treatment on fecal fat excretion in 18 patients with liver cirrhosis. All patients were Child Pugh class A or B and had not taken any therapy that could have affected intestinal absorption in the previous months. The dose of lactulose or lactitol was individually adjusted to maintain two semiliquid bowel movements per day. Steatorrhea was determined before and after a minimum of 7 days, when the cathartic effect was stabilized. Treatment with nonabsorbable disaccharides induced mild to moderate steatorrhea in 50% of patients. No differences were observed between the effects of lactulose and lactitol, but fecal fat excretion exceeded 10 g/day in two patients taking lactulose. These findings indicate that treatment with nonabsorbable disaccharides may increase fecal fat excretion in patients with liver cirrhosis. This factor should be taken into consideration when a cirrhotic patient has to take these drugs for a long time.
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PMID:The effect of lactulose and lactitol administration on fecal fat excretion in patients with liver cirrhosis. 140 23


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