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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Iron overload has been shown to impair the immune response of the liver, and induce hepatic fibrosis and
cirrhosis
. Opinions differ concerning the relative risk of developing hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in siderotic patients as compared with patients with hepatic fibrosis and
cirrhosis
and the possible mechanism of liver carcinogenesis in genetic hemochromatosis is still unknown. The purpose of this study is to assess hepatic iron overload, fibrosis and
cirrhosis
in liver tissue adjacent to hepatocellular carcinoma and in liver tissue of controls in population at risk for hepatocellular carcinoma. Liver tissue was available for examination in 147 biopsies with HCC collected in South Africa. As controls we used liver samples from 211 age and sex matched Africans who died in accidents. Tissue samples were processed routinely, stained with H and E, Sweet's reticulin, Masson's trichrome for fibrous tissue, Prussian blue for iron stain and immunohistochemically for HBsAg. Iron content was assessed with the method described by Brissot. Iron overload was detected in 42.1% of cancerous livers and in 43.7% of livers from controls. The presence of
siderosis
and iron content gradually increased with the age of studied similarly in cases and in controls.
Cirrhosis
was present in 32% of cancerous livers and was associated with iron overload in 13%. No
cirrhosis
and 6% of mild periportal fibrosis not related with
siderosis
was observed in controls. HBsAg was stainable in 80% of cancerous livers of patients below 25 years of age and in 40% of patients over 35 years. HBsAg in controls was positive in 9%. No relationship of HBsAg and amount of stainable iron in cancerous and livers of controls was found. In conclusion, African
siderosis
can not play important role in the etiopathogenesis of HCC.
...
PMID:Hepatic siderosis, fibrosis and cirrhosis: the association with hepatocellular carcinoma in high-risk population. 942
Although HLA-linked hemochromatosis greatly increases the risk for hepatocellular carcinoma in people of European ancestry, iron overload in Africa is not thought to be etiologically related to this malignancy. To determine if African iron overload may be associated with hepatocellular carcinoma, we reviewed 320 consecutive diagnostic liver biopsies processed at the University of Zimbabwe from 1992 to 1994 and we selected for analysis 215 biopsies from adults that were suitable for the histological assessment of hepatocellular iron. Subjects were stratified according to hepatocellular iron grades of 0-2+ (normal levels to mild
siderosis
; n = 183) and grades of 3+ and 4+ (distinctly elevated levels consistent with iron overload; n = 32). Thirty-six subjects had hepatocellular carcinoma. Logistic regression modeling revealed a significant association between iron overload and hepatocellular carcinoma after adjustment for age, sex and and the presence of portal fibrosis or
cirrhosis
(p = 0.041). The odds of hepatocellular carcinoma in subjects with iron overload was 3.1 (95% confidence interval of 1.05-9.4) times that of subjects without iron overload. While we could not test for exposure to viral hepatitis or to aflatoxins in this study, our findings suggest that iron overload may be a risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma in Africa.
...
PMID:African iron overload and hepatocellular carcinoma (HA-7-0-080). 945 25
Neonatal haemochromatosis is a disorder which affects foetuses and newborns. It is characterized by hepatocellular insufficiency, often appearing on the first day of life in the form of coagulopathy, hypoalbuminemia, hypoglycemia and jaundice. While spontaneous recovery has been reported, most of these infants die, and the diagnosis was previously often made during autopsy. With the help of MRI and salivary gland biopsies, plus increasing awareness of this disorder, the diagnosis is now often made quite early, and successful liver transplantations have been reported. Recently, there have also been encouraging preliminary reports of successful intervention with antioxidant and chelation pharmacotherapy, using a combination of selenium, vitamin E, N-acetylcysteine, deferoxamine, and prostaglandin E. We describe two patients with neonatal haemochromatosis who were both treated with this new "cocktail", one of whom died at five days of age, while the other survived, but needed a liver transplant at 2 1/2 months of age. The pathology of this condition is characterized by
hepatic cirrhosis
with giant cell transformation, and by
siderosis
of extrahepatic tissues. The prognosis is poor, and our experience with antioxidant treatment has been disappointing. Liver transplantation is a therapeutic option, but its use is limited by the scarcity of donor organs and the small size of many of the patients.
...
PMID:[Neonatal hemochromatosis]. 954 1
Among patients with hepatic iron overload, the distinction between hereditary hemochromatosis (HH), a common yet treatable genetic disease, and other causes of
siderosis
remains problematic. The recent discovery of a specific homozygous mutation (C282Y) in a novel major histocompatibility complex class I-like gene (named HLA-H or HFE) in 80% to 100% of well-characterized cases of HH suggests that direct DNA-based mutation analysis may help resolve this dilemma. To assess the clinical utility of direct HLA-H mutation analysis in a typical diagnostic setting, we measured genotypic and phenotypic parameters of iron overload in 37 subjects with biopsy-proven hepatic
siderosis
(2+ or greater) and in 127 healthy control subjects. The prevalence of C282Y homozygotes was significantly greater in the hepatic
siderosis
group (32%) than in the control group (0%), confirming the association between this homozygous mutation and hepatic iron overload. In the hepatic
siderosis
group, C282Y homozygotes had significantly higher hepatic iron and ferritin levels, a significantly lower prevalence of hepatitis C virus or alcoholic liver disease, but no significant difference in the saturation of serum transferrin. Of the 20 subjects with a hepatic iron index (HII) in the previously defined "hemochromatosis range" (>1.9), 9 (45%) were C282Y homozygotes. Of the 11 nonhomozygous subjects with an HII greater than 1.9 (presumed false-positive HIIs), 10 (91%) had
hepatic cirrhosis
compared with 3 of 9 (33%) homozygotes with an HII greater than 1.9 who had
cirrhosis
(P<.02). The HII thus has poor diagnostic specificity for predicting genotypic HH in patients with
cirrhosis
. We conclude that direct determination of the HLA-H C282Y genotype may be the single best diagnostic test for HH, particularly in patients with
cirrhosis
, for whom the HII is quite nonspecific.
...
PMID:Hepatic iron overload: direct HFE (HLA-H) mutation analysis vs quantitative iron assays for the diagnosis of hereditary hemochromatosis. 957 64
Mild to moderate hepatic iron overload is frequent in patients with chronic viral hepatitis (CH). We evaluated the role of hemochromatosis (HFE) gene mutations and other acquired factors in the development of iron overload in these patients. We studied 110 patients with chronic B or C viral hepatitis (31 women, 79 men), including 20 with
cirrhosis
, and 139 controls. Hepatic iron was evaluated by semiquantitative analysis in all the patients, and hepatic iron concentration (HIC) was determined in 97 of them (26 women, 71 men). C282Y and H63D mutations were sought in all the subjects by a polymerase chain reaction-restriction assay. The frequency of HFE genotypes and alleles did not differ in patients and controls. No relation was detected between hepatic iron stores and HFE gene mutations in women. In men, all C282Y heterozygotes had iron overload, and the H63D mutation was significantly more frequent in patients with more marked hepatic
siderosis
than in those with mild or no
siderosis
(P = .0039) and in controls (P = .0008). Heavy alcohol intake and
hepatic cirrhosis
were also associated with increased hepatic iron stores in the men. In the 71 men in whom HIC was measured, multiple regression analysis showed that this variable was related independently only to alcohol intake and HFE gene mutations. We suggest that in patients with CH, iron accumulates in the liver as the result of an interplay between genetic and acquired factors, and that increased liver iron stores may influence progression toward liver fibrosis.
...
PMID:Hepatic iron overload in patients with chronic viral hepatitis: role of HFE gene mutations. 975 49
Faced with hepatic
siderosis
, the pathologist must (1) determine the parenchymal, mesenchymal, or mixed type of iron overload; (2) quantify liver iron by either histology or biochemistry; (3) seek for associated iron-related lesions, especially sideronecrosis, fibrosis, and iron-free-foci; and (4) assess any other liver damage. The discovery of the HFE gene has modified the management of hemochromatosis. Because homozygosity for the C282Y mutation is diagnostic of the condition regardless of the liver iron concentration-to-age ratio, indication for liver biopsy in C282Y homozygotes is restricted to the assessment of prognostic lesions, such as fibrosis and iron-free-foci. In patients with a phenotype compatible with hemochromatosis but nonhomozygous for the C282Y mutation, liver biopsy remains mandatory to assess nonhemochromatosis causes of iron overload (rare hereditary defects of iron metabolism and transport and iron overload secondary to polymetabolic syndrome, to porphyria cutanea tarda, or to
cirrhosis
). The evaluation of iron distribution within liver cells and throughout lobules and the assessment of associated lesions are the most important features that allow for correct classification of nonhemochromatosis iron-overload syndromes.
...
PMID:Evaluation and interpretation of iron in the liver. 984 25
The synergistic effects of iron overload and ethanol on the liver of mice were studied over a period of 46 weeks. The determination of several parameters (iron, calcium, magnesium, alpha-hydroxyproline, lipid peroxidation, hepatomegalic and splenomegalic indexes) showed that ferrous and ferric lactates provoke an increase of calcium in the liver, higher than that of ethanol in the control animals. The relationship between liver calcium homeostasis modification and the increase of collagen and lipid peroxidation is discussed. Histological examinations showed differences in the tissular characteristics especially when iron and ethanol were given together. These findings suggest the liver calcium homeostasis changes found as a synergistic effect in the early stages of chronic iron overload may be of importance as a trigger of events leading to the pathway of fibrosis-->
cirrhosis
-->hepatocarcinoma reported in pathologies such as nutritional
siderosis
and hemochromatosis.
...
PMID:Iron-ethanol synergism and pathological liver transformation. 1021 26
Genetic haemochromatosis constitutes a high risk factor for the development of hepatocellular carcinoma. It is widely accepted that venesection prevents the evolution of
cirrhosis
in haemochromatosis and indirectly protects against the development of hepatocellular carcinoma. Clinical, pathological and radiological data are presented on three patients who did not conform to the '
siderosis
-
cirrhosis
-carcinoma' sequence and in whom prompt and adequate iron depletion did not prevent the development of cancer. This is the first report of hepatocellular carcinoma intervening in non-cirrhotic liver in two siblings with genetic haemochromatosis. The current literature on the subject is reviewed. The direct oncogenic role of iron remains to be elucidated. Hepatocellular carcinoma should be considered as a differential diagnosis in patients with non-cirrhotic genetic haemochromatosis who present with clinical deterioration during the course of an otherwise uneventful venesection programme.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma arising in the absence of cirrhosis in genetic haemochromatosis: three case reports and review of literature. 1051 28
Excessive deposition of Fe in the organs and tissues of Sub-Saharan Africans was first described in South Africa in 1929. Fe overload, or
siderosis
, was initially attributed to infections and to metallic poisoning (Cu, Sn, Zn), and then to malnutrition. In 1953 it was hypothesized that it was due primarily to excessive Fe intake derived from foods and drinks prepared in Fe vessels. Recently, in 1992 it was advanced that a gene distinct from any HLA-linked locus may also play a role. As to sequelae, in early research on series of hospital patients, the condition was linked to scurvy, osteoporosis, diabetes,
cirrhosis
, and latterly, to hepatocellular cancer and tuberculosis. Accordingly, many have concluded that Fe overload is responsible for considerable morbidity and mortality, that adventitious Fe intake should be reduced, and that phlebotomy be recommended for those severely affected. However, there are numerous limitations in the evidence. There are also problems in interpretation, since levels of Fe in the serum are affected additionally by a variety of factors: infection, inflammation, certain cancers and alcohol intake. These considerations complicate attempts to assess to what extent the associations described denote causation, and whether Fe overload has significant ramifications for ill in the general African population. While the adverse sequelae of overload may be less of significance than many believe, the precise pathogenicity of the phenomenon will remain uncertain until further investigations, including prospective studies, are undertaken.
...
PMID:Iron overload in Sub-Saharan Africa: to what extent is it a public health problem? 1061 17
Severe iron overload usually develops in patients with hereditary hemochromatosis (HHC), but variability in the phenotypic expression of the disease has been reported. This study assessed whether tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) plays a role in phenotypic expression of HHC. Sixty-four patients with HHC and 172 healthy volunteers (controls) were studied. Release of TNF-alpha from stimulated peripheral blood monocytes was measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and 308 and 238 TNF-alpha polymorphisms were detected with polymerase chain reaction and restriction fragment-length polymorphism analysis. The relation between TNF-alpha polymorphisms and clinical expression of HHC was evaluated. Patients with HHC released less TNF-alpha than controls, but the difference was significant only in homozygotes for the C282Y mutation. The prevalence of the 308 TNF-alpha polymorphism was similar in patients and controls, whereas the prevalence of the 238 polymorphic allele was significantly lower in patients (3% versus 16%; P =.002). A lower prevalence of
cirrhosis
was observed in patients with TNF-alpha polymorphism than in those without it (4 of 15 [27%] versus 28 of 49 [57%]), but the difference was not significant (P =.07). In nonhomozygotes for the C282Y mutation, severe liver
siderosis
was less prevalent in patients with the 308 polymorphism than in those without it (P =.05). Alanine aminotransferase (ALT) values were significantly lower in patients with TNF-alpha polymorphism (P =.006), even when patients with other hepatotoxic factors were excluded. Multivariate analysis showed that TNF-alpha polymorphism was independently associated with ALT values (P =.0008 and P =.045, respectively, in homozygotes and nonhomozygotes for the C282Y mutation) and
siderosis
in nonhomozygotes (P =.047). Thus, TNF-alpha appears to play a role in HHC by modulating the severity of liver damage. (Blood. 2001;97:3707-3712)
...
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor alpha promoter polymorphisms influence the phenotypic expression of hereditary hemochromatosis. 1138 6
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