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)

As with most liver diseases, the symptoms of hepatitis in dogs are nearly always aspecific: the dogs eat less, are apathetic, sometimes have polyuria/polydipsia, and sometimes have diarrhoea. Hepatoencephalopathy and ascites only occur with these symptoms in very advanced stages of chronic hepatitis. Only a part of the dogs have jaundice. Because of these aspecific symptoms, the diagnosis hepatitis is often not taken into consideration, even though the presence of a liver disease can be easily detected by measuring plasma concentrations of alkaline phosphatase and bile acids, one or both of which are elevated. The diagnosis is confirmed by histological examination of a liver biopsy sample. The most common forms of hepatitis are non-specific reactive hepatitis, acute hepatitis, and chronic hepatitis. Non-specific reactive hepatitis is a reaction against endotoxin as a result of sepsis or an increased gastrointestinal absorption. Treatment is directed to the primary process. Leptospirosis also causes non-specific reactive hepatitis, but then renal insufficiency is the most prominent feature. The diagnosis is made not on the basis of a liver biopsy but on the basis of increased IgM titres against Leptospira. Immediate treatment with antibiotics and infusions at the first signs (jaundice and uraemia) can save the animal's life. Acute hepatitis can develop as a result of infection, toxins, or liver hypoxia. There is no specific treatment, but adequate recovery often occurs with supportive treatment. Corticosteroids are contraindicated. Chronic hepatitis, which can lead to cirrhosis, is the most common form of hepatitis. It is an autoimmune inflammatory reaction that is usually caused by a virus infection but sometimes by poisoning (intoxication). Long treatment with prednisolone or azathioprine is usually successful, but early recognition of the disease increases the likelihood of success. Nowadays, chronic hepatitis due to hepatic copper accumulation in Beddlington terriers can be detected by DNA tests. Such tests make it possible to distinguish between carriers and non-carriers. Affected animals can be kept symptom-free by life-long treatment with zinc gluconate or penicillamine.
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PMID:[Hepatitis in dogs; a review]. 958 48

Previous in vitro studies have demonstrated zinc (Zn++) inhibition of basal and of potassium (K+) or thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH)-stimulated prolactin (PRL) secretion, in a selective, reversible, and dose-dependent manner. Thus, Zn++ may regulate physiologically pituitary PRL secretion. Furthermore, studies with patients with uremia, cirrhosis or prolactinoma, have shown the coexistence of hypozincemia and hyperprolactinemia and zinc supplementation did not correct hyperprolactinemia in these patients. In normal individuals Zn++ administration produced controversial results on PRL secretion. Here, we investigated whether zinc administration affects TRH-stimulated PRL in healthy men. We found that Zn++ administration does not change the TRH-stimulated PRL. Therefore, in normal conditions, Zn++ does not inhibit TRH-stimulated prolactinemia. In addition, we found that acute increases of blood PRL and TRH do not alter blood Zn++ levels.
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PMID:Effect of zinc administration on thyrotropin releasing hormone-stimulated prolactinemia in healthy men. 1081 35

Nitric oxide (NO) is produced in excess in various pathological states, including sepsis and hepatic cirrhosis, and appears to be related to inflammatory status. In uremia, one would expect the levels of NO to increase. We aimed to determine whether hemodialysis (HD) would remove NO from the systemic circulation of uremic patients. Blood was collected before, after, and 1 day after HD from 12 uremic patients. Plasma nitrite and nitrate (NOx-) levels were measured by colorimetric Greiss reaction and cGMP was measured by an enzyme immunoassay kit. Our study demonstrated that uremic patients have high plasma NO levels, and HD led to a significant drop in plasma NOx- level (63 +/- 15% reduction). The level rose back to the pre-HD level on the following day. Plasma cGMP in the patients also decreased significantly after HD (27 +/- 14% reduction). In conclusion, we hypothesized that HD might be a possible approach for the removal of excess NO in pathological conditions such as sepsis and hepatic cirrhosis.
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PMID:Effect of hemodialysis on plasma nitric oxide levels. 1084 81

Congenital or immunomediated deficiencies of the metalloprotease that cleaves physiologically von Willebrand factor (vWF) reduce or abolish the degradation of ultralarge vWF multimers that cause the formation of intravascular platelet thrombi in patients with thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP). There is little knowledge on the behavior of the protease in other physiological and pathologic conditions. Such knowledge is important to evaluate the specificity of low protease plasma levels in the diagnosis of TTP. Using an enzyme immunoassay, the protease was measured in 177 control subjects of different ages, in 26 full-term newborns, and in 69 women during normal pregnancy. Because TTP is often associated with multiorgan involvement and acute phase reactions, clinical models of these pathologic conditions were also investigated, including decompensated liver cirrhosis (n = 42), chronic uremia (n = 63), acute inflammatory states (n = 15), and the preoperative and postoperative states (n = 24). Protease levels were lower in healthy persons older than 65 than in younger persons. They were low in newborns but became normal within 6 months, and they were lower in the last 2 trimesters of pregnancy than in the first. Protease levels were also low in patients with cirrhosis, uremia, and acute inflammation, and they fell in the postoperative period. There was an inverse relation between low protease and high plasma levels of vWF antigen and collagen-binding activity. In conclusion, low plasma levels of the vWF cleaving protease are not a specific beacon of TTP because the protease is also low in several physiological and pathologic conditions.
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PMID:Changes in health and disease of the metalloprotease that cleaves von Willebrand factor. 1167 45

Pro-hemostatic therapy aims at an improvement of hemostasis, which may be achieved by amelioration of primary hemostasis, stimulation of fibrin formation or inhibition of fibrinolysis. These treatment strategies may be applied to specifically correct a defect in one of the pathways of coagulation, but have in some situations also been shown to be effective in reducing bleeding in patients without a primary defect in coagulation. Besides the transfusion of platelets in case of thrombocytopenia or severe platelet disorders, a pharmacological improvement of primary hemostasis may be achieved by the administration of desmopressin. The administration of DDAVP results in a marked increase in the plasma concentration of Von Willebrand factor (and associated coagulation factor VIII) and (also by yet unexplained additional mechanisms) a remarkable potentiation of primary hemostasis as a consequence. DDAVP is used for the prevention and treatment of bleeding in patients with von Willebrand disease or mild hemophilia A, and further in patients with an impaired function of primary hemostasis, such as in patients with uremia, liver cirrhosis or in patients with aspirin-associated bleeding. Based on the current insight that activation of coagulation in vivo predominantly proceeds by the tissue factor/factor VII(a) pathway, recombinant factor VIIa has been developed as a prohemostatic agent and has recently become available for clinical use. Indeed, in uncontrolled clinical studies this compound has been shown to exert a potent procoagulant activity and appeared to be highly effective in the prevention and treatment of bleeding, although most experience so far has been obtained in patients with severe and complicated coagulation defects. At present, a more general use of this agent for bleeding patients without an apparent coagulation defect is the subject of a number of ongoing clinical trials. Agents that exert anti-fibrinolytic activity are aprotinin and the group of lysine analogues. The pro-hemostatic effect of these agents proceeds not only by the inhibition of fibrinolysis (thereby shifting the procoagulant/anticoagulant balance towards a more procoagulant state), but also due to a protective effect on platelets, as has been demonstrated at least for aprotinin. The mechanism of this platelet-protective effect has, besides a potential prevention of plasmin-mediated loss of platelet receptors not been elucidated. Whether the pro-hemostatic effect of the anti-fibrinolytic agents will eventually result in a higher incidence of thromboembolic complications is still a matter of debate (see further), however, this has so far not been shown in straightforward clinical trials.
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PMID:Management of bleeding disorders by prohemostatic therapy. 1243 Sep 14

Human serum albumin (HSA) binding with endogenous metabolites and drugs is substantially decreased in chronic renal and liver diseases. To test the hypothesis that the decreased binding ability is caused by conformational changes of the protein, we analyzed infrared and Raman spectra of HSA isolated from healthy donors and patients with chronic uremia and liver cirrhosis. Uremia did not affect the secondary structure of HSA but modified the environment of its Asp/Glu residues. Liver cirrhosis increased the amount of extended and beta-structures, modified the environment of Asp/Glu and Tyr side chains, and changed the configuration of disulfide bridges in albumin molecules. The conformational changes of "cirrhotic" albumin were not caused by reversibly bound ligands and resembled a partial unfolding of the protein induced by adsorption on the charcoal surface. The dramatic structural alterations of HSA in liver cirrhosis may be caused by its oxidative modification and might underlie the decreased binding ability and changed body distribution of albumin.
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PMID:Chronic liver and renal diseases differently affect structure of human serum albumin. 1248 4

To clarify the thrombopoietin (TPO) production in patients with end-stage liver cirrhosis and uremia under hemodialysis, plasma TPO levels in patients with liver cirrhosis (n = 15), uremia under hemodialysis (n = 20) and healthy controls (n = 40) were measured by using a sandwich enzyme linked immunosorbent assay. Relationship between megakaryocytopoiesis and plasma TPO levels was analysed by linear regression. The results showed that the mean plasma TPO concentration in the uremic patients was significantly lower than that in the healthy volunteers, whereas plasma TPO level in end-stage liver cirrhosis was not significantly different from that of normal controls; plasma TPO levels in liver cirrhosis and uremic patients did not significantly influence megakaryocytopoiesis. It is concluded that end-stage liver cirrhosis patients maintained normal plasma TPO levels, but the production of TPO was significantly reduced in renal failure patients. Thrombocytopenia in liver cirrhosis appears to be not related to plasma TPO levels.
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PMID:[Plasma thrombopoietin level and its influence on megakaryocytopoiesis in end-stage liver cirrhosis and uremia patients]. 1251 30

Hepatitis B (HB) in haemodialysis patients results in morbidity and mortality, through chronicity, which leads to cirrhosis and liver carcinoma, even after renal transplantation. Hepatitis B vaccination is protective against HB virus infection. Suppressed immunity in renal failure leads to low HB vaccination success rates. Uremia, inadequate dialysis, use of low biocompatibility dialysis material, hyperparathyroidism, anemia, iron overload and malnutrition are all factors contributing to depressed immunity. Renal failure, associated with chronic inflammation, leads to impaired monokine production which results in decreased immunity. This impairment could result from defective HLA-DR B7-2 expression on monocytes. Hepatitis B vaccination non-responders express increased levels of HLA class II alleles (T-cell immune response modulators) DRB1 01 (DR1) and DRB1 15 (DR15). Various methods have been used to enhance the immune response to HB vaccination such as recombinant adjuvants, thymopentine, IL-2, levamisole and GM-CSF: they have produced variable results. Better dialysis biocompatibility and adequacy have also been conducted to overcome this low immune response. Response to conventional intramuscular HB vaccination is considered an index of adequate dialysis and low inflammatory state, both associated with better cardiovascular outcome and survival. HB vaccination reinforcement techniques evolved from an initial intramuscular double/multiple-dosing regimen to more frequent intradermal smaller dose injection. This newer regimen achieves a higher and almost complete seroconversion rate, although frequent boosters shots are necessary to maintain protective levels. Experience with pre-S1/S2, third generation, vaccines is limited and they have not been proven to be more effective than intradermally administered S antigens. Recombinant HB vaccines, intradermally administered, have been shown to elicit an immune response in all renal failure patients. Additionally the use of recombinant erythropoietin treatment to correct anemia contributes to this success.
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PMID:Recombinant hepatitis B vaccination in renal failure patients. 1267 88

Insulin-like growth factors [IGF I and II or somatomedins (SMS)] are polypeptides chemically and biologically correlated with insulin. The main source of synthetic activity and secretion is the liver, although many other tissues have been demonstrated to synthesize SMS. In the circulation, they are not present in a free form, but are mostly bound to a specific carrier protein independently synthesized in the liver. Hepatic or extrahepatic storage organs have not been demonstrated; the half life of the SMS-binding protein complex is between 3 and 4. Synthesis of SMS is regulated by GH, insulin, thyroxine and nutrition (caloric and protein intake, and nitrogen balance). The role of corticosteroids is still a matter of debate: in patients treated with steroids SMS blood levels have been shown to be within normal limits, while biological activity has been demonstrated to be significantly reduced by SMS inhibitors, probably induced by corticosteroid therapy. The biological properties of SMS are related to their structural homology with insulin, and can be summarized as follows: A. Insulin-like activity (glucose oxidation, lipogenesis, glycogen synthesis, inhibition of lipolysis and glycogenolysis); B. Sulphation activity (incorporation of sulphate and leucine into glycosaminglycans of the cartilage); C. Stimulation of fibroblast multiplication; D. Amplification of other hormone activities (GH); E. Complementary anabolic activity with insulin. Low levels of SMS have been demonstrated in hypopituitarism (secondary) or in other diseases independent of GH reduced secretion (primary) such as malnutrition, malabsorption, acute or chronic liver failure and uraemia. Negative nitrogen balance, hypocaloric and/or low protein diets are usually correlated with low levels of SMS. Recently, Schalch et al. reported on the role of orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) in normalizing SMS blood levels in a group of end-stage liver diseased patients. This preliminary paper deals with changes in IGF-I plasma levels (somatomedin C) in a group of patients affected by end-stage liver cirrhosis before and after OLT.
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PMID:Somatomedin C (IGF I) plasma levels after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) in end-stage cirrhotic patients. 1462 70

Semicarbazide-sensitive amine-oxidase (SSAO) is present in various human tissues and in plasma. Oxidative deamination of short-chain aliphatic amines is catalyzed by this enzyme to afford the corresponding aldehydes, ammonia and hydrogen peroxide. Methylamine and aminoacetone have been recognized to be physiological substrates for SSAO. There are several pathological states where increased serum SSAO activity have been found, such as diabetes mellitus, congestive heart failure, multiple types of cerebral infarction, uraemia, and hepatic cirrhosis. The role of SSAO in pathophysiology of diabetes has been most extensively investigated. The elevated formation of the potentially cytotoxic products of the enzyme may contribute to the endothelial injury of blood vessels, resulting in the early development of severe atherosclerosis; it may also contribute to the pathogenesis of diabetic angiopathy. It is now suggested that SSAO inhibitors may prevent the development of atherosclerosis and diabetic complications as well. Inhibitors can be conveniently subdivided into the main groups of hydrazine derivatives, arylalkylamines, propenyl- and propargylamines, oxazolidinones, and haloalkylamines. Of them, aryl(alkyl)hydrazines, and 3-halo-2-phenylallylamines are generally very strong SSAO inhibitors. Most of these inhibitors of SSAO have been originally developed for other purposes, or they are simple chemical reagents with highly reactive structural element(s); these compounds have not been able to fulfil all criteria of high potency, selectivity, and acceptable toxicity. New potent compounds with selectivity and low toxicity are needed, which may prove useful tools for understanding the roles and function of SSAO, or they may even be valuable substances for treatment of various diseases.
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PMID:Semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase: current status and perspectives. 1513 20


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