Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Evidence exists that alcohol abuse frequently coexists with narcotic
addiction
and methadone maintenance treatment, and it is the major factor in the development of
cirrhosis
and liver failure. This study of patients hospitalized for alcohol detoxification compares the quantity of alcohol consumed by alcohol abusers, addicted to narcotics or in a methadone maintenance treatment program, to that consumed by patients not involved with narcotic
addiction
. Mean daily alcohol consumption was not significantly different in either group using narcotics, including methadone, or in the subgroup of methadone maintenance patients, from the amount consumed by nonnarcotic abusers. Determination of temporal sequence in the use of these substances revealed that in 68% regular alcohol abuse preceded narcotic use. Alcohol abuse reportedly began after entering a methadone maintenance treatment program in 29% of our patients. Alcohol abusers who were in a methadone maintenance treatment program were significantly younger than those who did not use narcotics, including methadone. Time interval according to the patients' estimates, from onset of regular alcohol consumption to heavy drinking, was not significantly different in the two groups.
...
PMID:Quantitative and temporal relationships of alcohol use in narcotic addicts and methadone maintenance patients undergoing alcohol detoxification. 74 73
Fifty charts of patients discharged with a diagnosis of liver disease from the acute care service of a hospital for the treatment of
addiction
were analyzed. Among 42 active heroin users or former heroin addicts maintained on methadone, 79% were heavy alcohol abusers. Seventeen cases of
cirrhosis
were encountered. All occurred in those abusing alcohol. Reversible liver disease was seen in both alcohol abusers and nonalcoholics. This study suggests that alcohol is a major factor in the development of irreversible liver disease in active heroin addicts and ex-addicts on methadone maintenance.
...
PMID:The spectrum and causes of liver diseases in narcotic addicts. 87 47
To define the prevalence of Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) infection in patients with chronic hepatitis or
cirrhosis
of any aetiology, we tested a group of 372 consecutive subjects with biopsy-proven chronic liver disease (CLD) for anti-HCV antibodies, excluding active drug-addicts and alcoholics. Our results show that in Southern Italy HCV infection is widespread among subjects with cryptogenic chronic liver disease, as well as in liver diseases with features of autoimmunity (71.7% and 66.7% anti-HCV positive, respectively). Anti-HCV is infrequent among non drug-addicted HBsAg positive subjects (4.7%), and bears no relation to hepatitis D superinfection. Subjects with CLD and a history of parenteral exposure are almost always anti-HCV positive (89.2%). Patients with HBV-related CLD and previous drug-addicts are on the average younger than other disease groups, irrespective of their HCV status. Among subjects whose CLD is related to parenteral exposure, cryptogenic or autoimmune no increase in the rate of anti-HCV positivity seems to bear a parallel relationship to age. No known risk factor for parenteral transmission, other than use of blood or blood products and previous drug-
addiction
, can be clearly related to HCV infection. No trend to familiar clustering of HCV-induced liver disease is apparent. Liver disease severity, as assessed by transaminase levels and liver histology, does not correlate to anti-HCV status.
...
PMID:Hepatitis C virus antibodies in chronic liver diseases of different aetiology. 174 13
The behaviour of drug addicts and alcoholics leads to the cooperation of risk factors concerning the development of chronic hepatitis,
liver cirrhosis
and hepatocarcinoma. The authors evaluate the prevalence of infections from B, C and Delta virus among a group of 40 intravenous drug users and 40 alcoholics affering to a territorial centre for drug dependence located in Valtellina (Italy). The prevalence of at least one serum marker of virus B, C or Delta hepatitis results to be 85% among drug addicts and 17% among alcoholics. The prevalence of Anti-HCV in alcoholics results to be much lower than found in former works. For what concerns the hepatitis B virus, 68% of the drug addicts and 10% of the alcoholics had at least one positive serum marker. The hepatitis B seronegative patients underwent vaccination with a recombinant-DNA vaccine. Those affected by chronic C hepatitis have been treated with alpha-recombinant interferon. All of the patients underwent health education, psychotherapy and drug-
addiction
therapy for a period of 8 months. These strategies in prevention and therapy aim to the reduction over the years of the incidence of chronic hepatitis
liver cirrhosis
and hepatocarcinoma among intravenous drug users and alcoholics.
...
PMID:[Prevalence of liver damage in alcoholics and drug addicts]. 176 28
This paper addresses the potentials of high risk strategy and population strategy for preventing mortality from
liver cirrhosis
, accidents and suicide. The methodological approach is based on an integration of an empirical distribution of consumption and the risk functions of the damages at issue. According to the findings, the rate of alcohol-induced mortality from the three causes combined would be halved either by a 25 per cent decrease in overall consumption or a 36 per cent decrease in the alcohol consumption of the heavy drinkers (the top 5 per cent). The high risk strategy is most efficient in preventing
cirrhosis
; however the effect of the population strategy is also quite substantial here. The comparative advantage of the population strategy is most marked in connection with accidents and suicide, but the high risk approach yields an appreciable impact in this context as well. That is, neither of the two strategies appears as clearly superior to the other in terms of efficiency. The high risk strategy thus seems to be a sensible complement to the population strategy, and should have the potential of yielding effects on the population level if implemented on a large scale.
Addiction
1995 Apr
PMID:Prevention strategies and alcohol policy. 777 14
Alcohol abuse within the medical profession has long been an issue of concern. Recently, the General Medical Council reported that half of the doctors reported for health difficulties liable to affect professional competence were found to have an alcohol problem. This paper examines how rates of alcoholism among male doctors in Scotland have changed over the last three decades. Admission and discharge rates for doctors to psychiatric inpatient beds with diagnoses of alcoholism are compared with non-medical professions, for the years 1963-87. The results, assessed in the light of changing Standardized Mortality Rates for
liver cirrhosis
for the medical profession, suggest that doctors as a group remain at a higher risk of alcoholism compared to other professionals, but that this increased risk appears to be largely accounted for by a cohort of heavy-drinking doctors over the age of 45 years.
Addiction
1994 Dec
PMID:Trends in alcoholism among male doctors in Scotland. 786 45
This paper examines the proposition that increased treatment for alcohol abuse and Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) membership can account for a large part of the recent declines in
cirrhosis
mortality and morbidity. Data on treatment and AA membership in the USA between 1979 and 1987 and in Ontario between 1975 and 1986 are used, together with estimates of
cirrhosis
risk and the likely impact of treatment and AA membership. The results show that increased treatment levels and AA membership could account for all of the reductions in
cirrhosis
deaths and hospital admissions in Ontario. In the USA all of the deaths and about 40% of the admissions could be accounted for by these factors.
Addiction
1993 Feb
PMID:Recent liver cirrhosis declines: estimates of the impact of alcohol abuse treatment and alcoholics anonymous. 822 57
We have reviewed 156 papers which provided sufficient information to relate individual alcohol consumption to risk for a variety of physical damage. Overall, there was evidence for a dose-response relationship between level of alcohol consumption and risk of harm for
liver cirrhosis
, cancers of the oropharynx, larynx, oesophagus, rectum (beer only), liver and breast, and blood pressure and stroke. An increased risk of cardiac arrhythmias, cardiomyopathy and sudden coronary death was associated with heavy drinking. There was evidence for a protective effect of alcohol consumption against risk of coronary heart disease, which could be achieved at consumption levels of less than 10 g alcohol a day. The mortality of non-drinkers was higher than that of moderate drinkers in some studies. Level of alcohol consumption and total mortality were dose-related when non-drinkers were excluded. The finding of a dose-relationship between alcohol and harm suggested causality. It was not possible to define individual risk for all harms at a given level of alcohol consumption because of variations in methodology, but some idea of the order of magnitude of the increased risk can be obtained from calculating trends of pooled log-odds ratios. At levels of alcohol consumption of more than 20-30 g a day, all individuals are likely to accumulate risk of harm. Current guidelines on upper limits of lower risk drinking in different countries (168-280 g of alcohol a week for men and 84-140 g a week for women) reflect levels at which the risk of total mortality is not greatly increased above one.
Addiction
1993 Nov
PMID:The risk of alcohol. 806 77
National Prohibition in the USA (1919-1933) was followed by an era in which medical scientists played an important role in minimizing the harmful effects of alcohol.
Cirrhosis
, cardiomyopathy, adverse fetal effects, and esophageal cancer are examples of alcohol-related health problems that were well known at the beginning of the 20th century but were dismissed during the late 1930's and early 1940's, only to be rediscovered during the 1960's and afterwards. This eclipse in knowledge occurred because of skepticism about earlier claims that had been made in the name of scientific temperance and, most importantly, because of changing standards for medical evidence. The paradigm for disease causation that gave birth to modern medicine was based on microbiology and reinforced by hormone and nutrition discoveries. Most alcohol-related health problems are poorly explained by this paradigm. The more recent epidemiologic paradigm for noninfectious disease is more applicable to the health risks associated with heavy drinking. A transformation of knowledge about alcohol's relationship to disease has occurred.
Addiction
1993 Jun
PMID:The post-repeal eclipse in knowledge about the harmful effects of alcohol. 832 65
Mortality rates were drawn from the California Occupational Mortality Study (COMS) to analyze
liver cirrhosis
deaths within occupations and industries from 1979 to 1981. Age-adjusted Standardized Mortality Rates (SMRs) were made available by the State of California for separate analyses of women, men, blacks and whites. Rankings of occupations with narrow confidence intervals were strikingly similar for blacks and whites. Within occupations, the highest female SMRs were for waitresses, telephone operators, cosmetologists, dress makers, hospital orderlies, textile workers, and laborers. The lowest female SMRs were for skilled crafts workers and teachers. High male occupations included water transportation workers, bartenders, loggers, laborers, roofers, construction workers, farm workers, iron workers, and painters. Low male occupations included teachers, physicians and dentists, managers, factory supervisors, business sales workers, heavy equipment operators, and other professionals. High female industries included eating and drinking places, laundry/dry cleaning, nursing and personal care facilities, aerospace, beauty shops, and entertainment. Low female industries included wholesale trades and education. High male industries included water transportation, military, guard services, eating and drinking places, iron and steel mills, and railroads. Low male industries included research/engineering labs, education, and computer manufacturing. This study was descriptive. It remains unknown whether certain jobs cause excessive drinking and
cirrhosis
, or whether people who are prone to develop
cirrhosis
select certain jobs.
Addiction
1993 Jun
PMID:Liver cirrhosis deaths within occupations and industries in the California occupational mortality study. 832 68
1
2
3
4
Next >>