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)

A survey of the 52 vital statistics registration areas in the United States revealed that at least 23 did not fulfill the minimum cause-of-death query guidelines recommended by the National Center for Health Statistics. The Oregon Center for Health Statistics is one of only a few that query certifying physicians at a comprehensive level. During August 1986-July 1987, a total of 2,453 of 23,238 death certificates were returned to the certifiers for additional information, not including those returned in a tobacco use study. More than one-half (56.1 per cent) resulted in new and more specific underlying cause-of-death data. Only 5.2 per cent of the queries were unanswered. One probable result of Oregon's program is that the state has the highest percentage of liver cirrhosis and disease deaths attributed to alcohol abuse in the United States. Nationally, 41.7 per cent of all liver disease and cirrhosis deaths in 1984 were listed as due to alcohol compared to 82.4 per cent in Oregon. The state's total liver cirrhosis and disease death rate (12.0 per 100,000 population) is only marginally higher than the United States rate (11.6). The query program also serves to locate maternal deaths that would otherwise not be reported, as well as to provide more accurate cause-of-death statistics in general.
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PMID:Survey of cause-of-death query criteria used by state vital statistics programs in the US and the efficacy of the criteria used by the Oregon Vital Statistics Program. 270 89

Renal and hepatic samples were obtained from 121 forensic autopsies. In 64% of 107 individuals with evidence of alcohol abuse (AA), mesangial changes of mild cellular increase, deposits of IgA and IgM, and electron-dense deposits were found, with significantly higher incidence than seen in 14 controls. This mesangial glomerulonephritis (mesGN) was not limited to subjects with cirrhosis but was also observed in individuals with noncirrhotic alcoholic liver disease. Therefore, AA could be relevant in a larger number of mesGN patients than formerly suspected. When cases were separated by ethnicity, the incidence and severity of alcoholic liver disease were found to be essentially the same in American Indians, Hispanics, and Anglos. At the same time, mesGN in individuals with evidence of AA was more frequent in American Indians (87%) than in Caucasians (47%) (P less than 0.0001), with no statistically significant differences between Hispanics and Anglos. The possibility of ethnic influences on the predisposition to alcohol abuse-related mesGN is raised, although the importance of different patterns of alcohol ingestion cannot be ruled out.
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PMID:Frequent association of mesangial glomerulonephritis and alcohol abuse: a study of 3 ethnic groups. 272 26

The relation between veteran status and 15 indicators of alcohol consumption and problem drinking is examined using data from the 1977, 1983, and 1985 National Health Interview Surveys conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics. After simultaneous adjustment for age, region of the US, urbanization, ethnicity, marital status, education, and income, a greater proportion of White male veterans than White male nonveterans were heavy drinkers and a smaller proportion were abstainers. This association appeared in all three survey years; further, veterans consistently reported a high daily consumption level (the equivalent of approximately six bottles of beer, five glasses of wine, or four mixed drinks) compared to nonveterans. Among White male veterans, 6.9 percent reported family or marital problems and 13.9 percent reported motor vehicle crashes or violations compared to 4.4 percent and 8.9 percent, respectively, among nonveterans. The same pattern was observed for lifetime prevalences of alcoholism (veterans have nearly two and a half times the lifetime prevalence of nonveterans), cirrhosis of the liver, and unspecified alcohol-related problems.
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PMID:Alcohol consumption and problem drinking in white male veterans and nonveterans. 275 Oct 15

In 110 consecutive, medicolegal autopsies of young and middle-aged women (range 20-54 years) the breasts were examined by an extensive histopathologic method and by correlative specimen radiography. Malignancy was found in 22 women (20%) of which only one was known to have had clinical invasive breast cancer (IBC). At autopsy 2 women had IBC (2%), the remaining in situ carcinoma (in situ BC) of microfocal type (18%), i.e. 15 (14%) intraductal carcinomas (DCIS), 4 (3%) lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS) and one (1%) both DCIS and LCIS. Forty-five per cent of the women with malignancy had multicentric and 41% had bilateral lesions. Forty-five per cent of all histologically confirmed malignant lesions were identified by specimen radiography. Adenosis, benign epithelial hyperplasia, papilloma and duct ectasia were positively associated with malignancy. In addition malignancy was significantly more frequent among women aged more than 40 years, with late age at first full-term pregnancy, with alcohol abuse and with steatosis or cirrhosis of the liver. The results suggest that clinically occult in situ BC are frequent in young and middle-aged women.
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PMID:Breast cancer and atypia among young and middle-aged women: a study of 110 medicolegal autopsies. 282 56

To investigate risk factors for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in Italy--a country with medium (south: 5% to 10%) to low (north: 1% to 2%) incidence of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection--we studied 646 consecutive patients: 58 chronic active hepatitis (CAH), 428 cirrhosis, and 160 HCC, 49% from Southern and 51% from Northern Italy. Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) was positive in 41.4% of the CAH, in 23.1% of cirrhotic patients, and in 26.2% of HCC. In the latter, HBV DNA assay increased the number of subjects with active HBV infection by about 12%. Alcohol abuse was evenly distributed in all three categories of HBV markers. Males were preferentially affected. The HCC was superimposed on cirrhosis in more than 90% of patients. Our data suggest that, in our epidemiologic setting, different factors (HBV, non-A, non-B agents, alcohol) may cooperate in the development of HCC, mainly through their potential for causing cirrhosis.
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PMID:Risk factors for hepatocellular carcinoma in Italy. Male sex, hepatitis B virus, non-A non-B infection, and alcohol. 283 86

The frequency of liver cell carcinomas (n = 249) in autopsies of adults (n = 36,074) from 1960 to 1981 was 0.69%; in males (n = 19,124) 1% (n = 192) and in females (n = 17,950) 0.34% (n = 57). The development of liver cell carcinoma was associated with cirrhosis of the liver in 87% of the cases (89% in males and 70% in females). The relative frequency of liver cell carcinoma in autopsies is increasing: 1960 to 1966 0.5%, 1967 to 1973 0.89%, 1974 to 1981 1.4%. This increase is mainly the result of the development of carcinoma after cirrhosis in males: 1960 to 1966 0.49%, 1967 to 1973 0.86% and 1974 to 1981 1.2%. Cirrhosis of the liver from 1974 to 1981 showed a continuous increase in the relative frequency and an age-shift towards younger age groups in males. Throughout the study period a history of alcohol abuse was frequently given in the patients history.
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PMID:[The frequency of hepatocellular carcinoma in autopsy material]. 284 34

The 1916 painters and the 1948 electricians who resided in the Canton of Geneva at the time of the 1970 census were identified and followed up to 1984. During the study period 121 disability pensions were awarded to painters and 59 to electricians. Age standardised incidence of disability per 1000 man-years at risk was higher among painters than among electricians for all neuropsychiatric causes (1.23/1000 and 0.68/1000, respectively) and for all other causes (5.50/1000 and 3.41/1000, respectively). No case of presenile dementia was diagnosed among painters. There was inadequate evidence to indicate that the higher risk of neuropsychiatric disability for painters might have been due to their occupational exposure to organic solvents. A possible toxic effect of these substances on the central nervous system was confounded with alcoholism which was associated with disability from neuropsychiatric disease in 12 of 20 painters and in only one of 10 electricians. Mortality and incidence of cancer were assessed among both cohorts and compared with the expected figures calculated from Geneva rates. Among painters there was a significant increase in overall mortality (O = 254, E = 218.5), in mortality from all cancers (O = 96, E = 75.4), and in incidence from all cancers (O = 159, E = 132.0). For the specific cancer sites, there was a significant excess risk for lung cancer (mortality: O = 40, E = 23.0), which was possibly related to occupational exposure to asbestos and to zinc chromate, although cigarette smoking was not controlled. The significant excesses of biliary tract cancer and of bladder cancer were in accordance with previous observations among painters from other countries. There was also a significant increase in incidence from testicular cancer (O=5, E=1.6), which has not been reported before. For causes of death other than cancer the excesses for alcoholism (O=5, E=0.8). for liver cirrhosis (O=14, E=8.8), for motor vehicle accidents (O=12, E=5.9), and for cerebrovascular disease when allowing for ten years of latency (O=8, E=4.0), were consistent with a probable increased risk of alcohol abuse. Among electricians overall mortality was similar to that expected (O=137, E=139.0). No significant excess risk was found for all cancers or for any specific cancer site. Because of the small number of expected deaths the statistical power was low for the assessment of a possible risk for leukaemia or for brain tumour.
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PMID:Disability, mortality, and incidence of cancer among Geneva painters and electricians: a historical prospective study. 292 Jan 39

The content of metallothionein (MT) was determined in the livers (MT-L) and the kidneys (MT-K) of 145 deceased persons. The individual values showed marked variations; average levels (arithmetic means +/- S.D.) were 154.9 +/- 151.4 mg/kg liver wet wt. and 160.5 +/- 150.4 mg/kg total kidney wet wt. In contrast to MT-L, MT-K increased with age up to a maximum around mid-life and decreased at higher ages. Neither the MT-L nor the MT-K depend on sex. The MT content significantly correlates with the macroscopic and histopathologic status of the liver. As compared to normal tissue, livers with fatty degeneration, cirrhosis and brown atrophy show MT-L values of 40%, 25% and 233% respectively. Low MT-L of 40% of the control values are also observed in individuals with a history of alcohol abuse. This decline preceded visible macroscopic pathological findings. MT-L also responds to the cause of death. At suicidal overdose of drugs the MT-L is lowered to 62% and at "mechanical" suicides it is increased to 137%. Whereas MT-K is essentially independent of the kidney status, it is significantly increased to approximately 190% in male smokers.
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PMID:Metallothionein in human liver and kidney: relationship to age, sex, diseases and tobacco and alcohol use. 298 Aug 22

Serum levels of estrogens and testosterone were measured in 25 male patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and associated cirrhosis of the liver and in another 25 male patients with cirrhosis only. The two groups were statistically comparable in terms of age distribution, duration of liver disease, incidence of alcohol abuse, incidence of hepatitis B surface antigenemia, and grade of hepatic dysfunction. Estrone was significantly elevated in both groups of patients. Estradiol concentrations were above normal in 10 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and in 11 with cirrhosis only. All patients had normal concentrations of estriol. There were no statistical differences between the two groups in either individual or total estrogen levels (estrone 0.05 less than p less than 0.1). Eight of the patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and 5 of the cirrhotics had lower testosterone levels than normal, but this difference was not significant. However, the estrone to testosterone ratios were significantly higher in the hepatocellular carcinoma group than in the cirrhosis group (p less than 0.05). The present study seems to indicate that hyperestrogenemia commonly seen in male patients with liver cirrhosis may play some role in hepatic carcinogenesis of cirrhotic livers. Further studies are needed to determine if the estrone to testosterone ratio is implicated in hepatocarcinogenesis in cirrhotic men.
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PMID:Serum levels of estrogens and testosterone in cirrhotic men with and without hepatocellular carcinoma. 298 53

Hepatocellular carcinoma has a lower prevalence and presents at a later age in urban Blacks than in rural Blacks. These differences have previously been shown not to be attributable to differences in serum hepatitis B virus markers. In the present study, the average age of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma in a developing urban Black population is shown to have risen from 38.9 to 56.5 years (p less than 0.0001) over a 20-year interval, while the prevalence of co-existing cirrhosis has declined from 66 to 44% (p less than 0.05) and tissue HBsAg positivity has fallen from 44 to 17.7% (p = 0.002). The lower prevalence of tissue HBsAg in the recent patients may be explained by their older age. Macronodular cirrhosis was present in 56% of cases in the earlier period but declined to 18.9% in the later period, with micronodular cirrhosis becoming the dominant nontumor pathology (p = 0.002). Liver damage attributable to the abuse of alcohol is now found in more than half of the cases (48/90) of hepatocellular carcinoma occurring in this population. The remainder show no changes (12 cases) or show macronodular or incomplete septal cirrhosis (30 cases), presumed to be of viral origin. The latter cases are more likely to have serum markers of current hepatitis B virus infection than those with evidence of alcohol abuse. We conclude that alcohol is increasing in importance as an etiologic association of hepatocellular carcinoma in urban South African Blacks. At the same time, the prevalence of macronodular cirrhosis (and of cirrhosis as a whole) in urban patients with this tumor has declined. The reason for this decline is not known.
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PMID:Liver morphology in southern African blacks with hepatocellular carcinoma: a study within the urban environment. 298 64


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