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)

In 9 years in Kenya, 34 examples of primary liver cancer wer diagnosed in patients in the first two decades of life. This represents 4.7% of all liver cancers during this period. The larger proportion (29) were hepatocellular carcinoma. In the second decade, there was a notable association with macronodular cirrhosis. Analogy with experimental work suggests that cells in mitotic cycle may be more vulnerable to the effect of environmental carcinogens. Five examples of hepatoblastoma were identified at ages from 2 months to 14 years; none showed the features of "mixed" tumours. The ratio of hepatoblastoma to hepatocellular carcinoma was the reverse of that found in other large series of juvenile hepatic tumours. The histopathological features of these tumours are described and problems of their classification are discussed.
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PMID:Primary cancer of the liver in Kenyan children. 20 98

The occurrence of leiomyosarcoma was demonstrated in a tissue cylinder obtained by liver biopsy in a 68-year-old woman with unclear hepatomegaly. The patient died 8 months after she had experienced first signs of illness. Autopsy revealed a primary leiomyosarcoma of the liver with metastases in the lungs, bilaterally in the pleura, in the kidneys, and in the periportal and spleno-pancreatic lymph nodes. The occurrence of a primary tumour in the urogenital system or in the gastrointestinal-tract could be excluded. The diagnosis of leiomyosarcoma was based on the microscopical demonstration of smooth muscle fibres with enlarged red-like and partially atypical cell nuclei and atypical mitoses. Furthermore, we observed extensive necroses and haemorrhagia in the tumour tissue. Preexisting tumours of the liver as, e.g., teratoma or hepatoblastoma were not found. No cirrhosis of the liver could be detected. Obviously, the leiomyosarcoma had its origin in the smooth muscle fibres of the liver vascular system.--According to the literature primary leiomyosarcomas in the liver are only rarely found.
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PMID:[Primary leiomyosarcoma of the liver (author's transl)]. 71 54

Two instances of hepatoblastoma in adults are reported, with one case representing a purely epithelial, the other a mixed epithelio-mesenchymal variant. The purely epithelial tumour, consisting entirely of so-called fetal elements, was present in the liver of a 35-year-old woman without any other hepatic changes, whereas the mixed tumour developed in the coarsely nodular liver of a 73-year-old man with a currently inactive cirrhosis. Besides the epithelial component, this case held predominantly indifferent spindle-shaped and histiocytic mesenchymal cells which frequently gave rise to osteoid and to bony trabeculae, and on occasion also to vascular structures, biliary ducts and even to groups of hepatocytes. The cytological and histological picture of both cases is comparable even in its details to that seen in the hepatoblastomas of early childhood. This concordance should be insisted upon as a diagnostic pre-condition if a mixed tumour in the adult, consisting of several components, is to be accepted as a hepatoblastoma. This similarity also enables us to recognize the purely epithelial variant of the hepatoblastoma in the older patient as belonging to this tumour category, and to separate it from other hepatic carcinomas. It is suggested that in these tumours the pluripotent cells, or the cells that have again become pluripotent, are derived from differentiated hepatocytes; no evidence in favour of the existence of a particular cellular subpopulation or of "stem cells" has been found.
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PMID:Epithelial and mixed hepatoblastoma in the adult. Histological observations and general considerations. 131 55

The immunohistochemical detection of the c-erbB-2 oncopeptide (p185erbB2) has been shown to be a valid marker for over-expression of this oncogene. To evaluate the possible relevance of gene expression to the proliferation of hepatocytes and bile ducts in human disease, the authors applied a monoclonal anti-p185 antibody to formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues from 67 examples of benign proliferative and neoplastic hepatic lesions and fetal liver. Focal membrane-based reactivity for the oncopeptide was detected on tumor cells in two of eight hepatocellular carcinomas and on tumor cells and adjacent bile ducts and hepatocytes in four of six cholangiocarcinomas. Each of the latter four lesions were in patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis. No reactivity was obtained in examples of hepatoblastoma, mixed cholangiocarcinoma-hepatocellular carcinoma, bile duct adenoma, or hepatocellular adenoma. Weak staining for p185erbB2 also was seen in two of seven cases of (sub)massive hepatic necrosis and two examples of postnecrotic cirrhosis, all of which were secondary to either hepatitis B or C virus infection. No other benign proliferative lesions were labeled by the anti-p185 antibody, including cases of chronic allograft rejection, necrosis secondary to hepatic artery thrombosis, metabolic-associated and nonmetabolic-associated cirrhosis, focal nodular hyperplasia, and nodular regenerative hyperplasia. The authors' results indicate that c-erbB-2 may be amplified in specific neoplastic and hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus infectious lesions of liver. The authors postulate that: (1) c-erbB-2 immunoreactivity may be a marker for malignant transformation in primary sclerosing cholangitis; and 2) overproduction of p185erbB2 may be an epiphenomenon of hepatitis B virus or hepatitis C virus infection.
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PMID:Immunoreactivity for c-erbB-2 oncopeptide in benign and malignant diseases of the liver. 137 19

Primary tumors of the liver that are of clinical significance are rare. Ninety-five percent of such lesions when encountered will be malignant and only 5% will be benign. Malignant primary hepatic lesions represent 2% to 3% of primary cancers encountered in the United States. Hepatocellular carcinoma constitutes 90% of malignant liver primaries in the adult. Seventy-five percent of cases are associated with cirrhosis of the liver and patients with hepatitis B infection have a 33- to 200-fold excess risk for this malignancy. Cholangiocarcinoma represents 5% to 10% of hepatic primary malignancies while hepatoblastoma is distinctly uncommon in adults. Treatment is primarily surgical, and resectability is limited by the presence of cirrhosis and spread of the tumor within and outside of the liver. Of the benign liver tumors, the liver cell adenoma seem to be associated with oral contraception and have a proclivity for intraperitoneal hemorrhage, especially during pregnancy. Focal nodular hyperplasia is a tumor-like condition that also may be associated with oral contraception. This article describes five cases, two of which had quite unique presentations.
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PMID:Primary tumors of the liver. 160 11

Determination of p21, a product of Ha-ras oncogene, and HBsAg in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and liver cirrhosis etc. was carried out with ABC method. The results showed that HCC tissues exhibited enhancement of p21 expression with a positive rate of 72.4%, which was obviously higher than the expression of p21 in tissues from liver cirrhosis, chronic hepatitis and hepatoblastoma. The p21 positive rate of regenerative cirrhosis nodules close to the HCC was 87.2%. The p21 expression level in HBsAg positive regenerative nodules of cirrhosis close to the HCC was significantly high, and its positive rate reached 93.9%. The expression level of p21 protein in well-differentiated HCC was higher than that of poorly differentiated and undifferentiated HCC. Therefore, the result suggests that the expression level of p21 in liver cirrhosis is related to persistent infection of HBV. The elevated expression of p21 plays an important role in the development of regenerative nodules in liver cirrhosis towards HCC, and it is also an important factor in the early stage of HCC development.
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PMID:[Expression of p21 in hepatocellular carcinoma and liver cirrhosis and its relation with HBV infection]. 165 96

Of about 56000 autopsies carried out in Venice (between 1906 and 1988) there is a frequency 1.15% of hepatic primary carcinoma. In the pre-1946 period, the frequency is 0.59%, whereas in the post-1946 period it rises to 1.88%. There is a marked increase of cirrhosis related carcinoma, most notably in women. The main risk factors would appear to be alcohol and HBV. In the same period, there were 3 cases of hepatoblastoma (0.005%) and one case of hepatocellular carcinoma in early infancy.
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PMID:[On the frequency of primary hepatic carcinoma in the sector of Venice from 1906 to 1988]. 165 75

After reviewing collection techniques and the cytology of normal and reactive hepatocytes, a systematic approach to the evaluation of fine-needle aspiration biopsy smears of hepatic mass lesions is presented. One of the main problems facing the cytopathologist is the differentiation of cirrhosis from well-differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma. Smears from patients with cirrhosis often contain clusters of bile duct epithelial cells and chronic inflammatory cells, while properly sampled hepatocellular carcinoma smears should contain no bile duct epithelial cells and few inflammatory cells. Key criteria which favor the diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma over cirrhosis are: increased nuclear to cytoplasmic ratio, trabecular pattern, and atypical naked hepatocytic nuclei. Key criteria which favor the diagnosis of primary hepatocellular carcinoma over metastatic disease include polygonal cells with centrally placed nuclei, cells separated by sinusoidal capillaries, and bile. This systematic approach to the evaluation of hepatic fine-needle aspiration biopsies must be used with the realization that other uncommon mass lesions of the liver do exist (focal nodular hyperplasia, adenoma, hepatoblastoma, bile duct carcinoma, vascular tumors, mesenchymal tumors, and lymphomas).
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PMID:An approach to fine-needle aspiration biopsy diagnosis of hepatic masses. 206 78

Congenital defects and other disorders have been reported in association with malignant liver tumours. In order to assess their significance, a population-based survey was undertaken on children aged less than 15 years diagnosed with malignant liver tumours during the 30 years 1957-1986. The cases were identified from information collected by the West Midlands Regional Children's Tumour Registry. Pertinent data were extracted from their clinical records, and the original biopsy and any necropsy material were reviewed by a panel of three paediatric pathologists. Of the 50 eligible cases registered, eight were excluded because histology review showed that they had non-malignant conditions (3) or malignancies of extrahepatic origin (4) or because no pathological material was available (1). The diagnoses in the remaining 42 cases were hepatoblastoma (27), hepatocellular carcinoma (3), rhabdomyosarcoma (6), rhabdoid tumour (3) and yolk sac tumour (3). The incidence of primary malignant liver tumours was 1.20 per 10(6) person years and that of the hepatoblastoma sub-group was 0.77 (average childhood population of the West Midlands for the time period being 1,166,500). The presenting clinical, radiological and biochemical features were similar to those reported in other series and the ethnic and social class distributions were unremarkable compared with the local population. Congenital defects or other possibly related features were present in nine (21%) patients. Our results, taken with other reports, suggest that hepatoblastoma is a malignant tumour related to maldevelopment, possibly associated with 11p or 5q mutations, whereas hepatocellular carcinoma is more usually a complication of metabolic and other disorders which lead to cirrhosis.
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PMID:Malignant hepatic tumours in children: incidence, clinical features and aetiology. 237 47

During the years 1976 through 1985, 55 cases of primary malignant tumor of liver in infants and children were treated. Of the 55, 30 were histologically proved to have hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), and ten to have hepatoblastoma (HB). HCC was diagnosed in another 14 children based on clinical findings. There was one case of liposarcoma. Distinguishing features of primary malignant tumor of the liver of children in Taiwan include: (1) a significantly greater number of HCC than HB (4.4:1); (2) a 100% (25/25) positive rate of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) with family clustering for HCC; (3) 71% of the HCC patients also suffered from liver cirrhosis; (4) male preponderance in incidence of HCC. All of these results strongly supported the idea that vertical transmission of hepatitis B virus infection from the mother plays an important role in the development of HCC in this area. A 60% resectable rate and 40% survival rate were observed in HB, but for HCC, the resectability was less than 10%. Only two children were cured of HCC. Among those without tumor resection, all, except two, children died within 1 year. No difference in survival time was observed between those who had chemotherapy and those who did not. Early diagnosis and complete excision of the tumor remains the only way to long-term survival. Monitoring of alpha-fetoprotein in high-risk children, followed by more intensive investigation for those with elevation, is mandatory for early detection of the tumor.
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PMID:Primary malignant tumor of liver in infants and children in Taiwan. 283 62


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