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)

From April 1987 to May 1988, right trisegmentectomy was done in 4 primary liver cancer patients under normothermic interruption of porta hepatis. This interruption lasted 22-26 minutes. Two of the 4 cases were associated with mild cirrhosis. No operative complication and mortality occurred. Two patients died of recurrence 5 and 14 months after operation. The other two patients are still alive free of tumor for 14 and 24 months. Detailed technical description and discussion with review of literature are presented.
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PMID:[Right trisegmentectomy for primary liver cancer--a report of 4 cases with review of literature]. 165 89

A 36-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of general fatigue. The physical and laboratory findings on admission revealed splenomegaly, pancytopenia, hypocoagulopathy, liver hypofunction with a hepaplastin test of 55% and ICG Rmax of 0.6 mg/kg/min. Diagnostic imaging showed a hypoechoic mass 1.5 in diameter a low density area on the CT scan and a faint tumor stain on the AAG in the posterior inferior area of the liver. On a diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma with liver cirrhosis and hypersplenism, partial hepatectomy and splenectomy were performed. The resected hepatic specimen revealed a small liver cancer of 1.9 x 1.5 x 1.3 cm with liver cirrhosis. The specimen consisted of a firm rubbery mass. Macroscopically, the tumor appeared oval and was lobulated with a thin capsule. A fibrous scar was observed in the central area. Microscopically, malignant hepatocytes showed various shapes, ranging from polygonal to spindle form, with eosinophilic granular cytoplasm and were surrounded by abundant fibrous stroma. Orcein stain, revealed that these malignant hepatocytes contained many black granules of copper-binding protein. Immunoperoxidase staining for alpha 1-antitrypsin was also positive in the malignant hepatocytes. However, within this lamellar fibrous regions, there were many cords of tumor cells in which nucleoli were absent and abortive biliary differentiation was suggested. Consequently this tumor was diagnosed as an atypical fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinoma. We think that this case is the 3rd case reported in Japan and the 2nd case in a Japanese person.
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PMID:Fibrolamellar carcinoma of the liver--a case report. 165 47

Experimental and epidemiological studies of risk factors for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC): cirrhosis, male sex, oral contraceptives, alcohol, smoking, and aflatoxins, are evaluated, with meta-analysis for oral contraceptives, alcohol, and smoking. It is likely that an initiating event and one or more promoting events interact, probably with prolonged inflammation, necrosis and regeneration, to cause cancer in several types of cirrhosis. Over 90% of HCC patients have cirrhosis, usually from hepatitis B virus. The viral post-necrotic liver is often chronically dysplastic, but other types of cirrhosis are associated with HCC if they endure long enough. The proportion of men with HCC increases as hepatitis progressors to cirrhosis and then to HCC. Meta-analyses of 3 oral contraceptive studies resulted in a risk of 2.8 for 8 years of use, but 9.9 for 8 years. Population studies do not show any concentration of HCC in countries with high pill use, so the rarity of this cancer may have biased the results. Large epidemiologic studies are needed to refine risk estimates for oral contraceptives and HCC. Alcohol abuse of 80 g/day gives a risk of about 1.65 in pooled studies, compared to a risk of 1.1 for 80 g/day. Smoking gives a risk of 1.9, but there is no evidence for a secular trend by country in proportion to dose, as is evident for lung cancer. There is good experimental evidence that aflatoxin acts as an initiator for liver cancer, but there is not practical way to judge exposure for clinical studies.
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PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma: risk factors other than HBV. 166 Mar 33

Hepatitis viruses may cause liver cancer (HCC) through an indirect mechanism inducing inflammation and cirrhosis. Only hepatitis B virus (HBV) was shown to have a direct oncogenetic potential. Hepatitis D virus (HDV) infection, superimposed on the oncogenetic background provided by chronic HBV infection, appears to provide an additional risk for HCC. Patients with florid infections from both HBV and HDV and active liver inflammation develop HCC at a significantly younger age than those infected by HBV alone or infected by hepatitis C virus (about 10 years earlier). In patients positive for serum HBV-DNA/HDV-RNA and/or IgM anti-HBc/IgM anti-HD it is mandatory to program a more frequent (thrice a year) schedule of screenings (ultrasound scan, alpha-1-phetoprotein, etc.) for prophylaxis of HCC.
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PMID:Pathobiology of chronic hepatitis virus infection and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). 166 Nov 97

During the period of 1958-1989, 356 patients with pathologically proven primary liver cancer (PLC) were determined by laparotomy to be unresectable. Of the 356 patients, 51 (14.3%) were of subclinical stage, 287 (80.6%) of moderate stage and 18 (5.1%) of late stage. The association of liver cirrhosis was present in 310 patients (87.1%). Treatment modalities in 356 patients were divided into 4 groups: hepatic artery ligation (HAL) (51), hepatic artery infusion (HAI) of chemotherapeutic agents (114), HAL + HAI (117), and HAL + HAI + radiotherapy (74). The 5-year survival rate was zero in the 4 groups in the period of 1958-1977. During 1978-1989, however, the 5-year survival rate was zero in HAL, 7.9% in HAI, 24.4% in HAL + HAI (with second look resection in 10 patients), and 36.5% in HAL + HAI + radiotherapy (with second look resection in 19). The marked improvement in survival in later period was attributable to the accurate site of hepatic artery catheter, longer infusion chemotherapy, and combination treatment, particularly second look resection in some of the patients. These results indicate that HAL + HAI + combination treatment might provide a possible prolongation of survival or even resection in some patients with original unresectable PLC.
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PMID:Hepatic artery ligation and infusion chemotherapy for unresectable primary liver cancer. 166 Dec 26

It is known that there is a close relationship between cirrhosis and liver cancer. The proliferative phenomena characterizing liver cirrhosis seem to be predisposing factors for carcinoma. In fact, they differ from the self-limiting proliferative phenomena occurring in normal liver regeneration because they are associated with: 1) an abnormal hormonal pattern; 2) an altered arrangement of hepatocytes and non-parenchymal cells within the lobule; 3) an altered production of growth factors able to modulate liver regeneration; and 4) an abnormal oncogene expression. Under such conditions many carcinogens, which require the target cell to be in a replicative phase, have the opportunity to act.
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PMID:Cell regeneration in the pathobiology of liver carcinomas. 166 95

Serum levels of alpha-1-Antitrypsin(AAT) were determined in 42 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma(HCC), 5 patients with metastatic liver cancer from stomach adenocarcinoma, 10 patients with liver cirrhosis, 10 patients with chronic hepatitis, and 66 controls by rocket immunoelectrophoresis using rabbit antiserum. The mean level of serum AAT was 225.5 +/- 73.0 mg/dl in 66 controls. The serum AAT in patients with HCC was 428.7 +/- 123.3 mg/dl, which was significantly higher than those in the controls and in patients with liver cirrhosis or chronic hepatitis(p less than 0.02). The level of AAT in metastatic liver cancer was similar to that in HCC. The positive cut-off value for elevation of serum AAT in this study was determined as above 445 mg/dl, the mean plus 3 standard deviations in the controls. Elevations of serum AAT were observed in 54.8%, 60.0%, and 10.0% of patients with HCC, metastatic liver cancer, and liver cirrhosis, respectively, while none of the patients with chronic hepatitis or the controls was positive. The serum AAT levels in 42 patients with HCC were analyzed with regard to sex, age, serum albumin, HBsAg, alpha-fetoprotein(AFP), and diameter of HCC, with no significant differences being observed between these factors and the serum AAT levels except for the diameter of the HCC. The positive rate in the HCC with a diameter of 10 cm or more was 74.1%, which was a significantly higher rate compared with 20.0% in the HCC with diameters less than 10cm. The positive rate of AFP for HCC was 61.9%, when 500 ng/ml of AFP was used as the cut-off value.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Clinical usefulness of alpha-1-antitrypsin in the diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma. 166 67

Cancer statistics in 1965 revealed that people in the eastern part of Saitama had a high risk of developing cancer of the liver. Clusters of liver cancer were also observed in 1975, though less for males than for females. In 1985, traces remained of clusters with higher death rates from liver cancer. A field survey revealed absence of correlation between geographical clustering of liver cancer and HBsAg positivity, geographical HBsAg positivity differences between sexes, and lack of correlation between geographical distribution of HBsAg positivity and death rates from liver diseases (cancer or cirrhosis). There was no geographical relationship of death rates from liver cancer to liver cirrhosis in Saitama. Statistics of the Saitama Cancer Center revealed lower averages than in the rest of Japan for the percentage of HBsAg positivity in HCC inpatients, the percentage of HCC inpatients with liver cirrhosis, and the ratio between the number of patients with HCC and those with cholangio carcinoma. A mail questionnaire revealed that farmers in the eastern part of Saitama had a strong positive association with death from liver cancer. These results suggest that HBV does not play an important role in the clustering of high death rates from liver cancer in Saitama.
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PMID:Clustering of liver cancer deaths in Saitama Prefecture, Japan. 166 99

One-hundred and thirty-three consecutive ascitic patients hospitalized in our Liver Unit were prospectively investigated, to define the accuracy of ascitic fluid analysis in identifying malignancy. Patients with extrahepatic cancer and peritoneal carcinomatosis were characterized by positive cytology and higher ascitic levels of fibronectin, lactic dehydrogenase, carcinoembryonic antigen, and total protein than both patients with uncomplicated cirrhosis and patients with cirrhosis and liver cancer. Ascitic cytology, fibronectin, and lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) were the most sensitive and specific markers of extrahepatic malignancy. In contrast, none of these markers was useful in identifying patients with primary liver cancer complicating cirrhosis. For them, the only alteration of the ascitic fluid was an elevated alpha-fetoprotein concentration. The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of ascitic alpha-fetoprotein for detecting liver cancer were 87%, 95%, and 94%, respectively. Combining cytology with the determinations of fibronectin (or LDH) and alpha-fetoprotein in ascitic fluid satisfactorily differentiated 28 of 32 cases of malignancy-related ascites, with very low incidence of false-positives (4-6%). Therefore, in view of the frequent difficulties in detecting liver cancer as a complication of cirrhosis in patients with ascites, it is advisable to determine all these three markers in the same ascitic sample.
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PMID:Utility of ascitic fluid analysis in patients with malignancy-related ascites. 169 Sep 13

A comparative study on 150 cases of alpha fetoprotein (AFP) nonproducing primary liver cancer (PLC) in subclinical and moderate stages and 133 cases of intrahepatic solid space-occupying lesion (SOL) other than PLC was undertaken. All were operated and proven by pathology. The results indicated that in the intrahepatic SOL patients with negative serum AFP the diagnosis of PLC could be established if any one of the following items was confirmed: (1) Definite evidence of liver cirrhosis; (2) Hypoecho or inhomogeneous echo sonodensity on ultrasonography plus positive serum HBsAg; (3) Positive 99mTc-PMT liver scan (4) No overfilling of SOL on blood pool scintiscan plus positive HBsAg; (5) No enhancement after injection of contrast medium on computed tomography plus positive HBsAg. The positive rates of the above items in PLC and non-PLC groups were: (1) 73.2% vs. 0.9%, (2) 48.1% vs. 9.6%, (3) 64.3% vs. 14.3%, (4) 27.3% vs. 3.9% and (5) 34.6% vs. 0%, respectively. Statistically, these differences were significant. In conclusion, according to the above mentioned criteria, detection rate of over 90% with over 85% specificity can be obtained for AFP negative PLC.
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PMID:[Early diagnosis of alpha fetoprotein nonproducing primary liver cancer]. 169 35


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