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)

The earliest and most reproduceable lesion associated with chronic alcohol abuse is fatty liver. In some alcoholics this may be superseded by alcoholic hepatitis, which may represent the link between the early lesion and cirrhosis. Alcoholic cirrhosis usually begins as a regular, monolobular variety, but is eventually transformed into an irregular, multilobular type. All stages of alcoholic liver injury have now been produced in the baboon, despite high protein and vitamin supplemented diets. Alcohol may therefore now be regarded as a direct hepatotoxin. Epidemiological studies have indicated that alcoholic liver injury begins with an intake of more than 80 g ethanol a day, and that cirrhosis is generally not seen with an intake of less than 160 g per day. The development of cirrhosis correlates with the total duration and amount of alcohol ingested. Complications of alcoholic cirrhosis include iron overload and primary hepatic carcinoma.
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PMID:Relation of alcoholic liver injury to cirrhosis. 4 93

Chronic liver disease developing after acute hepatitis type B is well documented, but is not thought to occur after acute hepatitis due to other viruses. However, follow-up of 29 patients in a haemodialysis unit who contracted HBsAg-negative acute hepatitis during 1968-70 revealed 8 cases with raised serum-aminotransferase levels dating from that time. Liver biopsy in 7 of these disclosed chronic aggressive hepatitis in 3, of whom 2 had already progressed to advanced cirrhosis. Chronic persistent hepatitis was present in 2 others, and the remaining 2 had non-specific hepatitis in association with massive iron overload. Immunological studies demonstrated a higher frequency of cellular immunity to HBsAg in those who had previously had acute hepatitis than in those who had not, although the prevalence of humoral antibody was similar in the two groups. One possible explanation for these findings is the presence of immunological cross-reaction at a cellular level between the hepatitis B virus and that responsible for the initial outbreak.
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PMID:Chronic liver disease developing after outbreak of HBsAG-negative hepatitis in haemodialysis unit. 5 71

A 71-year-old woman showed a highly unusual pattern of iron distribution in the organism which was associated with iron overload. The hallmark of this disease was an extreme hypersiderinemia, the serum iron reaching about 800 mug/100 ml. There was a pigment cirrhosis of the liver, bronzed skin containing hemosiderin, and diabetes mellitus. Paradoxically, hemosiderin was not detectable in bone marrow macrophages, sideroblasts and erythrocytes were reduced, and there was a decrease in radioiron utilization of erythropoiesis, thus indicating insufficient iron supply. The pathogenesis of this disorder based on the formation of an autoantibody with specificity for transferrin thus producing a circulating immune complex which bound the majority of serum iron. Immunosuppression achieved a partial remission including a recovery of the patient's general state, a rise in free transferrin, a decrease in serum iron, disappearance of hemosiderin in the liver, and a rise in erythrocyte production.
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PMID:Transferrin-immune complex disease. 13 71

Most series in Africa show a high percentage of hepatitis B surface antigen in hepatocellular carcinoma. Two groups of cases were investigated in this study. The one was derived from the autopsy material at Baragwanath hospital from subjects who had lived in Soweto, a large Black urban town. The second group consisted of male Black mineworkers generally originating from rural areas. A combination of the aldehydefuchsin stain and immunoperoxidase technique was used. The two groups showed totally different results. The Baragwanath series consisted of 24 hepatocellular carcinomas of which only 4 (17%) were HBsAg positive. Of the 24 cases, 14 had cirrhosis of which 9 were macronodular and 5 micronodular. Ten of these cases showed heavy iron overload. The series of male Black mineworkers comprised 22 cases of which 16 (72%) were HBsAg positive. Twelve of the 22 cases showed a macronodular cirrhosis and there were no micronodular cirrhoses. Only one case showed severe iron overload. These findings delineate two different populations of hepatocellular carcinoma in Southern Africa.
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PMID:Hepatitis B surface antigen and hepatocellular carcinoma in Southern Africa. 23 51

Over the last 17 years there has been a significant reduction in the prevalence and severity of dietary iron overload in urban blacks of Johannesburg. This is attributed to a decrease in the consumption of traditionally brewed beer of high iron content over this period. A 40% reduction was found in hepatic iron concentrations measured in necropsy specimens from 248 male patients who died in 1976 as compared with 220 who died in 1959 and 1960. While hepatic iron concentrations rose with age in both groups there was no evidence of iron accumulation during the period between the two studies. Hepatic iron concentrations measured in 345 female subjects were many fold less than those of males and the 1976 group did not differ significantly from the 1959 to 1960 group. A paradoxical increase in the prevalence of portal fibrosis and cirrhosis was seen and may be due to the effects of increased ingestion of spirits and fortified wine in recent years. Iron overload was significantly greater in males with carcinoma of the esophagus and in those with idiopathic heart failure when compared to subjects who died of other causes. This suggests excessive exposure of these subjects to traditionally brewed beverages and the adulterants present in them.
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PMID:Changing patterns of dietary iron overload in black South Africans. 44 90

Chronic arthritis was the only symptom that led to the detection of increased iron stores in four patients. In these persons, the serum iron was ordered at the time of initial examination, and ranged from 212 to 237 microgram/dl with a transferrin saturation of 83% to 100%. Liver biopsy specimens showed hepatocyte iron deposition in each person, with definite cirrhosis in only one patient. These cases illustrate that a chronic arthropathy may be the first clinical manifestation of iron overload, and can lead to discovery of the disease in patients and their family members. Treatment may then be initiated before extensive tissue damage has occurred.
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PMID:Arthropathy as the major clinical indicator of occult iron storage disease. 57 39

A patient with no underlying hematologic or iron metabolic disorder developed iron induced hepatic cirrhosis as a consequence of long term medicinal iron ingestion. Marked improvement in liver histology followed removal of 28 grams of iron by phlebotomy. Radioautographic studies in rats showed a periportal hepatocyte concentration of radioiron absorbed from the intestine while plasma transferrin was saturated. Based on these and other observations an hypothesis is proposed to explain liver damage in disorders of iron overload.
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PMID:Medicinal iron-induced hepatic cirrhosis: reversal by phlebotomy: studies on pathogenesis. 61 15

Deferoxamine-chelatable iron was measured in 103 patients with known or suspected iron overload. All of 34 patients with untreated hemochromatosis had distinctly elevated values for deferoxamine-chelatable iron. The mean value in these cases was significantly greater than that in patients with cirrhosis, who had little or no stainable hepatic iron. In 15 patients with hemochromatosis who were tested sequentially during the course of phlebotomy therapy, deferoxamine-chelatable iron proved a reliable index of the degree of reduction of storage iron. In 22 additional patients with partially treated hemochromatosis and 14 with iron overload accompanying chronic anemia, this test correlated well with the magnitude of iron deposits in liver or bone marrow. In patients with unexplained elevations of serum iron, normal or only slightly elevated deferoxamine-chelatable iron correctly indicated that storage (hepatic) iron was not excessive. The test was more reliable than determination of serum iron or transferrin saturation as an indicator of increased storage iron. Elevated values could not be attributed to disturbed liver function. Determination of deferoxamine-chelatable iron is a safe, practical, and useful procedure for identifying persons with increased iron stores and for assessing the effect of phlebotomy therapy.
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PMID:Deferoxamine-chelatable iron in hemochromatosis and other disorders of iron overload. 62 26

The value of tests for the detection of body iron overload was investigated in 8 patients with clinically manifest primary hemochromatosis, 12 patients with cirrhosis and iron overload and 20 patients with liver disease and low or normal iron stores. Iron overload was defined as the presence of stainable iron in more than 50% of hepatocytes in a liver biopsy specimen. The percentages of patients with a true-positive (abnormal) or true-negative (normal) result were: serum iron concentration 65%, transferin saturation 85%, serum ferritin concentration 78%, serum ferritin:serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT) index 78%, percent iron absorption 58%, percent iron absorption in relation to serum ferritin concentration 80% and percent iron absorption in relation to serum ferritin:SGOT index 93%. The calculated predictive value of a normal test result for the exclusion of iron overload in patients with liver disease, a group with an assumed prevalence of iron overload of 10%, was 98% to 99% for transferrin saturation and serum ferritin concentration used alone and 100% for these measures used together; the predictive value of an abnormal result for the diagnosis of iron overload was less than 50% for all of the above measures used alone or in combination. Hence, in patients with an increased serum ferritin concentration or transferrin saturation, or both, determination of the hepatocellular iron content of a specimen from a percutaneous liver biopsy is required for the diagnosis of iron overload.
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PMID:Diagnostic efficacy of tests for the detection of iron overload in chronic liver disease. 67 27

Liver function and the presence of HBsAg and anti-HBsAg were studied in 90 hypertransfused thalassaemic children. Increased serum transaminases were found in 62 patients, and persisted from more than 6 months in 45 cases. Liver biopsy in this latter group led to a diagnosis of 14 cases of chronic persistent hepatitis, 9 cases of aggressive hepatitis, and 3 cases of hepatic fibrosis. In Italy thalassaemic children undergoing hypertransfusion therapy frequently encounter SH virus infection, with a consequent hepatitis that is generally anicteric and unrecognized unless systematically sought. In a liver already stressed by the concomitant iron overload, hepatitis infection might thus play a key role in the evolution of cirrhosis which frequently affects thalassaemics.
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PMID:Role of chronic hepatitis in development of thalassaemic liver disease. 79 38


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