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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
If untreated, hemochromatosis can cause serious illness and early death, but the disease is still substantially under-diagnosed. The cornerstone of screening and case detection is the measurement of serum
transferrin
saturation and the serum ferritin level. Once the diagnosis is suspected, physicians must use serum ferritin levels and hepatic iron stores on liver biopsy specimens to assess patients for the presence of iron overload. Liver biopsy is also used to establish the presence or absence of
cirrhosis
, which can affect prognosis and management. A DNA-based test for the HFE gene is commercially available, but its place in the diagnosis of hemochromatosis is still being evaluated. Currently, the most useful role for this test is in the detection of hemochromatosis in the family members of patients with a proven case of the disease. It is crucial to diagnose hemochromatosis before
hepatic cirrhosis
develops because phlebotomy therapy can avert serious chronic disease and can even lead to normal life expectancy.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of hemochromatosis. 1045 56
It is known that the regular consumption of alcohol is responsible for the disruption of normal iron metabolism in humans, resulting in the excess deposition of iron in the liver in approximately one-third of alcoholic subjects. The mechanisms involved are largely unknown; however, it is likely that the two major proteins of iron metabolism, ferritin and
transferrin
are intimately involved in the process. Tissue damage in alcoholic liver disease and the inherited iron-overload disease, haemochromatosis, are caused by excess alcohol and iron, respectively. The mechanisms of this damage are believed to be similar in both disease conditions and involve free radical-mediated toxicity. A high proportion of haemochromatosis sufferers consume excessive amounts of alcohol and synergistic hepatotoxic events may occur leading to the earlier development of
liver cirrhosis
. This review describes briefly the role of ferritin and
transferrin
in normal iron metabolism and in iron overload disease and explores the possible involvement of these proteins in the pathophysiology of excess iron deposition in alcoholic subjects.
...
PMID:Interrelationships of alcohol and iron in liver disease with particular reference to the iron-binding proteins, ferritin and transferrin. 1019 87
Chronic fatigue, arthralgia, infertility, impotence, cardiac disease, diabetes and abnormality of liver enzymes could point to the presence of haemochromatosis. A patient with one of these symptoms, a normal haemoglobin content, but an increased
transferrin
saturation and serum ferritin level most probably has a primary haemochromatosis. Most primary haemochromatoses have a genetic background. The diagnosis 'HFE-related haemochromatosis' is made when a homozygous Cys282Tyr mutation is found in the HFE-gene. However, in approximately 10% of the patients with the clinical features of primary haemochromatosis this mutation is absent. The treatment of primary haemochromatosis consists of regular phlebotomy. Liver biopsy is indicated if fibrosis,
cirrhosis
or another hepatic disease is suspected. Family screening of first-grade relatives is indicated for all patients with primary haemochromatosis.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis and treatment of primary hemochromatosis]. 1042 53
Hereditary hemochromatosis (HHC) is the most common inherited single gene disorder in people of northern European descent. Hereditary hemochromatosis is characterized by increased intestinal absorption of iron leading to its deposition into multiple organs. The classic description of HHC is bronze diabetes in a patient with
cirrhosis
. Hereditary hemochromatosis is increasingly being diagnosed at an earlier, less symptomatic stage. Diagnosis is based on an elevated fasting early morning
transferrin
saturation. Treatment is by phlebotomy, which, if initiated before the development of
cirrhosis
or diabetes, is associated with a normal life expectancy. Recently, a gene associated with HHC was discovered and named HFE. Two point mutations of this gene have been referred to as C282Y and H63D. Several US and European studies have found that 60% to 93% of patients with suspected HHC are homozygous for C282Y. Positive results of HFE gene testing may eliminate the need for a liver biopsy in selected cases. The greatest utility of HFE gene testing will likely be in screening family members of an identified proband and in helping to resolve ambiguous cases.
...
PMID:Update on hereditary hemochromatosis and the HFE gene. 1048 96
Hemochromatosis is a recessive disorder of iron metabolism characterized by progressive iron loading of parenchymal organs, which accounts for clinical complications such as
cirrhosis
, diabetes mellitus, cardiopathy, endocrine dysfunctions and arthropathy. Clinical complications, which usually develop after the third or fourth decade of life, can be fatal but may be prevented by phlebotomy if iron excess is detected at a very early stage. The hemochromatosis gene (HFE), located 4.5 megabases telomeric to the HLA-A locus, encodes an HLA class I like protein and two missense mutations, C282Y and H63D in complete disequilibrium have been identified within this gene. Due to its high frequency in the general population, the involvement of H63D in the pathogenesis of the disease remains controversial, and it might correspond to a minor mutation. Conversely, the C282Y mutation is tightly linked to the disease, as it accounts for 80 to 100% of the hemochromatosis cases in Northern Europe. The lower frequency observed, in the patients, in Italy and South of France led to imagine either the implication of other mutations or of other genes. The C282Y mutation is absent in Asia and Africa and is present in the general population with a decreasing gradient of frequency from Northern to Southern Europe. The prevalence of the disease was usually estimated to be 3% but the observed frequency of the C282Y homozygotes is 5% in our breton population raising the question of the penetrance of the disease, and consequently the use of the genotypic test for its systematic screening. As HFE encodes a membrane protein similar to HLA class I protein, its contribution to iron overload is not obvious. The normal protein is predicted to to be expressed at the cell surface in association with beta 2-microglobulin, a localization for which C282Y is critical as it disrupts this association. This protein has also been shown to form a stable complex with the transferrin receptor leading to a decreased affinity for
transferrin
. A better knowledge of its function will help to decipher iron and different metal-ions metabolism. Although the exact role of the HFE protein is unknown, the genotypic test allows the clinicians to ascertain their diagnosis and genetic counselling.
...
PMID:[Molecular genetics of hemochromatosis]. 1052 Apr 11
The discovery of the hemochromatosis gene has deeply changed and simplified the diagnosis of the disease. In a given individual, establishing the diagnosis relies, from now on, on a simple blood sample showing the couple: elevated
transferrin
saturation and homozygous C282Y mutation (= C282Y +/+). Liver biopsy should only be performed when iron overload is massive in order to detect
cirrhosis
(or bridging fibrosis), i.e. in a prognostic view. Practically, liver biopsy is confined to the following two situations: when the C282Y +/+ patient exhibits hepatomegaly and/or an increase in serum transaminases and/or a serum ferritin level above 1,000 micrograms/L; whenever, despite a strong bio-clinical suspicion of iron overload, genetic testing does not show the expected homozygosity for C282Y. At the family level, evaluating the risk for hemochromatosis is now "instantaneous" thanks to genetic testing. One must, however, keep in mind in interpreting the data of the family members that: clinical expression of the homozygous status is not constant; heterozygosity for C282Y does not per se lead to significant iron overload, but may constitute a co-factor exacerbating (or increasing the risk of) other hepatic or non hepatic diseases. Heterozygosity exposes also to the risk of homozygosity among the offspring; this knowledge of C282Y status must be balanced by the negative impact from the standpoint of possible societal genetic discrimination.
...
PMID:[The diagnosis of hemochromatosis in the era of the gene]. 1052 Apr 12
The iron content of the body is normally tightly controlled by regulation of iron absorption. In hereditary hemochromatosis, mutation of an HLA class 1 gene, designated HFE, results in excessive iron absorption. Over many years, accumulating iron produces tissue damage, most notably
cirrhosis
, cardiomyopathy, diabetes, and arthropathies. Hereditary hemochromatosis is the most common hereditary disease of Northern Europeans with a prevalence of approximately 5 per 1000. The most sensitive screening test for hemochromatosis is saturation of the
transferrin
with iron; a fasting value greater than 50% is strongly suggestive of the disease. Confirmation of increased iron storage can be achieved most readily by serial phlebotomy. We do not regard liver biopsy to be indicated, except in unusual circumstances. Early diagnosis and treatment by phlebotomy before tissue damage has occurred is essential, because life span seems to be normal in treated patients but markedly shortened in those who are not. Therefore, genetic counseling with evaluation of first-degree relatives is mandatory.
...
PMID:New developments in hereditary hemochromatosis. 1052 53
Hereditary hemochromatosis (HHC) is one of the most common inherited disorders in the Caucasian population. Diagnosis usually made after an elevation in ferritin and serum
transferrin
saturation is noted, often accompanied by asymptomatic hepatomegaly. Diagnosis is confirmed by genetic testing or liver biopsy. Damage to organs is due to excessive intestinal iron, which is transported to and then deposited in the liver parenchyma, and the heart, skin, and endocrine organs, causing skin pigmentation, development of
cirrhosis
and hepatic carcinoma, diabetes and endocrine failure, and heart failure. Bony changes can be manifested by arthritis, often in non-weight-bearing joints. The treatment of HHC is phlebotomy, which depletes iron stores. When diagnosis is made before organ damage occurs, treatment can prevent manifestations of the disease. Skin pigmentation and some cardiac damage may reverse on depletion of iron stores, but liver and endocrine damage is rarely reversible. Arthropathy is also not reversible, and often continues to progress even with effective treatment. When hemochromatosis is diagnosed, all first degree relatives of the patient should undergo genetic testing. With early detection and treatment this can be a manageable chronic disease. If undetected, it is potentially fatal.
...
PMID:Hereditary hemochromatosis: diagnosis and treatment in primary care. 1054 25
Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) may present with increased hepatic fibrosis progressing to end-stage liver disease. No factors that determine increasing fibrosis and histologically advanced disease have been recognized, thus, liver biopsy is recommended in all patients for diagnosis and prognosis. Our aim was to identify independent predictors of severe hepatic fibrosis in patients with NASH. One hundred and forty-four patients were studied. All patients underwent liver biopsy. Clinical and biochemical variables were examined with univariate and multivariate analysis. Thirty-seven (26%) patients had no abnormal fibrosis, 53 (37%) had mild fibrosis, 15 (10%) had moderate fibrosis, 14 (10%) had bridging fibrosis, and 25 (17%) had
cirrhosis
. In multivariate analysis, older age (P =. 001), obesity (P =.002), diabetes mellitus (P =.009), and aspartate transaminase/alanine transaminase (AST/ALT) ratio greater than 1 (P =.03) were significant predictors of severe liver fibrosis (bridging/
cirrhosis
). Body mass index (P =.003) was the only independent predictor of the degree of fat infiltration. Increased
transferrin
saturation correlated positively with the severity of fibrosis (P =.02) in univariate analysis, and there was a trend for more female patients among those with more advanced fibrosis (P =. 09). However, iron studies or gender were not significant when controlled for age, obesity, diabetes, and AST/ALT ratio. In conclusion, older age, obesity, and presence of diabetes mellitus help identify those NASH patients who might have severe liver fibrosis. This is the subgroup of patients with NASH who would be expected to derive the most benefit from having a liver biopsy and considering investigational therapies.
...
PMID:Independent predictors of liver fibrosis in patients with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis. 1057 11
We studied peripheral blood erythrocyte parameters and HFE genotypes in 94 hemochromatosis probands and 132 white, normal control subjects. Mean red blood cell counts in probands and control subjects were not significantly different. However, mean values of hemoglobin, hematocrit, mean corpuscular volume (MCV), mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH), and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC) were significantly higher in C282Y/C282Y probands (n = 60) than in wild-type control subjects (n = 65). Probands with other HFE genotypes also had increased mean erythrocyte parameters (other than red blood cell count). Peripheral blood smears prepared before therapeutic phlebotomy revealed that erythrocytes in many probands had increased diameters and were well filled with hemoglobin. Erythrocyte parameters were similar in C282Y/C282Y probands with and without hepatomegaly, elevated serum concentrations of hepatic enzymes,
hepatic cirrhosis
, diabetes mellitus, arthropathy, or hypogonadism. Among C282Y/C282Y probands, significantly greater values of MCV (but not other erythrocyte parameters) occurred among those who had
transferrin
saturation values of 75% or greater or iron overload at diagnosis. After iron depletion, the mean MCV, MCH, and MCHC values of C282Y/C282Y probands decreased but remained significantly greater than values in wild-type control subjects. Mean values of prephlebotomy MCH and MCHC concentrations were lower in HLA-A3-positive than in HLA-A3-negative C282Y/C282Y probands. We conclude that increased values of mean hemoglobin, hematocrit, MCV, MCH, and MCHC in hemochromatosis probands are caused primarily by increased iron uptake and hemoglobin synthesis by immature erythroid cells. Mechanisms of iron uptake by erythrocytes that could explain these results are discussed.
...
PMID:Peripheral blood erythrocyte parameters in hemochromatosis: evidence for increased erythrocyte hemoglobin content. 1063
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