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)

Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 levels were determined in chronic hepatic diseases by a radioreceptor assay and correlated with serum albumin, calcium and anorganic phosphate, 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 serum levels were significantly lower inall chronic hepatic diseses compared to normals. The low levels are correlated with the degree of parenchymal damage, not with the etiology of hepatic disease. In alcoholic liver disease thus 25=hydroxyvitamin D3 levels are significantly lower when cirrhosis is present than in mere fatty liver. Anorganic phosphate and calcium were close to the lower range of normal and significantly lower than in the control group studied.
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PMID:Serum 25 -- hydroxyvitamin D3 levels in patients with liver disease. 90 74

The levels of serum somatomedin peptides were determined with a somatomedin A radioreceptor assay utilizing human placental membranes. Low levels were found in 25 patients with liver cirrhosis and 28 patients with chronic hepatitis with the mean of 0.47 +/- 0.05 and 0.60 +/- 0.04 U/ml, respectively. There was a positive correlation between somatomedin A on one hand and serum albumin, cholinesterase, total cholesterol and thrombotest on the other. There was a negative correlation between somatomedin A and the indocyanine green retention test. These findings confirm earlier results obtained with bioassay.
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PMID:Serum somatomedin peptides measured by somatomedin A radioreceptor assay in chronic liver disease. 91 86

Intestinal 47-calcium absorption has been studied in 34 chronic alcoholics, 17 of whom were cirrhotics (group A) and 17 non-cirrhotics (group B). These patients were compared with 44 normal subjects (group C). In group C, the 47Ca 2 h plasma % of the dose showed a significant negative correlation to the total body weight (p less than 0.001) and a positive correlation with the serum albumin (p less than 0.05). The mean intestinal absorption of 47Ca expressed as 2 h plasma % of the dose multiplied by total body weight was 131 +/- SD 52 in group A and 136 +/- SD 71 in group B. These two means are significantly low (p less than 0.001 and p less than 0.002 respectively) in relation to that found in group C (168 +/- SD 32). These results suggest that intestinal calcium absorption is diminished in chronic alcoholism even in the absence of hepatic cirrhosis.
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PMID:[Decrease of intestinal absorption of 47-calcium in chronic alcoholism]. 92 26

The plasma elimination curves of diazepam following intravenous administration of 10 mg were studied in nine patients with cirrhosis of the liver and four patients without liver disease. The data were analyzed according to a two compartment model. The mean biological half-life (T/2) of diazepam was increased five-fold in patients with cirrhosis compared to the controls (164 hours vs. 32.1 hours). The plasma clearance of diazepam could be correlated neither with a quantitative measure of liver function, as estimated by galactose elimination capacity, nor to semiquantitative measures of liver function, such as serum albumin and prothrombin. It is suggested that the plasma clearance of diazepam is an inaccurate index of its rate of hepatic metabolism due to the complex kinetics of the drug.
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PMID:Pharmacokinetics of diazepam in disordered liver function. 96 87

Factor VII levels have been measured in 100 patients with liver disease following parenteral vitamin K1 therapy. There was good agreement between specific factor VII measurements and the one-stage prothrombin time apart from six patients with compensated cirrhosis in whom the prothrombin time was prolonged despite the presence of normal factor VII levels. A mean activity of 58% was found in patients with cirrhosis. Cirrhotic patients with features of hepatic decompensation had a significantly lower mean level of activity (40%) than the "contrast" patients with surgical obstruction of the major bile ducts (93%). Patients with chronic active liver disease had moderate depression of factor VII levels and those with non-cirrhotic liver damage had mean activities similar to the contrast group. Factor VII levels could not be correlated with BSP retention but there was a correlation with serum albumin concentration. It is concluded that the prothrombin time using Quick test with a standardized thromboplastin showing good sensitivity to factor VII, eg, the Manchester reagent (BCT), provides a reliable index of coagulability in chronic liver disease, and specific factor VII assays are not indicated.
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PMID:Factor VII as a marker of hepatocellular synthetic function in liver disease. 100 40

Tryptophan was measured in the lumbar CSF and serum of patients undergoing neurological investigation (controls) and in patients with hepatic cirrhosis. Samples were taken from the fasting patients at 8:00 a.m. Under these conditions, in the controls the mean CSF, free )mpm-albumin-bound) and total serum tryptophan were in the approximate ratio 1:4:24. In this cross-sectional study, for the controls, CSF tryptophan was correlated significantly and positively with the total serum but not with the free serum tryptophan. In patients with advanced hepatic cirrhosis the mean CSF tryptophan concentration was greatly elevated. However, the mean total serum tryptophan was unchanged and the free serum tryptophan only slightly elevated. Administration of probenecid, which displaces tryptophan from binding sites on serum albumin, and thereby increases the proportion of serum tryptophan in the free form, did not affect CSF tryptophan.
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PMID:Relationships between tryptophan in serum and CSF, and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid in CSF of man: effect of cirrhosis of liver and probenecid administration. 114 19

The results of seven laboratory tests of liver function, including spleen/liver activity ratios obtained by densitometric analysis of scans, are analyzed in 50 patients with proven Laennec's cirrhosis. In this series, the liver scan not only disclosed the liver gross anatomy and structural abnormality and established the best possible site for biopsy examination, but also, the increased splenic activity served as a useful diagnostic indication of Laennec's cirrhosis. Of 50 proven cases of Laennec's cirrhosis, 41 (82%) had abnormal spleen/liver ratios. An abnormal spleen/liver ratio in combination with abnormal results from any one or two other tests was relatively effective in the detection of cirrhosis. The accuracy is improved if the other laboratory tests are chosen from among tests for serum albumin, serum bilirubin, and SGOT. (Liver abnormalities other than cirrhosis can also present an abnormal spleen/liver ratio.) This simple determination extends the value of the liver scan commonly requested in search of metastases, primary lesions, or inflammatory processes, or in preparation for needle biopsy examination.
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PMID:Technetium 99m sulfur colloid spleen/liver ratio and other liver tests in the diagnosis of cirrhosis. 115 58

The role of liver in the peripheral conversion of thyroxine (T4) to triiodothyronine (T3) was studied in normal subjects and patients with alcoholic liver disease by measurement of thyrotrophin (TSH) and total and free T4 and T3 in randomand serial serum samples. Also, T4 to T3 conversion rates and T3 disposal rates were compared by noncompartmental analysis. While the mean total serum T4 values were similar for the two groups, 8.6 and 8.1 mug/kl, the mean free T4 value was significantly higher in the cirrhotic patients (3.3 ng/dl) than in the normal subjects (2.1 ng/dl, P less than 0.001). The mean serum T3 value, 85 ng/dl, was significantly reduced in the hepatic patients as compared to a mean serum T3 value of 126 ng/dl in the normal subjects (P less than 0.001), while the free T3 value was 0.28 ng/dl in both groups. The reduction of the serum total and free T3 values were closely correlated with the degree of liver damage, as indicated by elevation of serum bilirubin (r equal -0.547) and reduction of serum albumin (r equal 0.471). The mean serum TSH level was 3.1 muU/ml in the normals and 7.1 muU/ml in the cirrhotic aptients ( less than 0.001). 15% of the hepatic patients had serum TSH values above 10 muU/ml, which, however, did not correlate with any of the four liver function tests studied. Serial blood sampling from two convalescing patients with alcoholic hepatitis showed a gradual normalization of serum TSH and T3 levels as the liver function improved. After oral T4 administration, 0.25 mg/day for 10 days, three of four cirrhotic patients studied failed to raise their serum T3 values. The mean T4 to T3 conversion rate of seven normal subjects was 35.7%. The mean T4 to T3 conversion rate of four cirrhotic patients studied was significantly reduced to 15.6% (P less than 0.001). The mean disposal rates of T4 and T3 of the normal subjects were 114 and 34 mug/day, respectively. The ratio of T4 disposal to T3 disposal was 3.5. In contrast, the mean T4 disposal rate, 82 mug/day, and the mean T3 disposal rate, 10 mug/day, were both reduced in the cirrhotic patients. Their ratio of T4 disposal to T3 disposal was 7.9. These findings suggest that impairment of T4 conversion in patients with advanced hepatic cirrhosis may lead to reduced T3 production and lowered serum T3 level. Therefore, the liver is one of the major sites of T4 conversion to T3.
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PMID:Reduced peripheral conversion of thyroxine to triiodothyronine in patients with hepatic cirrhosis. 115 78

After ingestion of galactose (10 g per m2) labeled with 14C or 13C, breath was collected from subjects at intervals for 4 hr followed by measurement of 14CO2 by liquid scintillation counting or of 13CO2 by mass spectrometry. Nine subjects without liver disease and 21 "cirrhotic" patients were tested with 14C; 8 control subjects and 4 patients with diagnosis of cirrhosis were tested with 13C. The mean rates of expiration of labeled CO2 by the patients with "cirrhosis" were one-third to one-half of mean normal rates during the first 90 min. The time of peak concentration of tracer CO2 for cirrhotic patients (150 to 180 min) was later than for normal subjects (90 to 120 min). There was distinctly greater separation between control and liver disease groups by test of 14CO2 radioactivity at 1 hr than by serum alkaline phosphatase, total bilirubin, and transaminase, but only slightly better separation than by serum albumin concentration (which was highly correlated with 14CO2 output). The [14C]galactose test is simpler than the standard intravenous galactose tolerance test, and , like the latter, appears superior to some other tests for recognition of cirrhosis. The use of 13C provides an example of a new direction for clinical application of this stable, nonradioactive nuclide.
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PMID:Test for alcoholic cirrhosis by conversion of [14C]- or [13C]galactose to expired CO2. 127 55

Amiodarone, a commonly used antiarrhythmic agent, has numerous adverse effects. The purpose of this case report is to highlight its hepatotoxicity, an unusual complication of long term amiodarone therapy. Our patient is a 76-year-old man with underlying ischaemic heart disease and recurrent ventricular tachycardia. Eleven months after commencing amiodarone, he developed asymptomatic raised aminotransferases which resolved following drug withdrawal. Amiodarone was then reintroduced and four years later, the patient developed hepatomegaly, worsening liver biochemistry and histopathological changes consistent with early cirrhosis. His symptoms improved following discontinuation of amiodarone. However, hepatomegaly and a low serum albumin still persist four years later.
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PMID:Hepatotoxicity of amiodarone. 129 29


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