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)

Our personal experience with 172 patients, the results from the European Liver Transplant Registry and a review of the recent literature are summarized and discussed to define present indications for liver transplantation in hepatobiliary malignancy. The following conditions should be considered contraindications: advanced primary liver tumors with any extrahepatic spread, cholangiocellular carcinoma, hemangiosarcoma and liver metastases from nonendocrine primary tumor. Currently, "favorable" indications include uncommon tumors such as fibrolamellar carcinoma, epithelioid hemangioendothelioma, hepatoblastoma and metastases from endocrine tumors. Further indications may be nonresectable hepatocellular and proximal bile duct carcinoma in tumor stage II. Borderline indications are hepatocellular and proximal bile duct carcinoma in tumor stage III. In advanced tumors confined to the liver, transplantation should be restricted to multimodality treatment protocols. Although there are strong arguments for transplantation in early resectable hepatocellular carcinoma with underlying cirrhosis, it remains an open issue requiring further investigation in a controlled study using the same tumor classification. With regard to limited resources of donor organs, split-liver transplantation permits transplantation in tumor patients without neglecting those with benign diseases.
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PMID:Indications for liver transplantation in hepatobiliary malignancy. 800 78

The ascitic fluid ferritin concentrations were compared with serum-ascites albumin gradient (SAAG), in their diagnostic ability for detection of malignancy in 60 patients with ascites: 29 with chronic liver disease alone (CLD) and 31 patients with various neoplasms. Of the patients with malignancy, 12 had liver metastases, 9 had no evidence of liver involvement, and 10 had hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) with or without coexisting liver cirrhosis. Analysis of our data confirms that the ascitic ferritin is a more accurate indicator of malignant ascites (MA) than the SAAG. This new parameter is particularly helpful in distinguishing MA associated with HCC and/or metastatic liver disease from nonmalignant ascites due to CLD alone.
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PMID:Value of ascitic fluid ferritin in the differential diagnosis of malignant ascites. 813 81

The pathogenetic mechanism underlying glucose intolerance in pancreatic cancer is still unclear. We studied the pattern of three glucose regulating hormones (C-peptide, glucagon and GH) in pancreatic cancer patients with (N = 34) and without (N = 8) hyperglycemia, and compared the findings made with those from subjects with other hyperglycemic conditions of well-known origin [type I diabetes mellitus (8 cases) and diabetes mellitus secondary to chronic pancreatitis (13 cases) or liver cirrhosis (4 cases)]. In hyperglycemic pancreatic cancer patients, C-peptide was absent in 26% of the cases, reduced in 24%, elevated in 29% and within the normal range in the remaining 21%. In normoglycemic pancreatic cancer this hormone was reduced in two cases (25%) and within the normal range in all the others. GH was within the normal range in all cases: glucagon was below the normal range in some hyperglycemic pancreatic cancer patients (41%) or within the normal range in all the remaining patients. No correlations were found between the three hormones when findings from subjects were considered all together. However, in pancreatic cancer C-peptide and glucagon presented consensual variations. C-peptide, glucagon and GH levels were not related to tumor volume; glucagon was found to be associated with liver metastases. C-peptide was correlated with serum ALT and ALP. We may conclude that hyperglycemia associated with pancreatic cancer may be caused by different mechanisms. In some cases a reduced secretion of both insulin and glucagon was observed, as occurs in chronic pancreatitis. In the majority of patients, beta cell function appears normal, and the hyperglycemic state may depend on an altered peripheral sensitivity to insulin due to the pancreatic pathology itself or to consensual liver involvement.
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PMID:C-peptide pattern in patients with pancreatic cancer. 813 97

Urinary gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (gamma-Gla) levels were determined in healthy subjects of all ages. The urinary gamma-Gla levels were highest in infants (0-1 years), then fell in an age-dependent manner, again in subjects reaching a minimum value in adults, then gradually increased over 60 years of age. Urinary gamma-Gla levels therefore change markedly with aging. The relationships between the urinary gamma-Gla excretion and plasma levels of prothrombin and protein C in patients with various hepatic diseases or diabetes mellitus were examined and compared with those in healthy adults. Both plasma prothrombin and protein C levels were decreased in all patients with liver disease compared with healthy adults. In patients with hepatitis and liver cirrhosis, the decrease did not, however, affect the gamma-Gla excretion. In addition, in patients with hepatoma or carcinoma with liver metastases, the urinary gamma-Gla levels were increased. In patients with diabetes mellitus, the urinary gamma-Gla levels and plasma levels of prothrombin and protein C tended to increase, but this was not significant. The present results indicate that simultaneous measurement of the levels of urinary gamma-Gla and plasma prothrombin and protein C is a useful tool for the diagnosis of liver diseases and diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:Urinary levels of gamma-carboxyglutamic acid and its clinical significance. 814 4

Between August 1989 and April 1992, 60 consecutive elective hepatic resections were performed by one surgeon at two hospitals. This personal series was reviewed to determine the early results of elective hepatic resection. There were 17 patients with liver metastases from colorectal cancer, 14 with hepatocellular carcinoma (three with cirrhosis), seven with cholangiocarcinoma, six with carcinoma of the gallbladder plus liver involvement, ten with liver metastases from other sites and six with benign conditions of the liver. Thirty-eight patients underwent major liver resection, seven unisegmentectomy, six bisegmentectomy, four trisegmentectomy and five non-anatomical resection. Total vascular exclusion was used in 50 cases and the Pringle manoeuvre in ten. The mean(s.d.) operative blood transfusion was 990(1260) ml packed red blood cells (range 0-13 units); 17 patients did not receive blood transfusion. There were two operative deaths; non-fatal complications developed in 16 patients. The two deaths were from postoperative liver failure and there was no other hospital death.
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PMID:Elective hepatic resection for benign and malignant liver disease: early results. 815 72

Previous studies using dynamic scintigraphy have shown that the measurement of changes in hepatic perfusion may be exploited to detect liver metastases. Similar hepatic haemodynamic changes also occur in cirrhosis, however, thereby reducing the diagnostic power of the technique. The ability of duplex colour Doppler sonography (DCDS) to differentiate between the changes in liver perfusion in patients with cirrhosis and those with hepatic metastases was assessed. Hepatic arterial and portal venous blood flows were measured in 30 control subjects, 20 patients with cirrhosis, and 55 patients with overt liver metastases. The Doppler perfusion index (DPI) (the rate of hepatic arterial to total liver blood flow) and the congestive index (ratio of the cross sectional area of the vessel to time averaged velocity of blood flow in the vessel) of the hepatic artery (HCI) and portal vein (PCI) were calculated. The hepatic arterial blood flow of the cirrhotic and metastatic groups was significantly raised compared with that of controls, and the portal venous blood flow of the former groups were reduced (p < 0.0001). The DPIs of the cirrhotic and metastatic groups were therefore significantly raised compared with those of controls (p < 0.0001). No significant difference was noted in HCI values between the three groups. The PCI values of the cirrhotic group, however, were significantly raised compared with those of controls and patients with metastases (p < 0.0001). The data suggest that DCDS measurement of PCI may be of value in differentiating between the hepatic perfusion changes caused by cirrhosis and those resulting from hepatic metastases, thereby increasing the diagnostic power of this technique.
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PMID:Hepatic perfusion changes in patients with liver metastases: comparison with those patients with cirrhosis. 849 6

Proliferation of preexisting bile ducts, ductular metaplasia of hepatocytes and proliferation and differentiation of liver stem cells are discussed in the pathogenesis of neoductular structures in the liver. Under the condition of experimental bile duct obstruction and in extrahepatic bile duct stenosis neoductular structures are first the result of proliferation and sprouting of preexisting ducts and cholangioles. Especially in later stages of cholestasis but also in other chronic progredient liver diseases such as chronic alcoholic liver disease and chronic active hepatitis periportal hepatocytes may show a phenotypic shift towards ductular epithelia. In postnatal liver diseases hepatocytes first express keratin 7 and later keratin 19 during ductular transdifferentiation. This is in contrast to embryonal cholangiogenesis. In alpha-1-antitrypsin-deficiency, hemochromatosis, Wilson's disease, and chronic active hepatitis B cellular deposites typically located in hepatocytes such as alpha-1-AT, siderin, copper, HBs-Ag, and HBc-Ag can also be found in neoductular cells close to hepatocytes. These deposites seem to be retained during the ductular transdifferentiation of hepatocytes. Expression of bile duct-type integrin subtypes and TGF beta 1 in neoductular cells are involved in the changing parenchymal/mesenchymal interplay during neoductogenesis, resulting in periductular basal membrane and periductular fibrosis. In FNH the ductular transdifferentiation of hepatocytes is integrated in the histogenesis of micronodules and portal tract equivalents of these tumor-like lesions. Ductular structures in hepatoblastomas and especially in combined hepatocellular and cholangiocarcinomas (CHCC) may reflect the common embryologic derivation of hepatocytes and biliary epithelia. Non-neoplastic liver tissue in resection specimens of our CHCC showed a lower rate of cirrhosis, and a significantly higher Ki 67-LI of neoductular cells compared to liver tissue in resection specimens of HCC and liver metastases. 3 of 10 CHCC had developed in alpha-1-AT-deficiency, in which this protease-inhibitor was predominantly retained in periportal hepatocytes. These findings in non-neoplastic tumor-bearing liver tissue suggest that CHCC include a special histogenic type of primary liver carcinoma which in analogy to some experimental liver tumors might develop from periportal parenchymal cells.
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PMID:[Hepatic neoductules]. 860 Jun 93

The survival probability is 79% for patients with neuroblastoma stage 4S treated according to the German Society for Pediatric Oncology and Hematology (GPOH) treatment studies. Most of these patients (80%) have liver metastases. Patients are grouped according to their condition at diagnosis and tumour resectability to different risk groups (A, B, C). Chemotherapy is provided for patients who are initially diagnosed as critically ill, caused for example by excessive hepatomegaly due to liver metastases. The aim of this study is to clarify whether liver infiltration is associated with liver dysfunction and whether chemotherapy plays a role in this process. Hepatopathy was diagnosed when clinical signs were present and/or liver function tests revealed pathologic results. The charts of 48 patients (22 boys, 26 girls) diagnosed between 1990 and 1994 from the ongoing NB-90 treatment study were evaluated retrospectively. Median age at diagnosis was 52 days (range: 1-328). 41 patients (85%) had liver infiltration, 26 patients (54%) had bone marrow involvement and in nine patients (19%) skin metastases were found. 12 patients were in poor general condition at diagnosis (risk group C). 36 of 48 patients (75%) received chemotherapy, three children were treated with radiotherapy additionally, due to massive liver enlargement. 15 patients (31%) had signs of hepatic dysfunction at diagnosis or during their illness, 14 of these had liver metastases. All these 15 patients were treated with chemotherapy. 12 of 15 patients with hepatopathy were younger than two months at diagnosis. Five patients with liver dysfunction were not critically ill at diagnosis. Hepatomegaly > or = 6 cm was present in 10 of 15 patients with liver dysfunction. Hepatopathy was transient in eight patients, four patients died soon of multiorgan failure during progression of disease. Three children developed liver fibrosis with conversion to cirrhosis. Hepatopathy was correlated with distribution to risk groups (A and B (5/36) vs. C (10/12), p < 0.001). The appearance of hepatic dysfunction in patients with neuroblastoma stage 4S remains a serious problem especially for young children with excessive hepatic infiltration. Liver dysfunction was of short duration and reversible in most patients, however, even with age-adapted dosages of chemotherapy long-standing cases of hepatopathy were observed. A general recommendation for treatment strategy in this heterogeneous patient group is difficult. Attention should be given to for this complication.
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PMID:[Hepatopathy in patients with stage 4S neuroblastoma]. 892 87

Percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI) is a relatively new therapeutic technique for the treatment of liver tumours. PEI is now considered a reliable alternative to surgical resection for cirrhotic patients with a single, small hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Intratumoral injection of absolute ethanol, in fact, achieves complete ablation of HCC nodules 3 cm or less in diameter with a high probability. Moreover, PEI is not associated with significant morbidity or mortality and does not damage non-cancerous liver parenchyma. Long-term survival rates of PEI-treated patients were similar to those obtained in matched patients submitted to partial hepatectomy. In large HCC lesions, the anticancer effect of PEI can be significantly enhanced by pretreatment of the tumour with transcatheter arterial chemoembolisation. PEI may also be effectively used to destroy adenomatous hyperplastic nodules in liver cirrhosis, which represent precancerous lesions. The results of PEI in the treatment of liver metastases, in contrast, have been far less encouraging than in the case of HCC, so that PEI is not recommended when other interventional procedures such as radiofrequency electrocautery or interstitial laser photocoagulation are available. Imaging procedures plays a key role in PEI, as they provide a reliable assessment of the therapeutic effect of the procedure.
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PMID:Ethanol injection for the treatment of hepatic tumours. 893 35

The diagnostic value of a new tumor marker, c-erbB-2, was studied in the sera of 50 controls, 112 patients with benign diseases and 534 patients with malignancies. Using 15 U/ml as the cutoff, no healthy subjects, patients with benign diseases (excluding liver cirrhosis) or patients with no evidence of disease (45 patients) had serum levels higher than this limit. Abnormal c-erbB-2 levels were found in 38.5% (10 of 26) of the patients with liver cirrhosis and in 26.7% (8 of 30) of those patients with primary liver cancer. No differences were found between the c-erbB-2 serum concentrations in liver cirrhosis or primary liver cancer, suggesting the possible catabolism of this antigen in the liver. Abnormal levels of this antigen were found in 20% (56 of 278) of the patients with breast carcinoma (locoregional 7%, metastases 41.5%), in 21% (6 of 28) of ovarian carcinomas (stage I-II 0%, stage III-IV 42.8%), in 21% (3 of 14) of the colorectal tumors (locoregional 0%, metastases 30%), and in 13.3% (11 of 83) of the patients with lung cancer (locoregional 11.5%, metastases 16%). C-erbB-2 sensitivity in other patients with advanced disease was: 25% (9 of 36) in prostatic cancer, 22% (2 of 9) in gastric cancer, and 11% (1 of 9) in vesical tumors. When patients with liver metastases were excluded abnormal c-erbB-2 serum levels were only found in breast, lung, prostatic and ovarian carcinomas. C-erbB-2 sensitivity in patients with lung cancer was related to tumor histology with significantly higher value in non-small cell lung cancer (mainly adenocarcinomas) than in patients with small cell lung cancer (p < 0.013). C-erbB-2 concentrations in patients with breast cancer were significantly higher in patients with recurrence (mainly bone and liver metastases) and in patients with progesterone receptor-negative (< 15 fmol/mg) tumors (p < 0.01). In conclusion, c-erbB-2 is not a specific tumor marker and abnormal serum levels may be found in patients with liver pathologies. Its sensitivity suggests its possible application as a tumor marker in breast, ovarian, lung (mainly adenocarcinomas) and prostatic tumors.
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PMID:Serum levels of C-erbB-2 (HER-2/neu) in patients with malignant and non-malignant diseases. 914 15


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