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)

Knowledge of the cellular changes that lead to hepatic neoplasia in humans is limited. Cirrhosis is a common antecedent or accompaniment of liver cell carcinoma and it seems that both its etiology and its time of duration are relevant risk factors. Many cellular changes have been observed in patients and among populations considered to be at risk. Of these, liver cell dysplasia is the most striking, and studies of its prevalence, natural history, and association with particular forms of cirrhosis suggest that it is a precancerous change. Bile duct carcinoma may follow infestation with liver flukes and duct epithelial hyperplasia is present before the development of cancer. Angiosarcoma from several causes is commonly preceded by a peculiar fibrosis, vascular changes, and Kupffer cell hyperplasia.
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PMID:Precancerous changes in the human liver. 22

Our knowledge of the cellular changes that lead to liver cell carcinoma in humans is limited by proper and necessary ethical restriction on clinical research. We know rather more about risk factors, the most important of which is cirrhosis, it seems that both the causative agent and the time of duration of the cirrhotic process are relevent to the magnitude of this risk. According to present knowledge, alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency, alcoholism, naturally occurring carcinogens, drugs, and the hepatitis B virus seem to carry the greatest risk of cancer developing in a cirrhotic patient. Cirrhosis, however, is not an essential prerequisite, and some or possibly all of these agents can also induce cancer without cirrhosis. Bile duct carcinoma commonly follows infestation with liver flukes. Cirrhosis is usually absent but duct epithelial hyperplasia is present prior to the development of cancer. Many cellular changes have been observed in patients and among populations considered to be at risk from liver cancer. Of these, liver cell dysplasia is the most striking and studies of its prevalence, natural history, and association with cirrhosis suggest that it is a precancerous change.
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PMID:Precursor lesions for liver cancer in humans. 77 94

PSC is a progressive chronic hepatobiliary disorder of unknown etiology for which no effective medical or surgical therapy now exists. This syndrome occurs most commonly in young men and is frequently associated with CUC. The diagnosis is best made utilizing endoscopic retrogradecopic retrograde cholangiography. Although liver histologic findings alone are infrequently diagnostic of PSC, it remains important to exclude other causes of chronic cholestasis. Although the etiology remains unknown, preliminary studies suggest that PSC is related to immunologic damage. Although viral infections can induce obliterative cholangitis in children, their role in the cause of PSC remains undefined. PSC progresses slowly from an asymptomatic stage to cirrhosis, portal hypertension, and premature death secondary to liver failure. Bile duct cancer appears to be a frequent complication of long-standing PSC. Since no therapy is of established efficacy, controlled clinical trials of both medical and surgical therapy should be encouraged. Fat-soluble vitamin deficiencies commonly occur in the advanced stages of PSC, and therefore serum levels of vitamins A, D, E, and prothrombin time should be monitored on a regular basis to prevent complications associated with these deficiencies. Liver transplantation is now a therapeutic option for the treatment of end-stage PSC. Palliative surgical biliary drainage procedures, proctocolectomy, and surgical decompressive shunts that increase the risk of liver transplants, therefore, should be avoided, if possible, in young PSC patients. If a total proctocolectomy is surgically indicated, we would strongly recommend performing a ileoanal pull-through procedure, thus, avoiding the formation of an abdominal ileostoma and the risk of developing bleeding peristomal varices.
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PMID:Diagnosis and treatment of primary sclerosing cholangitis. 390 Dec 73

Biliary tract cancers are relatively rare but fatal tumors. Apart from a close link with gallstones and cholangitis, risk factors for biliary tract cancer are obscure. Chronic liver conditions, including liver cirrhosis, have been linked to a higher risk of biliary tract cancer. In a population-based case-control study conducted in Shanghai, China, we investigated the relationships of a history of chronic hepatitis and liver cirrhosis as well as a family history of liver cancer with biliary tract cancer risk. The study included 627 patients with biliary tract cancers (368 gallbladder, 191 bile duct and 68 ampulla of Vater), 1,037 patients with biliary stones (774 gallbladder stones and 263 bile duct stones) and 959 healthy subjects randomly selected from the population. Bile duct cancer was associated with self-reports of chronic liver conditions, including a history of chronic hepatitis (OR = 2.0, 95% CI 0.9-4.4), liver cirrhosis (OR = 4.7, 95% CI 1.9-11.7) and a family history of primary liver cancer (OR = 2.0, 95% CI 1.0-3.9). The excess risk persisted after adjustment for gallstones and were more pronounced among subjects without gallstones (OR = 5.0, 95% CI 1.3-20.0 and OR = 4.9, 95% 2.0-12.2, respectively). History of liver conditions was also associated with an excess of biliary stones (OR = 1.9, 95% CI 1.2-3.0). No association was found for cancers of the gallbladder and ampulla of Vater. A history of chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis may be risk factors for extraheptic bile duct cancer. Given that chronic infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) is the most common cause of liver disease in China, serologic markers of HBV need to be measured in future studies to examine the link between HBV and bile duct cancer.
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PMID:Biliary tract cancer and stones in relation to chronic liver conditions: A population-based study in Shanghai, China. 1727 1