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)

A 41-year-old man with posthepatic liver cirrhosis and bleeding tendency was found to have a circulating anticoagulant with potent antithrombin activity. The thrombin time of the patient's purified fibrinogen was normal. This anticoagulant was residing in the patient's IgG fraction, and his IgG fraction could prolong the thrombin time of purified fibrinogen, suggesting that this circulating anticoagulant was an antibody. No heparin was detected in the patient's plasma. However, the antithrombin activity of this anticoagulant could be neutralized by toluidine blue or methylene blue ex vivo.
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PMID:An autoantibody with potent antithrombin activity whose action could be inhibited by toluidine blue or methylene blue. 381 68

Prothrombin, both by a one- and a two-stage method, and progressive antithrombin were determined on the same plasma samples from 47 patients with cirrhosis and 27 patients with acute hepatitis. In the first group prothrombin estimated by the two-stage method was significantly higher than by the one-stage method. The values were often within the normal range and were not correlated with the indices of protein synthesis. Since progressive antithrombin was also depressed, the unduly high levels measured by the two-stage method are probably related to the influence exerted by antithrombin on the two-stage method. The opposite pattern was observed in patients with acute hepatitis, ie, the one-stage assay gave higher values than the two-stage assay. The one-stage method correlated better with the indices of protein synthesis. It is suggested that a one-stage assay should be used in patients with liver failure to evaluate the haemostatic balance before liver biopsy or surgery.
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PMID:Estimation of prothrombin in liver disease. 543 Apr 18

A discrepancy was found in hepatic cirrhosis patients between two forms of biological activities, i.e. progressive antithrombin activity (prog AT) and heparin cofactor activity (heparin AT). A reduced level of heparin AT was obtained in comparison with that of prog AT, despite the fact that both activities correlated well in normal controls. The binding ability of AT III to heparin was observed by crossed immunoelectrophoresis, and showed a reduced second peak of AT III with a faster AT III with a qualitative defect in its binding ability to heparin due to impaired protein synthesis.
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PMID:Characterization of the biological activity of antithrombin III in patients with hepatic cirrhosis. 646 6

The blood coagulation and fibrinolysis of 33 patients with compensated liver cirrhosis and 31 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma were examined using several markers, namely thrombin-antithrombin III complex (TAT), plasmin-alpha 2 plasmin inhibitor complex (PIC), antithrombin-III (AT-III) and prothrombin time, and the relationship between these markers, endotoxemia, and TNF-alpha was examined. These patients had no complications due to hepatic failure, such as infections, encephalopathy, ascites, G-I bleeding and clinical DIC. PIC was not elevated, but TAT tended to be elevated in LC and significantly elevated in HCC. AT-III was decreased in LC and HCC, and the blood endotoxin was partly positive in LC and HCC, but was not correlated with AT-III or PT. The TAT level in the blood-endotoxin-positive patients measured by endospecy methods was higher than that in the negative patients, and was significantly correlated with the blood endotoxin level in the LC and HCC patients (r = 0.57, r = 0.88, p < 0.01). No relationship was observed between TNF-alpha and blood endotoxin. In conclusion, (1) blood coagulability was activated already in compensated LC and HCC, but was not connected with fibrinolysis, (2) the activation of coagulability was closely related with endotoxemia, and (3) TNF-alpha was not correlated with blood endotoxin or TAT.
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PMID:[Blood coagulation and fibrinolysis in relation to endotoxemia in liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma]. 756 21

Abnormal cytokine levels have been described in patients with chronic liver disease, but studies correlating cytokine homeostasis with abnormalities in coagulation and fibrinolysis are lacking. In order to establish a link between cytokines and the hemostatic changes the following parameters were determined in 44 patients with cirrhosis (alcoholic = 15, postnecrotic = 22, others = 7): TNF-alpha, IL-6, thrombin-antithrombin (TAT) complexes, prothrombin fragment 1 + 2 (F1 + 2) and t-PA by using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays, and PAI-1, plasminogen and alpha 2-antiplasmin (alpha 2-AP) by using chromogenic substrates. All patients were at stages B and C of Child's classification when entering the study. Mean cytokine concentrations were significantly higher in cirrhotic patients as compared to age- and sex-matched controls (p < 0.009). There was a significant increase of TAT (p < 0.02) and F1 + 2 (p < 0.001) in the patients groups, suggesting a grade of intravascular coagulation. A hyperfibrinolytic state as demonstrated by an increase of t-PA and decrease of plasminogen and alpha 2-AP was also observed (p < 0.001). We could define a subgroup of patients with cytokine values higher than 20 pg/ml. Interestingly, in this group there was a significant increase of TAT (p < 0.04) and t-PA (p < 0.02) levels and a decrease of plasminogen and alpha 2-AP (p < 0.02) as compared to values observed in patients with cytokines lower than 20 pg/ml. We conclude that high levels of TNF-alpha and IL-6 may contribute to hyperfibrinolysis and intravascular coagulation in patients with liver cirrhosis, as assessed by the increase of TAT and t-PA levels and the reduction of plasminogen and alpha 2-AP.
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PMID:Increased concentrations of tumor necrosis factor and interleukin-6 contribute to the hemostatic abnormalities in advanced liver disease. 858 22

The serpin superfamily of serine proteinase inhibitors contains many members but the best-characterized is the plasma protein alpha 1-antitrypsin. its genetic deficiency is associated, in the homozygote, with hepatic damage that may progress to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Low levels of circulating alpha 1-antitrypsin fail to protect the lungs against proteolytic attack and predispose the homozygote to early onset pan-lobular emphysema, bronchiectasis and asthma. The major cause of alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency, the Z mutation (Glu342Lys), results in the accumulation of protein in the endoplasmic reticulum of the liver. Using a structural approach, we have shown that the hepatic inclusions result from a protein-protein interaction between the reactive centre loop of one molecule and the beta-pleated sheet of a second. This loop-sheet polymerization is now also recognized to be the basis of deficiencies associated with mutations of C1-inhibitor, antithrombin and alpha 1-antichymotrypsin. Our recent solution of a crystal structure of a thermostable mutant of alpha 1-antitrypsin shows the detailed interactions that result in loop-sheet linkage and helps to explain the mechanism of action of this family of proteinase inhibitors.
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PMID:New insights into the structural basis of alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency. 897 59

Serpin polymerization is the underlying cause of several diseases, including thromboembolism, emphysema, liver cirrhosis, and angioedema. Understanding the structure of the polymers and the mechanism of polymerization is necessary to support rational design of therapeutic agents. Here we show that polymerization of antithrombin is sensitive to the addition of synthetic peptides that interact with the structure. A 12-m34 peptide (homologous to P14-P3 of antithrombin reactive loop), representing the entire length of s4A, prevented polymerization totally. A 6-mer peptide (homologous to P14-P9 of antithrombin) not only allowed polymerization to occur, but induced it. This effect could be blocked by the addition of a 5-mer peptide with s1C sequence of antithrombin or by an unrelated peptide representing residues 26-31 of cholecystokinin. The s1C or cholecystokinin peptide alone was unable to form a complex with native antithrombin. Moreover, an active antitrypsin double mutant, Pro 361-->Cys, Ser 283-->Cys, was engineered for the purpose of forming a disulfide bond between s1C and s2C to prevent movement of s1C. This mutant was resistant to polymerization if the disulfide bridge was intact, but, under reducing conditions, it regained the potential to polymerize. We have also modeled long-chain serpin polymers with acceptable stereochemistry using two previously proposed loop-A-sheet and loop-C-sheet polymerization mechanisms and have shown both to be sterically feasible, as are "mixed" linear polymers. We therefore conclude that the release of strand 1C must be an element of the mechanism of serpin polymerization.
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PMID:Importance of the release of strand 1C to the polymerization mechanism of inhibitory serpins. 900 80

Cirrhosis is associated with compromised hemostasis and coagulopathy during orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). It has been suggested that hemostasis is better preserved during OLT in primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) than other cirrhotic states. The aim of this study was to compare coagulation and fibrinolysis in 15 patients with PBC with 31 patients with other liver disease before and during OLT. Preoperatively, both groups had subnormal mean levels of prekallikrein, factor XIIa, antithrombin III (ATIII), plasminogen, and alpha2-antiplasmin. C1 esterase inhibitor and kallikrein inhibition in PBC was higher than the normal range (P < .01), but not in non-PBC. Non-PBC had lower median fibrinogen levels and shorter euglobulin clot lysis times (ECLT) (P < .05). Tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) antigen levels did not differ between groups but were elevated from the normal range, as were median thrombin-antithrombin complexes (TAT). Plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI) activity was significantly higher in PBC (0.0041). Perioperatively in the PBC group during the early anhepatic phase of OLT, there was more thrombin generation, as evidenced by higher TAT levels (P = .0455) and less hyperfibrinolysis with longer ECLTs. We hypothesize that there is a preserved capacity to generate thrombin and less fibrinolytic activation during the anhepatic phase of OLT, and we suggest that, in PBC, the use of antifibrinolytic agents may have an adverse effect.
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PMID:Coagulation and fibrinolysis in primary biliary cirrhosis compared with other liver disease and during orthotopic liver transplantation. 904 19

The crystal structure of a binary complex of human antithrombin with a peptide of the same sequence as its reactive loop (P14-P3) has been determined at 2.9 A. The peptide binds as the middle strand s4A in the A beta-sheet, homologously to that of the reactive loop in the latent and cleaved forms of antithrombin. Peptide binding results in the complete expulsion of the hinge region of the loop from the A beta-sheet although the conformation differs from that of heparin-activated antithrombin. The 36-fold increase in the rate of reaction of the binary complex with factor Xa indicates that full loop expulsion alone is not sufficient for complete heparin activation of antithrombin but that this is also dependent on the overall conformation of the molecule. Previous studies have demonstrated that reactive loop peptides can block or reverse the polymerisation of serpins associated with cirrhosis and thrombosis. The antithrombin binary complex structure defines the precise localisation of the blocking peptide in a serpin and provides the basis for rational drug design for mimetics that will prevent polymerisation in vivo and so ameliorate the associated disease.
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PMID:Implications for function and therapy of a 2.9 A structure of binary-complexed antithrombin. 976 69

According to a recent hypothesis, venous thrombosis results from the concurrence of several factors. This hypothesis was assessed in patients with portal or hepatic venous thrombosis by simultaneously investigating most of the currently identified prothrombotic disorders, local precipitating factors, and other risk factors such as oral contraceptive use. Patients with a tumorous obstruction and patients with cirrhosis with portal vein thrombosis were excluded. The prothrombotic disorders that were investigated included classical and occult myeloproliferative disorders; antiphospholipid syndrome; protein C; protein S and antithrombin deficiency; factor V Leiden; factor II; and methylene-tetrahydrofolate-reductase gene mutations. We found 1 or several prothrombotic disorders and a local precipitating factor in 26 and 10 of the 36 patients with portal vein thrombosis, respectively; and in 28 and none of the 32 patients with hepatic vein thrombosis, respectively. We found a combination of prothrombotic disorders in 5 and 9 patients with portal and hepatic vein thrombosis, respectively, whereas such a combination is expected in less than 1% of asymptomatic subjects. Of the 10 patients with a local precipitating factor, 8 had a prothrombotic disorder. Of the 13 patients who use oral contraceptives, 10 had a prothrombotic disorder. We conclude that portal or hepatic venous thrombosis should be regarded as an index for 1 or several prothrombotic disorders, whether or not local precipitating factors or oral contraceptive use are found. Concurrence of prothrombotic disorders is more common than expected. Extensive investigation of prothrombotic disorders and anticoagulation should be considered in patients with portal or hepatic venous thrombosis.
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PMID:Cause of portal or hepatic venous thrombosis in adults: the role of multiple concurrent factors. 1070 47


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