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 alpha 1 antitrypsin, alpha 1 acid glycoprotein and beta 2 glycoprotein I concentrations were determined in 36 patients with malignant hepatocellularcarcinoma, 30 with cirrhosis and 35 with hepatitis by quantitative immunoelectrophoresis. Serum alpha 1 antitrypsin and alpha 1 acid glycoprotein levels were significantly higher in patients with hepatocellularcarcinoma than in those with cirrhosis (p less than 0.001) or hepatitis (p less than 0.001). Elevated levels of alpha 1 antitrypsin were found in 88.9% of patients with hepatoma compared to 23.3% of patients with cirrhosis and 28.6% of patients with hepatitis. Raised levels of alpha 1 acid glycoprotein were also found in 80.6% of patients with hepatoma compared to 20% of patients with cirrhosis and in only 5.7% of patients with hepatitis. beta 2 glycoprotein I levels were similar in the three conditions and therefore not useful for differential diagnosis. In monitoring the progress of tumor growth alpha 1 antitrypsin and alpha 1 acid glycoprotein levels were found to increase during the growth phase. Measurements of these two glycoproteins are suggested for differential diagnosis of these liver diseases, as tumor markers for the detection of hepatocarcinoma, and for the monitoring of the progress during treatment.
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PMID:Changes in serum alpha 1 antitrypsin, alpha1 acid glycoprotein and beta 2 glycoprotein I in patients with malignant hepatocellular carcinoma. 8 7

Identification of the material present in human serum which is responsible for inhibition of binding of desialylated glycoproteins to rat hepatocyte membranes was accomplished by means of affinity chromatography using Sephadex to which the galactose-specific lectin, Ricinus Communis Agglutinin (RCAI) was covalently bound. RCAI-Sephadex was capable of extraction of virtually all of the inhibitory activity from cirrhotic serum. The RCA I-bound inhibitory activity could be eluted with 0.05 M D-galactose. The D-galactose eluate when subjected to radioimmunoelectrophoresis against a number of specific antibodies to human serum glycoproteins produced arcs corresponding to alpha 1-acid glycoprotein, alpha2-macroglobulin, IgG, IgA, and IgM. In another experiment putative terminal galactosyl groups of desialylated glycoproteins in the D-galactose eluate from cirrhotic serum exposed to RCAI-Sephadex were labelled with tritiated borohydride after treatment with galactose oxidase. Subsequent gel electrophoresis showed peaks of radioactivity throughout the area of the gel corresponding to protein molecular weights of the 19 S, 7 S, and 4 S classes. It thus appears that a heterogeneous population of desialylated serum glycoproteins accounts for the inhibition of binding of desialylated glycoprotein to the hepatocyte membrane and that these desialylated glycoproteins are present in small amounts in normal human serum and in greatly increased quantities in serum from patients with cirrhosis.
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PMID:Serum inhibitors of desialylated glycoprotein binding to hepatocyte membranes. 10 Dec 52

Alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) is an alpha1-glycoprotein (M.W. about 65000) appearing in the fetal serum of most mammals including man during the early stages of pregnancy; 4 weeks after birth it disappears altogether or exists at very low concentrations as in the normal adult. AFP is formed in the yolk sac, the fetal liver and the gastro-intestinal tract. One of its physiological functions in fetal life is supposed to be the protection of the fetus from maternal oestrogens (oestrophilic property). The clinical significance of AFP is based on the regular and increasing production in primary liver cell carcinoma, less frequently in teratogenetic tumors where it serves as a control of therapy and course of the disease. Less frequent, minor and temporary increases in the AFP serum level occur in several primary tumors with secondary liver involvement, and in inflammatory gastro-intestinal diseases, e.g. of the liver (hepatitis, cirrhosis). AFP has an increasing importance in gynecology (gestational age, fetal distress syndrom, malformations, hydatidiform mole/chorion carcinoma). The physico-chemical properties of AFP are widely known. Both fetal and tumor AFP appear to be immunologically and biochemically identical, as are that of tissue and biological fluids. The differences observed (variants, microheterogeneity) depend mainly on the different content of sialic acid. An antigenetic relationship exists, between the AFP of most species. The immunodiffusion (Ouchterlony) is the most frequently used but relatively insensitive test (1-5 mug/ml) in finding AFP, whereas the radioimmunoassay is the most sensitive one (up to 0,25 ng/ml) and permits the determination of normal serum levels in adults (below 20 ng/ml). The serum concentration in healthy pregnant women lies up to 500 ng/ml, in patients with hepatitis, liver cirrhosis and other liver diseases mostly under 3 mug/ml, whereas in those with primary liver cell carcinoma levels up to and above 600 mg-percent have been found.
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PMID:[Carcinofetal antigens. I. alpha-fetoprotein (author's transl)]. 16 80

Two unreleated adult males were found to be suffering from an association of pan-lobular severe emphysema and hepatomegally of unknown origin which led to the discovery of a marked deficit in alpha-1 antitrypsin (A1-AT) in relation to a PiZ phenotype. Liver biopsy revealed cirrhosis with portal fibrosis in one case and in both cases fatty infiltration with the accumulation of a glycoprotein antigenically identical to A1-AT. Electron microscopy showed this protein to be situated within the dilated lumina of the endoplasmic reticulum of the hepatocytes. A1-AT deficiency is usually associated with pulmonary involvement only in the adult and liver involvement only in the child. The association of the two remains rare--hence the interest of the two cases reported.
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PMID:[Pulmonary emphysema and hepatic involvement by alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency in two adults with a PiZ phenotype (author's transl)]. 30 25

A 16-year-old girl with advanced cirrhosis and severe alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency of the homozygous Pi ZZ phenotype was treated by orthotopic liver transplantation. After replacement of the liver with a homograft from a donor with the normal Pi MM phenotype, the alpha 1-antitrypsin concentration in the recipient's serum rose to normal; it had the Pi MM phenotype. Two and a third years later, chronic rejection necessitated retransplantation. Insertion of a homograft from a heterozygous Pi MZ donor was followed by the identification of that phenotype in the recipient's serum. Neither liver graft developed the alpha 1-antitrypsin glycoprotein deposits seen with the deficiency state. These observations confirm that this hepatic-based inborn error of metabolism is metabolically cured by liver replacement.
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PMID:Liver replacement for alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency. 32 Jun 94

Using single radial immunodiffusion, ten glycoproteins from non purulent pleural fluids have been estimated in different diseases. For five proteins (prealbumin, ceruloplasmin, alpha2HS-glycoprotein, transferrin, beta2-glycoprotein 1) the results have been found not to correlate with the causal disease. However for orosomucoid, alpha1-antitrypsin, haptoglobin, alpha2-macroglobulin and hemopexin, there was good correlation between proteins levels and aetiology. The glycoprotein concentration was low in mechanical effusions from cirrhosis and chronic cardiac failure. It was high in inflammatory, post-embolism and particularly neoplastic effusions. A raised orosomucoid level occurred as the most characteristic of cancer states especially when associated with a parallel increase of the four other glycoproteins. A simultaneously elevated level of these five pleural glycoproteins seems to be a good and significant biological sign for neoplastic effusion diagnosis.
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PMID:[Glycoproteins of pleural effusions (author's transl)]. 40 7

Extremely deficient levels of alpha-1-antitrypsin (ALPHA1AT) predispose such deficient individuals to the development of emphysema and cirrhosis. Protease inhibitor (Pi) typing has clarified that the inherited deficiency is codominant. A glycoprotein with antigenic characteristics of alpha1AT is found in the endoplasmic reticulum of the hepatocytes of individuals with PiZ phenotype. No therapy is available except liver transplantation. Although biochemical advances in defining the nature of alpha1AT deficiency are progressing, the pathogenesis of the liver disease remains an enigma.
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PMID:The current status of alpha-1-antityrpsin, a protease inhibitor, in gastrointestinal disease. 76 97

Circulating alpha-1 acid glycoprotein level in cirrhotic patients was determined by radioimmunoassay, and was compared to the ones in normal subjects and chronic active hepatitis with sublobular necrosis. Serum alpha-1 acid glycoprotein levels in liver cirrhosis (p less than 0.001) and chronic active hepatitis with sublobular necrosis (p less than 0.02) were significantly reduced comparing to the normal subjects, although any statistically significant difference was not observed between the formers. In liver cirrhosis, thie serum alpha-1 acid glycoprotein level correlated negatively with serum albumin concentration but neither with serum alpha-1 globulin fraction nor with Indocyanine green clearance rate.
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PMID:Serum glycoproteins in the liver diseases. IV. Alpha-1 acid glycoprotein level in liver cirrhosis. 89 35

A new low molecular weight protein was purified from the urine of uraemic patients. The protein was found to be glycoprotein with a molecular weight of 31 500, determined by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and a carbohydrate content of 19%. It was electrophoretically heterogenous and migrated in the slow alpha1-region. The mean serum level in 20 apparently healthy individuals was 32+/-10 mg/1. The serum level was normal in 5 patients with severe reduction of plasma protein synthesis caused by cirrhosis of the liver but elevated in patients with a decreased glomerular filtration rate. The mean urinary excretion in 5 healthy individuals was 1.3 mg/24 h. Increased excretion was seen in 10 patients with varying degrees of uraemia.
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PMID:alpha1-Microglobulin, a new low molecular weight plasma protein. 100 Aug 59

A radioimmunoassay for human alpha1-acid glycoprotein has been developed. 97.8% of 125I-alpha1-acid glycoprotein prepared for the assay were immunoprecipitable with specific anti-sera against the protein. alpha1-acid glycoprotein concentration in sera from normal adults was found to range between 70 and 114 mg/100 ml, with a mean of 93. Fulminant hepatitis, liver cirrhosis or chronic active hepatitis with sublobular necrosis caused a significant lowering of alpha1-acid glycoprotein concentration. Sera obtained from patients with acute hepatitis in convalescence, chronic inactive hepatitis or primary biliary cirrhosis gave normal concentration of the glycoprotein.
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PMID:Serum glycoproteins in the liver diseases. II. Radioimmunoassay of alpha-1 acid glycoprotein. 101 93


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