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)

34 pituitary adenomas were examined by light and electron microscopical methods. Slices of tumor tissue fixed in formaldehyde or Bouin's solution, respectively, and embeded in paraffin were stained by hematoxylin-eosin, Goldner's method (including Orang G), periodic acid Schiff (PAS) reaction, and in some cases by Herlant's tetrachrom. The ultrastructure was studied using tumor tissue fixed in glutaraldehyde within 1 hour after removal. The adenomas were classified by their light microscopical characteristics as chromophilic or chromophobe tumors. Employing the PAS reaction and Goldner's staining method, 27 adenomas were found to give intense or weak staining reactions. By electron microscopical investigation , all the adenomas studied were seen to contain secretory granules more or less densely packed within the cytoplasm. The number of these granules was strongly correlated with the intensity of the tinctorial properties of the tumor tissue. Out of 11 acidophilic adenomas, 10 were observed consisting of typical STH cells. 4 acromegalic patients were found to possess heavily or poorly granulated STH cell adenomas (two patients in each of these groups). One patient with a clinical history of liver cirrhosis and gynecomastia was observed bearing an acidophilic (and erythrosinophilic) adenomatous hyperplasia of prolactin cells, 13 tumors consisted of cells exhibiting almost weak amphophilic staining properties and secretory granules of 100-250nm diameter, thus resembling cells which have been reported to produced ACTH. One of the patients suffering from these adenomas, showed the clinical signs of M. Cushing. By ultrastructural criterions, 3 adenomas with PAS-positive tumor cells were considered to be composed of gonadotropic cells. Only 7 adenomas were observed which did not give any chromophilic reaction. These tumors consisted of extreme poorly granulated cells which could not be significantly associated with one of the pituitary hormones by their morphological properties. In respect of the abundance of mitochondria, 4 out of the adenomas were designated as oncocytic tumors.
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PMID:[The ultrastructure of human pituitary adenomas (author's transl)]. 6 63

Prolactin responses to provocative thyrotropin-releasing factor (TRH) stimulation were evaluated in 43 chronic alcoholic men were divided into groups for analysis based on the presence or absence of gynecomastia and the histologic appearance of their livers as determined by percutaneous liver biopsy. Compared to the normal volunteers, alcoholics with reversible liver disease (fatty liver) had reduced basal prolactin levels and exaggerated TRH responses. In contrast, alcoholics with cirrhosis and gynecomastia had markedly elevated basal prolactin levels and reduced responses to TRH. The results of this study combined with previously reported findings in cirrhotic men provide a basis for a possible explanation for the signs of feminization frequently found in alcoholic men.
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PMID:Hyperprolactinemia and thyrotropin-releasing factor (TRH) responses in men with alcoholic liver disease. 10 34

The hypothalamo-pituitary gonadal function was evaluated in eleven chronically alcoholic menopausal women by measurement of basal serum oestradiol, FSH, LH and prolactin, followed by LHRH-TRH test and administration of clomiphene citrate. All patients had hepatic damage, fibrosteatosis or cirrhosis. Two subgroups have been isolated according to urinary and serum estrogen levels: seven patients with urinary estrogen output less than 14 microgram per 24 h and plasma oestradiol less than 40 pg per ml were considered as post menopausal women: basal values of FSH and LH and their response to LHRH did not differ from that observed in normal menopausal women; clomiphene citrate induced a significant suppression of FSH and LH blood levels. Four women with urinary estrogen output greater than 14 microgram per 24 h and plasma oestradiol greater than 40 pg per ml were considered in menopausal transition. Their basal and post LHRH-FSH blood levels were lower than in the control group. These results suggest a normal hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal axis at least in the post menopausal alcoholic women.
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PMID:Effects of chronic alcoholism on the pituitary-gonadal function of women during menopausal transition and in the post menopausal period. 36 30

A significant increase of basal plasma prolactin levels (radioimmunoassayed) in 75 patients with liver cirrhosis was found in comparison to 50 male controls (8.5+/-4.5 (SD) vs. 5.5+/-1.7 ng/ml p less than 0.001). The extent and incidence of hyperprolactinaemia in 48 patients with alcoholic cirrhosis was more pronounced than in 27 cases of cirrhosis of non-alcoholic aetiologies (mean 9.7+/-4.8 vs. 5.7+/-2.1 ng/ml). No relation to ascites formation as well as to the development of gynaecomastia was apparent. Prolactin release following thyrotropin-releasing hormone was markedly enhanced in alcoholic as compared to non-alcoholic cirrhosis. Possibly hyperprolactinaemia and increased pituitary hormone reserve reflects hyperoestrogenism but changes of the hypothalamic regulation cannot be excluded as yet.
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PMID:Plasma prolactin and prolactin release in liver cirrhosis. 40 18

Serum prolactin levels were determined following stimulation by sulpiride in 20 patients with nonalcoholic liver cirrhosis and 10 normal controls. Prolactin response was essentially the same in the two groups. Only 5 cirrhotics, all with ascites, showed a lower prolactin response after sulpiride stimulation. This was interpreted as a consequence of a rapid prolactin escape from blood into the ascitic fluid, as it was shown to be the case in 2 of these patients. It is concluded that prolactin secretion in nonalcoholic liver cirrhosis is essentially normal. The higher prolactin levels found by others in alcoholic cirrhosis could be the result of a direct effect of alcohol on hypothalamic structures involved in prolactin secretion.
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PMID:Prolactin secretion in nonalcoholic liver cirrhosis. 73 36

The pattern of immunoreactive prolactin secretion over 24 hr in a group of patients suffering from cirrhosis of the liver has been studied and compared to that of healthy controls. The results were analyzed by use of chronograms and by mean cosinor. Although the daily mean average secretion of serum prolactin by the cirrhotics is not different from that of the control subjects utilizing the standard t-test, cosinor analysis of the data fails to demonstrate a circadian rhythm for prolactin secretion in the cirrhotics. These results are discussed in view of the apparent clinical hyperestrogenization and known changes in electrolyte balance which are commonly found in persons with advanced liver disease.
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PMID:Circadian study of immunoreactive prolactin in patients with cirrhosis of the liver. 86 82

The effects of oral BCAA supplementation on fasting levels of prolactin and estradiol were retrospectively analyzed in frozen plasma samples of patients with cirrhosis and chronic hepatic encephalopathy, taking part in a 3-month randomized, double-blind trial. Twenty-five patients had received 0.24g of BCAA per kg body weight, 24 had received an equinitrogenous amount of casein, in addition to a diet providing 0.7-1.0 g/kg of protein. Thirty-eight were males, 11 post-menopausal women. Fasting prolactin did not show any change in the BCAA group, where mental state significantly improved. In the casein group plasma prolactin increased by nearly 50% during the 3-month period. Similarly, estradiol concentrations were unchanged during BCAA supplementation, and increased during casein treatment. The analysis of variance demonstrated significant differences between the 2 treatments. Liver function tests and nutritional parameters (albumin, transferrin, urinary creatinine) supported a superiority of BCAA over casein. These data suggest that the favorable effects of BCAA on mental state are not mediated by changes in cerebral neurotransmission, but are due mainly to maintained liver function, possibly related to improved nutrition.
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PMID:Oral BCAA supplementation in cirrhosis with chronic encephalopathy: effects on prolactin and estradiol levels. 145 29

Men suffering from liver cirrhosis were examined. They demonstrated a decrease in the blood content of gonadotropic hormones and testosterone and a rise of estradiol and prolactin. The changes indicated were more pronounced in decompensated liver cirrhosis and were associated with lipid peroxidation activation and a reduction of the count of T suppressor lymphocytes. As a result, the treatment of men suffering from decompensated liver cirrhosis and hyperprolactinemia by parlodel lowered blood prolactin and activity of lipid peroxidation. The use of chorionic gonadotropin for the treatment of men with decompensated liver cirrhosis and a low content of blood lutropin produces an immunomodulatory effect. Parlodel and chorionic gonadotropin favour a decrease of the cytolytic syndrome.
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PMID:[The immunomodulating and hepatotropic effect of correcting hyperprolactinemia and hypophyseal gonadotropic dysfunction in liver cirrhosis patients]. 150 76

To investigate the gonadal dysfunction and changes in sex hormones in male patients with postnecrotic cirrhosis, and to compare them with those in alcoholic cirrhotic men, three age-matched groups of men (hepatitis B virus-related postnecrotic cirrhosis 27, alcoholic cirrhosis 21, normal controls 30) were studied. Twelve of the 21 (57%) alcoholic cirrhotics and 16 of the 27 (59%) postnecrotic cirrhotics had a history of impotence. Both alcoholic and postnecrotic cirrhotic patients had significantly lower basal testosterone, but higher estradiol and prolactin levels than the control group (p less than 0.05). However, no differences were noted between the two cirrhotic groups. The degree of reduced testosterone and increased prolactin levels correlated with the severity of the cirrhosis. Despite the low testosterone concentration, basal levels of follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) were not increased in the cirrhotic patients. All the three groups studied had normal FSH and LH responses to the stimulation of exogenous gonadotropin releasing hormone. On the basis of these results, we conclude that: (1) impotence and low testosterone level are not infrequent findings in men with hepatitis B virus-related postnecrotic cirrhosis, especially in those with decompensated liver function. (2) The liver disease per se is important for the development of male sexual dysfunction. (3) The derangement of hypothalamic-pituitary function may play a role in the sexual dysfunction and changes in sex hormones in male patients with cirrhosis.
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PMID:Gonadal dysfunction and changes in sex hormones in postnecrotic cirrhotic men: a matched study with alcoholic cirrhotic men. 177 85

Serum prolactin assays in patients of hepatic cirrhosis were analysed. Patients with cirrhosis had higher values of serum prolactin (27.2 +/- 5.1 ng/ml in males and 38.4 +/- 4.1 ng/ml in females) as compared to control subjects (p less than 0.05). Majority of patients of cirrhosis with suspected portal-systemic encephalopathy had significantly higher serum prolactin than those without encephalopathy (p less than 0.05). Significantly higher values of serum prolactin on admission had positive correlation with mortality (p less than 0.01). Clinico-biochemical severity of hepatic dysfunction was directly correlated with level of serum prolactin. The present study reveals the possibility of diagnostic and prognostic values of serum prolactin in cirrhosis, specially in clinical/sub-clinical subsets of portal-systemic encephalopathy.
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PMID:Observation on serum prolactin in hepatic cirrhosis. 178 16


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