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)

Mitochondrial function is impaired in patients and experimental animals with liver cirrhosis. The relationship between mitochondrial impairment and severity of cirrhosis is unknown, however. We therefore characterized the severity of cirrhosis in rats with phenobarbital/CCl4-induced cirrhosis by the aminopyrine breath test, a microsomal function test reflecting hepatocellular mass. Mitochondrial function was evaluated by measuring oxygen consumption, enzyme activities and ATP production in mitochondria isolated from cirrhotic (N = 8) and control livers (N = 4). Oxygen consumption and mitochondrial enzyme activities calculated per liver were significantly reduced in the presence of cirrhosis. This decrease corresponded to the loss of hepatocytes calculated from the reduction in aminopyrine breath test. The effect of atractylate, oligomycin and dinitrophenol on state 3 respiration was equal between the two groups. The respiratory control ratio was significantly reduced in mitochondria from cirrhotic livers with beta-hydroxybutyrate (4.01 +/- 0.94 vs 5.45 +/- 0.40), but not with succinate as substrate. The rate of ATP production was significantly decreased in mitochondria from cirrhotic rats for both substrates. In contrast, the static head (state 4) phosphate potential was fully developed after 10 min and was equal between the two groups. We conclude that cirrhosis of the liver leads to a loss of hepatocytes which is paralleled by reduced oxygen uptake and reduced mitochondrial enzyme activities.
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PMID:Mitochondrial function in carbon tetrachloride-induced cirrhosis in the rat. Qualitative and quantitative defects. 273 Jun 74

Microsomal Na+,K+-ATPase isolated from the renal cortex of rats with CCL4-induced cirrhosis (CIR) showed a higher specific activity than the enzyme obtained from control rats (COR). Kinetic studies showed a lower K0.5 for ATP (0.08 +/- 0.03 vs. 0.24 +/- 0.04 mM; p less than 0.05), a lower Na+ activation constant (9.6 +/- 1.5 vs. 19.0 +/- 1.7 mM; p less than 0.05), and a higher K+ activation constant (1.2 +/- 0.1 vs. 0.6 +/- 0.1 mM; p less than 0.05) for CIR. The optimal pH of the enzyme was 0.5 units higher in CIR than COR. The fluorescence of eosin-treated enzymes indicated a higher ratio of E1/E2 forms of Na+,K+-ATPase in CIR. The K+-activated p-nitrophenylphosphatase (pNPPase) activity of the enzyme was lower in CIR than COR rats (1.5 +/- 0.1 vs. 2.2 +/- 0.1 mU/mg; p less than 0.05). Dialysing (24 h) COR microsomes reproduced most of the changes observed in CIR enzymes (kinetics, optimal pH, and eosin fluorescence). Lyophilized dialysate of COR, but not of CIR microsomes, inhibits Na+,K+-ATPase activity. These results suggest that a dialysable inhibitor modifies the Na+,K+-ATPase activity in the kidney of COR which is almost absent in that of CIR. The absence of this factor may lead to the overall inability to excrete Na+ in the cirrhotic state.
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PMID:Absence of an endogenous regulator of Na+,K+-ATPase activity in the tissues of cirrhotic rats. 283 57

Alcoholic beverages contribute an appreciable percentage (4-6%) to the total caloric intake in Western societies. The caloric value of ethanol as fuel may be dose-related. Most evidence suggests that at moderate intake levels of less than 45 g/day (3 drinks) ethanol is efficiently utilized as a fuel by the liver. At high intakes, ethanol calories may not be utilized for cellular synthesis of ATP and maintenance of weight. The exact mechanism for this inefficient utilization remains unknown but may be related, in part, to metabolism of ethanol by the microsomal ethanol-oxidizing system, a reaction that does not contribute to generation of reducing equivalents for ATP synthesis. Although ethanol is utilized for ATP synthesis after single-dose administration, chronic consumption leads to morphological changes in hepatic mitochondria and to decreased ATP synthesis. Reductions in the activities of the enzymes of the mitochondrial electron transport chain have been reported after alcohol feeding and may help to explain decreases in hepatic ATP synthesis. There is some evidence that ATP degradation by "Na-K ATPase" is increased after ethanol feeding and that hepatic O2 consumption is likewise enhanced. However, other studies have failed to demonstrate enhanced O2 consumption. Current evidence suggests that malnutrition alone is not sufficient to explain the pathogenesis of chronic liver disease in alcoholics. Although the daily amount of alcohol consumed and the duration of excessive consumption are clearly important factors in the development of alcoholic hepatitis and cirrhosis, other factors, particularly nutritional deficiencies, may modulate the risk of developing alcohol-related liver damage. The prevalence of malnutrition is exceedingly high in alcoholics with clinically severe liver disease. Nutritional deficiencies are better correlated with a clinical index of severity than with histologic severity of alcoholic hepatitis. Prognosis and outcome of patients with alcoholic liver disease may be affected by nutritional deficiencies, which thus provides a rationale for aggressive nutritional management of these patients.
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PMID:Alcohol and nutrition: caloric value, bioenergetics, and relationship to liver damage. 301 71

The cirrhotic patients were in poor nutritional condition and deteriorated reticuloendothelial function, which were further aggravated after hepatic resection. Preoperative nutritional repletion treatment as well as preoperative administration of OK-432 improved the nutritional condition and reticuloendothelial function of the patients, resulting in uneventful postoperative courses. In experimentally induced liver cirrhosis, however, an excessive amount of glucose administration in the early postoperative period induced the reduction of hepatic energy charge and ATP content. An adequate amount of glucose should be administered in a period associated with marked glucose intolerance. To determine daily glucose disposal rate rapidly, blood glucose curve obtained from intravenous glucose tolerance test (IVGTT) and insulin tolerance test (ITT) was analyzed in hepatectomized cirrhotic rats. It was possible to calculate prospected values of glucose disposal rate by the analytic index of IVGTT and ITT. An adequate perioperative nutritional support and the activation of the reticuloendothelial system are thought to have important therapeutic value to prevent complications of liver cirrhosis after resection.
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PMID:[Significance of perioperative nutritional support and activation of the reticuloendothelial system on the resection of the cirrhotic liver]. 306 76

Gluconeogenesis and alanine metabolism of normal and cirrhotic rats were studied in view of partial hepatectomy. Liver cirrhosis was made by repeated injection of thioacetamide in rat. Partial hepatectomy was performed by modified method of Higgins-Anderson. Liver glycogen and fructose-2, 6-bisphosphate were decreased after hepatectomy and recovered within 7 days in normal groups, while those of cirrhotic group reduced even in preoperative state were further decreased and hardly recovered after hepatectomy. Gluconeogenesis of perfused liver in cirrhosis was increased from both lactate and alanine preoperatively, but gluconeogenesis from alanine was not increased in both hepatectomized rats. ATP and energy charge were decreased after hepatectomy and recovered within two weeks. These level were lower in cirrhotic group, and decreased further and hardly recovered after hepatectomy. Alanine utilization to CO2 in vivo was not impaired in cirrhotic group either preoperatively or postoperatively. ATP and energy charge were increased by alanine injection in hepatectomized rats of both normal and cirrhotic group. In conclusion, glucose-insulin therapy of sufficient amounts is important to improve decreased glycolysis and abnormal gluconeogenesis on both post-hepatectomy period of normal and pre and post-hepatectomy period of cirrhosis. Also alanine is effective for stimulating decreased energy production.
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PMID:[Changes of gluconeogenesis and alanine metabolism following partial hepatectomy in normal and cirrhotic rats]. 339 28

In the cirrhotic rat liver induced by phenobarbitone and carbon tetrachloride, adenylate energy charge, mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation, and respiratory enzyme concentrations were studied along with serum albumin concentrations. Cytochrome a (+a3) concentrations of the liver increased with the severity of cirrhosis and were negatively correlated with the ATP-synthesizing ability per unit of cytochrome a (+a3). These changes were associated with the decrease in hepatic energy charge. Such decreased energy charge may be responsible for the decreased serum albumin level in the cirrhotic rat. It is suggested that such falls in hepatic energy charge may be one of the most important factors contributing to the decreased functional reserve of cirrhotic patients.
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PMID:Adenylate energy charge and cytochrome a (+a3) in the cirrhotic rat liver. 609 79

The present study was undertaken to investigate the effect of ATP-MgCl2 for hepatic cellular energy crisis following hepatectomy in cirrhosis. In experimental study, cirrhotic rats, induced by subcutaneous injection of CCl4 twice a week for 10 weeks, received ATP-MgCl2 (12.4 mumoles) (ATP group) or saline (control group) at 2 hours after 68% hepatectomy. The hepatic cellular energy charge (EC) and arterial ketone body ratio (AKBR), which were good indicators to evaluate the hepatic cellular metabolism, and reticuloendothelial system (RES) function were significantly improved among ATP group at 24 hours after hepatectomy compared to the control group. Survival at one week was also significantly improved with ATP-MgCl2 treatment. In clinical study, ATP-MgCl2 (30-50 mumoles/kg) was infused intravenously to twenty hepatectomized cirrhotic patients. The hepatic cellular energy metabolism, studied using AKBR, and RES function as well as the clinical course were improved with ATP-MgCl2) treatment compared to those of the conventionally treated controls. These data indicate that ATP-MgCl2 is beneficial as one of the therapeutic approaches to improve the hepatic cellular energy crisis after hepatectomy which is the major cause of death following hepatectomy among cirrhotic patients.
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PMID:[Treatment of post-hepatectomy hepatic cellular energy crisis in cirrhosis with ATP-MgCl2 administration]. 633 58

Energy-rich phosphagens, water, and electrolytes were determined in skeletal muscle biopsy specimens from five elderly women and five elderly men with moderate liver cirrhosis. At the time of the study the patients were in their usual condition without evidence of deterioration of the disease. When compared with findings in apparently healthy subjects of similar age, the distribution and level of electrolytes and water were within normal limits in the female patients. The male patients showed increased contents of muscle water, and Mg2+ was reduced. The values calculated for the intracellular concentration of K+ and Mg2+ were also below normal. The pattern and levels of energy-rich phosphagens were abnormal in all but one female patient. As a general finding, ATP and the total level of adenine nucleotides were markedly reduced, as were phosphocreatine, the ATP/ADP ratio, and the energy charge potential.
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PMID:Muscle biopsy studies in patients with moderate liver cirrhosis with special reference to energy-rich phosphagens and electrolytes. 671 37

The chronic ingestion of ethanol results in liver-cell damage, and characteristic features of this injury are the marked alterations in both the functions and morphology of the mitochondria. Morphologically, the changes observed in human alcoholics and experimental animals appear similar. Bizarrely shaped mitochondria and megamitochondria are detected at the fatty liver stage and persist as the disease progresses. As yet, however, no correlation has been found between the severity of these morphological changes and the development of cirrhosis. Analysis of the mitochondrial membranes indicates that ethanol consumption produces changes in both the protein and lipid composition of the membrane. Profound decreases in the components of the respiratory chain have been detected, and these changes are associated with marked depressions in the activity of NAD+-linked dehydrogenases, cytochrome oxidase, and the ATP synthetase complex. On the other hand, no consistent pattern has emerged as to the effect of chronic ethanol consumption on the composition of the membrane phospholipids. Many of the changes appear to be dependent on the sex of the animal, the dietary status, and the duration of ethanol intake, and are suggestive of changes in fatty acid desaturase activity. Mitochondria isolated from ethanol-fed rats displayed impaired respiration and a lowered steady-state rate of ATP synthesis. Whether or not these functional changes are directly related to alterations in the physical properties of the membranes remains to be resolved. This marked depression of respiratory functions in isolated mitochondria was not reflected by a significant decrease in O2 consumption by the livers of ethanol-fed animals.
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PMID:Alcohol-induced mitochondrial changes in the liver. 672 59

ATP-thymidine 5'-phosphotransferase (TK) is a cellular enzyme involved in DNA synthesis, activated during the G1/S phase of the cell cycle. Elevated TK serum levels can be found in cancer patients due to the active proliferation of tumor cells. TK serum activity was tested by a radioenzymatic technique (Prolifigen TK REA, Sangtec Medical, Sweden) based on the conversion of 125 I deoxyuridine to 125 I deoxyuridine monophosphate. A total of 181 patients were enrolled in this study: 133 lymphomas (Hodgkin, HL and Non-Hodgkin, NHL) 48 benign diseases including acute (n = 17) and chronic inflammatory diseases (n = 13), myocardial infarction (n = 11), liver cirrhosis (n = 2), renal failures (n = 2), and diabetes (n = 3). Lymphoma patients were classified according to the Ann Arbor staging system, and 103 NHL patients were classified according to the Working Formulation histologic grade (21 low, 72 intermediate, and 10 high grade lymphomas). The patients were treated with standard chemo-radiotherapeutic protocols according to the stage and the histologic grade; the evaluation of the response to the treatments and the follow-up were performed according to the serial examinations currently used in our Institute. Given a TK cut-off of 5 U/L, the diagnostic sensitivity of TK test at lymphoma presentation was 81.8% and 75.7% in HL and NHL patients, respectively. Values exceeding 50 U/L were found only in NHL patients. The overall sensitivity of TK resulted higher than that of LDH (16.7%), copper (42.6%), IgG (23.5%), IgM (26.8%) and IgA (9.8%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Thymidine kinase (TK) activity as a prognostic parameter of survival in lymphoma patients. 766 Aug 54


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