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 case of the syndrome of sea-blue histiocyte is presented in a 53-year-old Japanese woman, which is the first recorded case in Japan. The patient had hepatosplenomegaly, bleeding manifestations, mild thrombocytopenia, fatty metamorphosis and cirrhosis of the liver, as well as abnormal serum lipid profiles. Her parents were consanguineous and her maternal grandmother with hepatomegaly died of hepatic failure. Histologically, peculiar histiocytes containing numerous, intracytoplasmic sea-blue stained granules on May-Giemsa stain were demonstrated in biopsy materials of the bone marrow, lymph node and liver. The sea-blue granules in these histiocytes proved to have histochemical staining characteristics of lipogenic ceroid-like pigment. Ultrastructurally, these granules showed membrane-bound, pleomorphic inclusions of heterogeneous nature, including electron-dense amorphous or variegatedly osmiophilic, frequently laminated materials. Enzyme cytochemically, localization of acid phosphatase activity was demonstrated in and around the intracytoplasmic inclusions. With regard to the pathogenesis of the sea-blue histiocytes in this case, it may be suggested that the existence of the abnormality in lipid metabolism plays an important role in intralysosomal ceroidogenesis in these histiocytes.
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PMID:Syndrome of the sea-blue histiocyte--the first case report in Japan and review of the literature--. 21 60

A 65 years old, female patient with acquired aplastic anemia secondary to frequent exposure to hair dye. While on treatment with anabolic steroids hormone became jaundiced and developed hepatomegaly eight months later. During laparotomy the liver was enlarged, hard, with multiple whitish nodules on its surgace but was otherwise normal. Liver biopsy showed hepatocellular carcinoma, there were not cirrhosis niether hemochromatosis. A review of the related literature was done and discussed on the experimental and clinical evidences that suggested that androgens may play same role on the etiology of liver cancer.
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PMID:[Androgenic therapy and hepatocellular carcinoma. Report of a case]. 22 17

Occurrence of fever in a patient with liver cirrhosis should suggest the following: 1. Endotoxemia. Endotoxins are normally present in portal blood; in hepatic cirrhosis they are insufficiently cleared by the liver and their presence can be demonstrated in the systemic circulation by the "limulus test". Fever is one of the many consequences ascribed to the presence of endotoxins in the blood. 2. Infections. Cirrhosis and alcoholism (which often accompanies it) impair host defenses against bacteria and other organisms. Thus, infections are actually more frequent in hepatic cirrhosis as is shown by the example of bacterial endocarditis. Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis must be searched for carefully when ascites is present. 3. Alcoholic hepatitis. This diagnosis is established histologically. The usual symptoms, occurring with variable incidence, include anorexia, nausea and vomiting, abdominal pain, fever and jaundice in the presence of hepatomegaly, leukocytosis and an elevated SGOT. Differential diagnosis from obstructive jaundice and a severe prognosis without alcohol abstinence make early diagnosis mandatory. Its evolution in cirrhosis can be astonishingly rapid. In the absence of hepatic encephalopathy, corticosteroids do not appear to be recommended. 4. Hepatoma.
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PMID:[Fever and liver cirrhosis]. 22 38

The disease course is described in 21 patients with low serum concentrations of alpha1-antitrypsin of the phenotype Z (genotype pi ZZ). 13 of these patients have long-standing disease characterized by bronchitis or dyspnea beginning before the age of 40 and progressing to emphysema (11 patients) and to corpulmonale (7 patients). The remaining 8 patients are children with hepatopathy characterized by prolonged jaundice at birth, persistent hepatomegaly and persistently elevated liver enzymes. In 2 children, the evolution to cirrhosis was ascertained by biopsy.
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PMID:[Severe alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency: clinical observations of 21 patients]. 31 May 77

Four cases of hepatic angiosarcoma are reported with a review of 99 other cases in the English literature. Angiosarcoma of the liver is associated with chronic exposure to thorotrast, vinyl chloride, arsenicals, radium and possibly copper and with chronic idiopathic hemochromatosis. Although 40% of patients have hepatic fibrosis or cirrhosis at autopsy, the nature of the association between chronic liver disease and hepatic angiosarcoma is unknown. The clinical presentation of hepatic angiosarcoma is nonspecific with abdominal pain, weakness and weight loss common complaints and with hepatomegaly, ascites and jaundice common findings. Liver function tests are usually abnormal but there is no one liver function test or set of tests specific for the tumor. The occurrence of thrombocytopenia and disseminated intravascular coagulation is characteristic of hepatic angiosarcoma and may be related to local consumption of clotting factors and formed blood elements in the tumor. Catastrophic intraabdominal bleeding is also characteristic and occurs in one-fourth of all cases. This complication is likely related to the high incidence of clotting abnormalities and the vascular nature of the neoplasm. Selective hepatic arteriogram and open liver biopsy are the foundations of diagnostic evaluation. Percutaneous liver biopsy should be avoided. Failure to appreciate the possibility of hepatic angiosarcoma in the proper clinical setting, leading to blind percutaneous biopsy, may result in failure to make the diagnosis at the cost of significant morbidity and mortality. Survival of patients with hepatic angiosarcoma is brief; only 3% live longer than 2 years. Treatment of the tumor to date is empirical. There are probably a few patients who might benefit from radical surgery with curative intent. For all others chemotherapy is indicated. Adriamycin is active against hepatic angiosarcoma, but optimal dose and mode of administration require further investigation. Further study is also required to delineate the cause of hepatic angiosarcoma in the 60% of cases without definite epidemiologic association.
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PMID:The clinical features of hepatic angiosarcoma: a report of four cases and a review of the English literature. 36 8

Increased splenic uptake of radiocolloids is a helpful sign in the scintigraphic diagnosis of various hepatocellular diseases, but little attempt has been made to quantify this physiologic phenomenon. We have devised a simple computer method that compares average splenic activity to average right-lobe liver activity. The method is reproducible (r = 0.97) and exhibits little interobserver variation (r = 0.99). One hundred clinically normal subjects were found to have a nearly symmetrical distribution of S/L ratios around a mean of 0.77, with a s.d. of 0.20. Fifteen subjects normal by biopsy were found to have a similar mean spleen-to-liver (S/L) ratio of 0.74. Based upon a normal range of 0.37 to 1.17 (0.77 +/- 2 s.d.), elevated S/L ratios were found in fatty metamorphosis (85%), cirrhosis (67%), and chronic hepatitis (43%). Abnormal S/L ratios in the range from 1.17 to approximately 1.4 were not visually obvious. Overall sensitivity of the S/L ratio in these three diseases is 69%. When combined with the other scintigraphic indications of hepatocellular disease (nonhomogenous colloid uptake, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, and bone-marrow colloidal uptake), the liver scan was found to have a sensitivity of 93%.
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PMID:Simple computer quantitation of spleen-to-liver ratios in the diagnosis of hepatocellular disease. 37 3

Seventy children with hepatomegaly, between the ages of 3 months and 13 years, were investigated including a liver biopsy in 60, to study the general pattern of liver disease in children. Thirty percent had acute viral hapatitis, 20 percent cirrhosis, 17.6 percent pulmonary tuberculosis, 18 percent hereditary diseases and 14 percent miscellaneous diseases involving the liver. None of the cases met the criteria for Indian childhood cirrhosis. It was concluded that in Karachi pulmonary tuberculosis was a common case of hepatosplenomegaly in children and that the aetiology of cirrhosis was probably multifactorial.
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PMID:Aspects of paediatric liver disease in Karachi. 40 63

Five nonalcoholic diabetic women were clinically and histologically verified as having micronodular cirrhosis. In this series all the patients were over 50 years of age, and showed obesity, hyperglycemia, enlarged liver and mild abnormalities of liver function tests. The histological findings differed from hepatitic cirrhosis. In two patients serial biopsies confirmed development of cirrhosis from centrilobular necrosis.
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PMID:Five patients with nonalcoholic diabetic cirrhosis. 46 92

Liver size has been estimated clinically and by a non-invasive ultrasound technique in 16 normal subjects, 16 patients with cirrhosis, 10 patients with chronic biliary obstruction, and three patients with primary hepatoma. Antipyrine disposition was also measured in each subject. Hepatomegaly was not clinically detectable until there was approximately a 20% increase in liver size. Additional increases in size correlated significantly with clinical estimates of hepatomegaly. Antipyrine clearance had a three-fold range in normal subjects. Its mean value was significantly reduced in each subgroup of patients with liver disease. However, 48% of patients with liver disease had values within the normal range. In normal subjects there was a significant correlation between antipyrine clearance and liver volume. Thus, intersubject variation in clearance normalised for liver volume was less than clearance alone. Antipyrine clearance normalised for liver volume in patients with liver disease was significantly lower than in normal subjects and there was no overlap with normal subjects. In conclusion, assessment of drug metabolising efficiency per unit volume of liver increased the discrimination in differentiating subjects with normal from abnormal livers.
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PMID:Antipyrine clearance per unit volume liver: an assessment of hepatic function in chronic liver disease. 48 57

The role of liver size in drug metabolism was investigated in 34 chronic alcoholics and 28 controls by comparing antipyrine half-life with biopsy content and total amount of hepatic cytochrome P-450 (P-450) and liver weight. Liver size was significantly greater in alcoholics than in controls. Total P-450 was increased and antipyrine metabolism was enhanced in alcoholics with normal histology of the liver. In subjects with alcoholic hepatitis or cirrhosis, the antipyrine half-life was prolonged and P-450 was decreased. Alcoholics with fatty liver had a reduced P-450 content, but the total amount of P-450 and the antipyrine half-life were normal. The results demonstrate in alcoholics that an enlarged liver of normal histological appearance is associated with enhanced drug metabolism. In subjects with fatty liver the drug metabolizing capacity per unit weight of liver is often impaired, but the increase in liver size leads to undisturbed total oxidizing capacity and normal in vivo metabolism. In alcoholic hepatitis drug metabolism is impaired in spite of hepatomegaly. In cirrhosis the enlargement of the liver appears to compensate for the decreased P-450 content resulting in only slightly decreased total P-450, and the severly impaired in vivo drug metabolism may be due to derangement of blood flow.
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PMID:Liver size and indices of drug metabolism in alcoholics. 63 35


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