Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The plasma proteins are constantly shuttling between intravascular and extravascular mass of a specific plasma protein is determined by its individual rate of synthesis and the mean total time it spends in plasma. The ratio of intravascular to total mass (distribution ratio) is determined by the relative rate, at which it passes from plasma to interstitial spaces (transcapillary escape rate: TER) and the relative return rate via lymph. TER in a specific organ depends on the local leakiness of the microvasculature. The overall value in normal man varies with the molecular weight of the protein being about 5%/h of the intravascular albumin mass, 3%/h for IgG and less than 1%/h for IgM. The higher the TER, the lower is the intravascular fraction. Hypertension, diabetes mellitus, burns, myxedema and certain types of liver cirrhosis will increase TER. In hypertension and diabetes this may be compensated for by an increased lymphatic return rate. Hypoproteinemia due to malnutrition or urinary or gastrointestinal loss is accompanied by a shift from the extravascular to the intravascular space.
...
PMID:Intra- and extravascular distribution of albumin and immunoglobulin in man. 73 85

We report an unusual case of a large inferior mesenteric-caval shunt in a 25-year-old man without cirrhosis with hypoproteinemia and hypochromic anemia. In this large shunt the direct communication was between the inferior mesenteric vein and the internal iliac vein. Hemodynamic change as a result of the shunt was thought to cause his present clinical problems and future portosystemic encephalopathy. Percutaneous transcatheter embolization of the shunt with fibrin glue was performed through the internal iliac vein, and this offered amelioration of hypoproteinemia and reduction of serum ammonia levels without any complications. An interventional radiologic approach instead of surgical ligation should be attempted for portosystemic shunts, and fibrin glue, as well as coils or a detachable balloon, is also valuable as an embolizing material.
...
PMID:Interventional embolization with fibrin glue for a large inferior mesenteric-caval shunt. 159 79

The clinical background relating to edema in elderly inpatients was investigated, in terms of various items in elderly (aged greater than or equal to 65) cases with edema (n = 96) and without edema (controls, n = 95). Both groups were matched for sex, age, and underlying diseases. As compared with the control patients, the patients with edema had longer hospital stays with more disabled status, and showed less activity of daily living (ADL). The rates of bed-restricted patients, dementia patients, and patients with decubitus, muscle atrophy, or incontinence were found to be significantly higher in the patients with edema. The measurement of biochemical parameters revealed that the patients with edema had significantly lower levels of serum albumin, Na, Cl, creatinine, and uric acid, in contrast to higher levels of C-reactive protein. According to the classification of the assumed causes of edema, we divided the patients with edema into five groups; group 1 (n = 33): edema associated with immobilization, group 2 (n = 18): edema due to heart failure, group 3 (n = 15): edema on paretic limbs, group 4 (n = 6): edema due to hypoproteinemia, group 5 (n = 5): edema associated with liver cirrhosis. Both group 1 and group 4 patients had lower levels of hemoglobin and albumin, whereas group 3 patients had higher scores of ADL, higher blood pressure, and higher levels of hemoglobin and albumin. These results suggest that immobilization and restriction in bed, as well as malnutrition, were important factors in causing edema in elderly inpatients.
...
PMID:[A controlled study on edema in elderly inpatients]. 238 89

Application of isolated ultrafiltration (IUF) of blood in 70 out of 100 patients with refractory heart failure (HF) made it possible, acting on some mechanisms of water excretion disorders, to attain the compensation for the HF signs. At the same time the correction of the manifestations of secondary hyperaldosteronism, hypoproteinemia, hyperbilirubinemia, and azotemia was attained only thanks to the presence of the functional reserves of the liver and kidneys. In 35 patients with cachectic HF, IUF failure was determined by marked cardial liver cirrhosis together with depletion of the functional reserves of the cardiovascular system. The lack of sufficient diuresis, hyponatremia, hypoproteinemia, and hyperbilirubinemia may be unfavourable prognostic signs despite the reduction of HF intensity consequent on IUF.
...
PMID:[The efficacy of isolated ultrafiltration of the blood in patients with refractory heart failure]. 276 1

This report describes a new disorder resembling hereditary tyrosinemia (HT) but differing from it in several respects. Similarities include failure to thrive with hypoproteinemia, micronodular cirrhosis, alpha-fetoprotein positive hepatocellular carcinoma, renal Fanconi syndrome with renal tubular ectasia, hypermethioninemia, and hypoglycemia associated with islet cell hyperplasia. However, the tyrosine metabolic pathway was intact. Unique findings include optic atrophy, cerebellar degeneration, and exocrine pancreatic hypoplasia. Polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) status was evaluated in the serum and liver. Initial PUFA profile to serum phospholipids revealed grossly elevated linoleic acid and subnormal linolenic acid. All PUFAs derived from these precursors were absent suggesting gross abnormalities in the utilization of these two essential fatty acids for synthesis of longer chain highly unsaturated structural PUFA. Analysis of liver phospholipids indicated that linoleic acid was lower and w3 and monenoic acids were higher than in the liver specimens from two cases of HT. The gross abnormalities in PUFA pattern, although perhaps secondary to another cause, represent serious structural and functional abnormalities of essential membrane lipids and potentially of eicosanoids derived from them.
...
PMID:A new hepato-pancreato-renal disorder resembling tyrosinemia involving neuropathy and abnormal metabolism of polyunsaturated acids. 283 82

In this study, background factors were determined in 108 surgical patients who showed depression in phagocytic and bacteriocidal activity with nitroblue tetrazolium reduction test. Control subjects consisted of 4 healthy males and 4 healthy females whose age ranged from 25 to 38 years. The background factors associated with the depressed neutrophil phagocytic and bacteriocidal activity in surgical patients were renal insufficiency, liver cirrhosis, hypoproteinemia, diabetes mellitus, long-term administration of steroids and immunosuppressants, obesity, anemia, aging and malignant tumors. These depression factors closely resembled those generally considered to be involved in increased susceptibility to infections.
...
PMID:Depression factors of neutrophil bactericidal activity with nitroblue tetrazolium reduction test in surgical patients. 297 37

Hypoproteinemia by itself produces a metabolic alkalosis. It is not clear whether a respiratory compensation (hypercapnia) develops with this alkalosis; patients with liver cirrhosis, most of them with hypoproteinemia, are known to hyperventilate. We studied 23 clinically stable patients with hypoproteinemia, with very low albumin-to-globulin ratios (range 0.4 to 1.1), who had either liver cirrhosis (n = 12) or other medical conditions (n = 11). In both groups, there was marked hypocapnia, accompanied by alkalemia (PaCO2 values (mean +/- SD) 31 +/- 2 and 32 +/- 3 torr; pH (mean +/- SD) 7.45 +/- 0.03 and 7.47 +/- 0.03, for the patients with cirrhosis and those without, respectively). Hypoxemia was not the stimulus provoking hyperventilation. The lowering of PaCO2 was proportional to the reduction of serum albumin and total protein concentrations; no detectable difference was seen between the patients with cirrhosis and those without cirrhosis in this apparent dependence of PaCO2 on the concentration of serum proteins. Many of these clinically stable patients with hypoproteinemia, with or without liver cirrhosis, had appreciable concentrations of unidentified anions in plasma (inappropriately high anion gap). Whatever the nonrespiratory acid-base status of the patients with hypoproteinemia, their pulmonary ventilation (hypocapnia) appeared excessive when compared with subjects (presumably) without proteinemia who had similar nonrespiratory acid-base states. The mechanism responsible for the hyperventilation in hypoproteinemia and the nature of the unidentified anions in this condition are obscure.
...
PMID:Hyperventilation with hypoproteinemia. 318 88

The percentage of cell number of 3 types of male anterior pituitary cells was counted in autopsy cases with liver cirrhosis and cases that died of other conditions. These cases were then compared. In liver cirrhosis, acidophils (somatotrophs and mammotrophs) showed a tendency to increase in cell percentages. Immunocytochemistry also revealed the increase in the number of somatotrophs and mammotrophs in liver cirrhosis. Comparison of protein synthesis in cirrhotic liver and in healthy liver, in vitro, revealed that in the cirrhotic liver tissue protein synthesis was markedly depressed and GH for protein synthesis became more necessary than in a non-cirrhotic state. The disturbed protein synthesis and hypoproteinemia were suggested as causative factors of increased acidophils of the anterior lobe of the hypophysis.
...
PMID:Increased acidophils of the hypophysis in liver cirrhosis. 620 28

We analyzed the serum anion gap (AG = sodium plus potassium minus chloride plus bicarbonate, N = 11-21 mEq/l), serum uric acid and urea concentrations in hyponatremia of various origins. We found that characteristic chemical patterns emerged in association with different hypotonic states: Low uric acid concentration was typically observed in the SIADH and in hyponatremia related to hypopituitarism. The same observation was also frequently noted in hyponatremia secondary to diuretics or to polydypsia. In the SIADH, we observed a decrease in the AG but to a greater extent (-26%) than one would expect from the simple dilutional effect (-16%). Fifty percent of the patients presented an AG lower than 11 mEq/l. In patients with diuretic-related hyponatremia, one group presented an hypouricemia and a low AG as in SIADH (reflecting volume expansion), in the other group the AG was normal or increased as was uric acid concentration (reflecting volume depletion). In adrenocorticotropin deficiency, hyponatremia was typically associated with a low bicarbonate concentration, a normal AG and hypouricemia. In polydypsic patients with hyponatremia, the AG was usually normal or increased despite sometimes very low sodium levels. Uric acid levels were highly variable, most often decreased. We also noted in these patients that the serum urea levels were correlated with urine osmolality (R = +0.8; p < 0.001), and in 40% of them we observed very low blood urea concentration (0.5-2 mmol/l) at the admission time. In hyponatremia related to cardiac failure or cirrhosis, the AG was usually normal despite mild hypoproteinemia.
...
PMID:Uric acid, anion gap and urea concentration in the diagnostic approach to hyponatremia. 852 2

A 63-year-old woman who had received hemodialysis therapy since she fell acute on chronic renal failure 4 years ago presented with multiple joint pain. Nephrocalcinosis was not detected by abdominal X-ray when hemodialysis therapy was initiated. Laboratory testing showed azotemia, anemia, hypoproteinemia and mild liver dysfunction but no liver cirrhosis. Biopsied bone tissue demonstrated numerous calcium oxalate crystal depositions. Laparoscopy revealed black liver in macroscopic view. Histological studies showed numerous lipofuscin-like dark brown granules were deposited in hepatocytes. The activity of alanine : glyoxylate aminotransferase (AGT) was less than 0.1 U/g in biopsied patient's liver tissue. Generally, clinical symptoms demonstrated by Japanese primary hyperoxaluria type I (PH-I) patients are milder than those of European patients. Some PH-I patients may successfully avoid urinary tract calcification unless they fall into oliguria by some other causes. The lipofuscin granules are most likely the source of the dark color. Massive deposition of the lipofuscin granules indicated that the duration of the liver metabolic abnormality had lasted for long time. Thus, black liver may be related to a mild form of PH-I.
...
PMID:A case of late onset primary hyperoxaluria type I (PH-I) presented with black liver. 977 23


1 2 3 Next >>