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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Three patients with cirrhosis, ascites, and dilutional hyponatremia were treated with demeclocycline in an attempt to correct the abnormal water retention. Demeclocycline administration (600 to 900 mg/day for 8 to 9 days) resulted in [a] increased blood urea nitrogen and plasma creatinine concentrations; [b] reduction of the inulin clearance by between 63% to 78% and of paraaminophippurate clearance by 36% to 77%; and [c] an impairment of the renal concentrating ability. Urine osmolality decreased to hypotonic levels, but polyuria did not appear, probably because it was prevented by the reduction of the glomerular filtration rate. Renal failure was reversible on withdrawal of demeclocycline. No other causes than demeclocycline administration could be found to explain the reduction of the glomerular filtration rate and the estimated renal plasma flow.
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PMID:Renal failure associated with demeclocycline in cirrhosis. 40 25

Arteriosclerotic and nonarteriosclerotic rats were treated with carbon tetrachloride (CCL4) to induce cirrhosis of the liver. Massive myocardial infarction was then induced in intact and CCL4-treated animals. During acute necrosis (Days 1 thru 3), animals were killed at 4, 8, 12 and 24 h on Days 1 and 2, and during myocardial repair on Days 4, 5 and 8. During the induction of cirrhosis, animals developed polydypsia, polyuria, and hyperglycemia; during myocardial infarction, the arteriosclerotic + cirrhotic animals developed severe and persistent congestive heart failure, i.e., hydrothorax. Adrenal and thymus gland weights and corticosterone levels indicated that cirrhosis per se increased pituitary--adrenal activity, particularly in arteriosclerotic animals. Enzyme levels of SGOT and SGPT demonstrated severe hepatic damage due to cirrhosis and acute myocardial infarction. Blood triglycerides and cholesterol responded abnormally in cirrhotic animals during acute myocardial ischemia due to their entrapment within hepatic cells. The cirrhotic animals manifested poor myocardial repair with persistent foci of necrosis, calcification, and a high incidence of large, occlusive, atrial thrombi. It is suggested that cirrhosis interferes with lipid metabolism and adrenal steroid conjugation leading to abnormal levels of mineralocorticoids which favor congestive heart failure, poor myocardial repair, and atrial thrombosis.
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PMID:Effect of CCL4-induced cirrhosis on the pathophysiologic course of acute myocardial infarction in nonarteriosclerotic vs arteriosclerotic male rats. 46 16

Renal dysfunction in patients with cirrhosis of the liver is frequent especially in connection with endotoxaemia. Renal and intrarenal haemodynamics were investigated, therefore, in normal rats with or without portacaval anastomosis (PCA) by means of the cardiac output (CO) fractionation technique using microspheres. The intrarenal blood distribution was estimated after anatomical separation of renal cortex and medulla. In normal rats the total renal fraction of CO was 22.5 +/- 7.2%, and the renal medulla fraction 0.8 +/- 0.4% of CO. After a single injection of E. coli-endotoxin (1.5 mg/kg b.w.) the animals developed a high-cardiac-output state, the mean arterial pressure decreased from 110 +/- 15 mm Hg to 81 +/- 6 mm Hg. Renal fraction of CO was unaltered but the blood flow through the kidney was increased due to the high CO. The blood flow of the medulla increased five to tenfold of control values whereas renal cortical blood flow decreased. During the first eight hours after endotoxin administration the animals developed polyuria with a decrease of urine osmolality. Comparable systemic and renal haemodynamics were present in untreated PCA-rats, in which endotoxaemia was present spontaneously (Limulus Gelation Test). Additional endotoxin administration in these animals caused severe shock syndrome with a decrease in total renal perfusion and a further decrease in renal cortical blood flow. Endotoxin administration in normal rats caused minimal morphological alterations in the kidneys which were comparable with those found in PCA-rats. Endotoxin administration in PCA-rats however leads to severe damage of the kidney with fibrin deposits in the glomerula and acute tubular necroses. The haemodynamic, functional and morphological changes caused by endotoxin in the experiments are observed in principle in patients with cirrhosis of the liver too. This indicates that endotoxin should be taken into considerations concerning the pathogenesis of renal failure in patients with cirrhosis of the liver.
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PMID:[Effects of endotoxinemia on renal and intrarenal hemodynamics of rats with or without portacaval anastomosis]. 80 23

Authors describe the simultaneous occurrence of ascites due to liver cirrhosis and diabetes insipidus in a patient with consistently normal urine volume. The diagnosis of diabetes insipidus has been proved by the water deprivation test combined with the administration of dDAVP as well as by serial determinations of plasma arginine vasopressin levels before and during infusion of hypertonic sodium chloride solution. Authors discuss the differential-diagnostic difficulties of the case and consider the mechanisms playing a role in the abolishment of diabetic polyuria by hepatic disease.
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PMID:Simultaneous occurrence of diabetes insipidus and ascites due to liver cirrhosis: clinical and pathophysiological studies. 224 24

The occurrence of hepatic cirrhosis with ascites and diabetes insipidus in the same patient is described. The stimulability of residual vasopressin was confirmed by water deprival and the partial vasopressin deficit by the administration of dDAVP. Water loading test referred to the possibility of suppression of residual vasopressin. Studying the specific renal functions in diets of different sodium content following the administration of dDAVP and diuretics, the diuretic without adding ADH was found to be the best therapy for these patients. Reviewing the literature the authors are taking into consideration the difficulties of differential diagnostics and the mechanisms which may explain the inhibiting effect of the liver disease on the polyuria associated with diabetes insipidus.
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PMID:[Partial diabetes insipidus and ascitic liver cirrhosis in a patient]. 279 88

The effects of polyunsaturated fatty acids (phosphatidylcholine) on renal function in healthy subjects and in patients with chronic renal failure, with liver cirrhosis, and with heart failure were studied. The drug was administered at 3.5 mg/kg i.v. (Linoleic acid 1.24 mg/kg). In all cases, the administration of the drug caused an increased excretion of sodium and especially of water with a reduction in basal urinary hypertonicity. The polyuria was caused by the higher glomerular filtration rate not being counterbalanced by an increase in tubular water reabsorption. The water reabsorption was mostly anisosmotic. The presence of urinary hypertonicity excluded an inhibition of ADH secretion by this drug. The sodium excretion was probably caused by an increase of the glomerular filtration rate whereas no significant changes in the tubular reabsorption of sodium were seen. We found a significant (p 0.05) increase in PGE2 urinary excretion after phosphatidylcholine administration. Lysine - acetylsalicylate injection after phosphatidylcholine, in other trials in the same patients, prevented the effects previously reported. Therefore we suggest that the effects of this drug are mediated by an increased availability of renal prostaglandins.
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PMID:Effects of polyunsaturated fatty acids and prostaglandin synthesis on renal function. 308 1

As with most liver diseases, the symptoms of hepatitis in dogs are nearly always aspecific: the dogs eat less, are apathetic, sometimes have polyuria/polydipsia, and sometimes have diarrhoea. Hepatoencephalopathy and ascites only occur with these symptoms in very advanced stages of chronic hepatitis. Only a part of the dogs have jaundice. Because of these aspecific symptoms, the diagnosis hepatitis is often not taken into consideration, even though the presence of a liver disease can be easily detected by measuring plasma concentrations of alkaline phosphatase and bile acids, one or both of which are elevated. The diagnosis is confirmed by histological examination of a liver biopsy sample. The most common forms of hepatitis are non-specific reactive hepatitis, acute hepatitis, and chronic hepatitis. Non-specific reactive hepatitis is a reaction against endotoxin as a result of sepsis or an increased gastrointestinal absorption. Treatment is directed to the primary process. Leptospirosis also causes non-specific reactive hepatitis, but then renal insufficiency is the most prominent feature. The diagnosis is made not on the basis of a liver biopsy but on the basis of increased IgM titres against Leptospira. Immediate treatment with antibiotics and infusions at the first signs (jaundice and uraemia) can save the animal's life. Acute hepatitis can develop as a result of infection, toxins, or liver hypoxia. There is no specific treatment, but adequate recovery often occurs with supportive treatment. Corticosteroids are contraindicated. Chronic hepatitis, which can lead to cirrhosis, is the most common form of hepatitis. It is an autoimmune inflammatory reaction that is usually caused by a virus infection but sometimes by poisoning (intoxication). Long treatment with prednisolone or azathioprine is usually successful, but early recognition of the disease increases the likelihood of success. Nowadays, chronic hepatitis due to hepatic copper accumulation in Beddlington terriers can be detected by DNA tests. Such tests make it possible to distinguish between carriers and non-carriers. Affected animals can be kept symptom-free by life-long treatment with zinc gluconate or penicillamine.
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PMID:[Hepatitis in dogs; a review]. 958 48

A 9-month-old bull was presented with a history of runting and glucosuria. The bull showed major signs of diabetes mellitus, such as polyuria, polydipsia, polyphagia, emaciation, glucosuria, and ketonuria, but persistent hyperglycemia was missing. Because in an intravenous glucose tolerance test glucose disappearance was only insignificantly more rapid in a non-diabetic age-matched control than in the diabetic bull a butyrate-stimulated insulin response test was performed. Insulin response to butyrate infusion was markedly impaired in the diabetic bull compared with the non-diabetic bull. At necropsy hepatic cirrhosis was noticed and suggestive signs for diabetes mellitus were seen in liver and kidneys.
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PMID:Diagnosis of diabetes mellitus in a bull by means of butyrate infusion. 971 60

The aquaporins (AQP) are a family of small transmembrane water channels. The discovery of AQP has provided insight into molecular mechanisms underlying renal water absorption and its regulation by vasopressin. Seven types of AQP have been identified in the kidney. AQP1 has been localized in the proximal tubule and descending thin limb, while AQP2, AQP3, and AQP4 are expressed in the collecting duct. Of these isoforms, AQP2 expression and intracellular trafficking is tightly regulated by vasopressin. Decreased expression of renal AQP has been detected in several disorders associated with polyuria and impaired ability to concentrate urine, as exemplified by nephrogenic diabetes insipidus or renal failure. In contrast, increased expression of AQP is seen in conditions leading to water retention, such as congestive heart failure, liver cirrhosis, and syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion. Thus, the understanding of molecular structure and function of aquaporins may have important implications for therapy of water balance disorders.
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PMID:[Aquaporin water channels in water balance regulation in the kidney]. 1273 79

A six-year-old, neutered male Siberian husky was presented for euthanasia for end-stage liver disease. Examination of the dog raised questions regarding the severity of the condition. It had presented to the referring veterinarian with polyuria, polydipsia and weight loss. Blood tests at that time revealed elevated liver enzymes and hypoalbuminaemia. Cirrhosis was presumptively diagnosed, based on an ultrasound examination, which showed ascites with a normal liver. The dog had a history of hypothyroidism, which was controlled with levothyroxine. Physical examination revealed cachexia. A second abdominal ultrasound examination was performed and revealed portal vein and aortic thromboses. Tick titres showed a positive Ehrlichia canis titre of 1:640. Skin biopsies showed lymphoplasmacytic vasculitis. Doxycycline and aspirin treatment was initiated, and the clinical signs resolved. The authors concluded that the thrombi were primarily caused by chronic ehrlichiosis, based on the clinical findings and the response to treatment.
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PMID:Portal vein and aortic thromboses in a Siberian husky with ehrlichiosis and hypothyroidism. 1451 Mar 31


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