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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Persistent abnormalities of liver function tests occur in approximately 15% of home parenteral nutrition (HPN) patients and are associated with steatosis, steatohepatitis, and, rarely, fibrosis or
cirrhosis
. Approximately one-third of patients with gut failure on long-term HPN have low total and free plasma carnitine concentrations, and it has been suggested that a deficiency of L-carnitine may be responsible for the steatosis and steatohepatitis in HPN patients. To determine whether administration of L-carnitine is capable of reversing steatosis in HPN patients, 4 adult women on HPN for a mean of 53 mo (range 21-80 mo) were studied before and after 1 mo of intravenous L-carnitine supplementation (1 g/day). All patients had abnormalities in standard liver function tests and low total and free plasma carnitine values. The mean total and free plasma carnitine concentrations and the mean total hepatic carnitine concentration were reduced before supplementation and rose to normal values after treatment (27.4 +/- 2.3 to 35.5 +/- 3.1 nmol/ml, 19.4 +/- 2.8 to 25.7 +/- 2.5 nmol/ml, and 3.5 +/- 0.65 to 6.5 +/- 1.2 nmol/mg of noncollagen protein, respectively). However, there were no significant changes in mean serum
aspartate aminotransferase
and alkaline phosphatase levels (65 +/- 21 vs. 54 +/- 12 IU and 429 +/- 220 vs. 472 +/- 224 IU, respectively), plasma free fatty acids, plasma triglycerides, hepatic free fatty acid and triglyceride concentrations, or the grade of hepatic steatosis on light microscopy. These results suggest that carnitine deficiency is not a major cause of steatosis and steatohepatitis in patients receiving HPN.
...
PMID:L-carnitine therapy in home parenteral nutrition patients with abnormal liver tests and low plasma carnitine concentrations. 312 32
The ratio of the serum aspartate to alanine amino-transferase levels (
AST
/ALT) is often used as a clue to the etiology of the underlying liver disease. This ratio is usually greater than 2.0 in alcoholic liver disease and less than 1.0 in patients with chronic hepatitis and chronic cholestatic syndromes. We analyzed the
AST
/ALT ratio in 177 patients with various forms of nonalcoholic chronic liver disease who underwent medical evaluation and percutaneous liver biopsy. In the majority of cases of chronic viral hepatitis, the
AST
/ALT ratio was less than 1.0. However, there was a statistically significant correlation between the
AST
/ALT ratio and the presence of
cirrhosis
. Among 100 patients with chronic type B hepatitis, the mean
AST
/ALT ratio was 0.59 in those without
cirrhosis
and 1.02 in those with
cirrhosis
. Furthermore, the
AST
/ALT ratio often rose to greater than 1.0 when
cirrhosis
first became manifest. Thus, the finding of an
AST
/ALT ratio of greater than 1.0 in a patient with nonalcoholic liver disease should suggest the presence of
cirrhosis
. In addition, the use of the
AST
/ALT ratio as a means of separating alcoholic and nonalcoholic liver disease must be tempered with the knowledge that this ratio may be less helpful in the presence of
cirrhosis
.
...
PMID:Ratio of serum aspartate to alanine aminotransferase in chronic hepatitis. Relationship to cirrhosis. 313 26
Plasma levels of the lysosomal enzymes, beta-hexosaminidase and beta-glucuronidase, were analyzed in rats with carbon tetrachloride induced
liver cirrhosis
. Out of 22 animals, 15 showed cirrhotic and 4 pre-cirrhotic livers. 4 cirrhotic animals exhibited cholestatic features with increased bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and
aspartate aminotransferase
(
ASAT
) in plasma. The remaining 15 pre-cirrhotic and cirrhotic rats showed clear significant changes only in
ASAT
levels. These 15 rats showed no consistent increase in plasma, spleen or liver lysosomal enzyme activities, whereas the 4 rats with cholestatic features exhibited considerable increases of lysosomal enzymes. The increased activities might be attributed to decreased biliary excretion and/or increased production of lysosomal enzymes by activated macrophages.
...
PMID:Lysosomal enzymes in plasma, liver and spleen from rats with carbon tetrachloride-induced liver cirrhosis. 315 68
Selenium deficiency has been implicated as contributing to hepatic injury in alcoholics. The mechanism by which this occurs is most likely lipoperoxidation secondary to decreased activity of the selenoenzyme glutathione peroxidase. To further assess this relationship, we measured selenium content in autopsy livers in 12 patients with alcoholic cirrhosis compared to 13 patients matched for age and sex dying from other causes, mostly with cardiopulmonary diseases. The mean (+/- SEM) hepatic selenium content in
cirrhosis
was 0.731 +/- 0.077 microgram/g dry weight versus 1.309 +/- 0.166 microgram/g in controls (P less than 0.005; Student's t test). Clinical and biochemical indices of significant hepatic dysfunction, including encephalopathy, ascites, and elevations of serum bilirubin or prothrombin time, were only present in the cirrhotic group. A significant inverse correlation between hepatic selenium content and the prothrombin time was noted (r = -0.50; P less than 0.02). No significant relationships between hepatic selenium and the abnormalities of bilirubin, albumin, or
aspartate aminotransferase
were found. We conclude that significantly decreased hepatic selenium stores are present in patients with severe alcoholic cirrhosis compared to controls. The magnitude of that selenium deficit does correlate with some indices of hepatic function, specifically the prothrombin time. These data lend further support to a true selenium deficiency state in alcoholic cirrhosis. It is highly possible that selenium deficiency represents an important link, synergistically joining the nutritional and hepatotoxic backgrounds of alcoholic liver injury and
cirrhosis
.
...
PMID:Decreased hepatic selenium content in alcoholic cirrhosis. 316 92
Twenty-eight patients with biopsy or clinical acute alcoholic hepatitis were prospectively randomized to 21 days of conventional therapy (14 control patients) or, in addition, to 2 L/day of a peripheral iv infusion of a 900 mosmol amino acid-glucose solution (14 patients).
Cirrhosis
was present in 64% of controls and in 54% of infused patients. There were three deaths in controls and one in the infused group. There were no significant intergroup differences in mortality, clinical findings, liver tests, or functional mass by the galactose elimination capacity either at entry or after completion of the study. In controls, there was intragroup improvement in serum bilirubin (p = 0.033) and
AST
(p = 0.008) but not in other "liver tests" or in functional hepatic mass by galactose elimination capacity. In infused patients there was improvement in bilirubin (p = 0.001),
AST
(p = 0.008), and serum albumin (p = 0.016). Improvement in functional mass by galactose elimination capacity was significant at the p = 0.052 level. Hyaline was initially present in six of eight pairs of biopsies in both groups. After treatment, five of six pairs in controls but only one of six pairs in the infused group still had hyaline (p = 0.03). This latter finding, if confirmed in larger groups, may be of considerable clinical importance. It is suggested that 3- to 4-wk trials of such protocols may require a longer duration of follow-up in greater numbers of patients to detect important advantages of amino acid-glucose infusions which are only implicit in these findings.
...
PMID:A prospective randomized clinical trial of peripheral amino acid-glucose supplementation in acute alcoholic hepatitis. 330 90
We studied a consecutive series of 204 patients who were admitted to a hospital for addictive diseases during 40 months and who had a liver biopsy. Parenteral drug abusers (n = 34) were significantly younger than alcohol abusers (n = 23) or abusers of both (n = 147) and had lower levels of serum alkaline phosphatase, total bilirubin, and
aspartate aminotransferase
than the other two groups. Chronic active hepatitis and chronic persistent hepatitis were more frequent (p less than 0.001) in abusers of parenteral drugs alone, whereas
cirrhosis
was found most often (p less than 0.001) in abusers of both alcohol and parenteral drugs.
Cirrhosis
was present in 10 of 39 (26%) simultaneous abusers of alcohol and parenteral drugs compared with 58 of 96 (60%) alcohol-abusing former parenteral drug abusers (p less than 0.001). Methadone maintenance treatment was not associated with
cirrhosis
. Thus, methadone-maintained patients who abuse alcohol and develop
cirrhosis
should remain in methadone maintenance treatment and receive concomitant alcoholism treatment. Also, these data further support the hypothesis that abusers of both alcohol and parenteral drugs have an increased risk of developing
cirrhosis
.
...
PMID:Chronic liver disease in abusers of alcohol and parenteral drugs: a report of 204 consecutive biopsy-proven cases. 354 73
Although copper is believed to be hepatotoxic in Wilson's disease and Indian Childhood
Cirrhosis
(ICC), the rat shows only minimal hepatic damage on copper-loading. To investigate the possibility that copper deposition may potentiate the effects of a superimposed hepatitis, D-galactosamine (GalN) was given to copper-loaded and control rats. In the non-copper-dosed rats, GalN 0.85 g/kg i.p. produced elevated serum
AST
(3731 +/- 545 IU/l; normal 64.8 +/- 2.1), ALT (2090 +/- 190 IU/l; normal 18.0 +/- 0.7), and OCT (16.7 +/- 2.6 mmol/min/ml; normal 0.12 +/- 0), and liver cell necrosis with portal infiltration. In rats whose liver copper was elevated to 1298 +/- 169 micrograms/g (control 18.7 +/- 1.7) by oral copper supplementation, GalN produced much smaller increases in
AST
(825 +/- 122 IU/l), ALT (103 +/- 15 IU/l) and OCT (0.27 +/- 0.02 mmol/min/ml) and minimal histological damage. Viable bacterial cell counts from faecal homogenates showed that the anaerobically cultured bacteria were reduced on copper-dosing of rats. Therefore the protective effect of copper may be due to a decrease in gut-derived endotoxin acting on the liver, or to an impaired prostaglandin synthesis or perhaps to synthesis of acute phase reactants.
...
PMID:Copper protects against galactosamine-induced hepatitis. 365 8
A study was carried out to confirm the pathogenetic role of ethanol in the development of chronic active hepatitis (CAH) and to assess if previous or current superimposed hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection could be relevant to the course of alcoholic liver disease (ALD). We examined clinical and laboratory reports of 57 alcoholics with biopsy-proven CAH. Serum and/or tissue HBV markers and the presence or absence of
cirrhosis
were investigated. Alcohol was the only aetiological factor present in a small group of CAH, with or without histological findings suggestive of alcoholic damage. Age, sex and survival were similar among the subgroups of CAH with and without previous or current HBV infection and among the subgroups of CAH with and without associated histological alcoholic features. Among the laboratory data, the
AST
/ALT ratio was higher in CAH without previous or current HBV infection. The mean age was comparable in CAH patients with and without
cirrhosis
, whereas the cumulative 5-year survival was worse in CAH with
cirrhosis
(87% vs. 49%). These data suggest a difference in alcohol susceptibility in our subjects.
...
PMID:Features of chronic hepatitis in alcoholics. A survey in Milan. 369 15
Alcoholic liver disease (ALD) in Japan was compared clinicopathologically with the occurrence in the U.S.A. ALD found in Japan was more frequently complicated by other hepatic diseases including non-A, non-B chronic hepatitis than ALD found in the U.S.A. (9.9% versus 21.9%). Patients with such complications were excluded from this study. The chief complaints of the total of 51 alcoholics studied in the U.S.A. were abdominal distension or jaundice and those of 98 alcoholics studied in Japan were non-specific: general fatigue, weakness or appetite loss. The U.S. patients exhibited more elevated levels of serum bilirubin (8.1 +/- 7.5 versus 1.9 +/- 2.4 mg/dl, mean +/- SD) and a higher incidence of leukocytosis (49.0% versus 5.1%). While the serum
glutamic-oxalacetic transaminase
(GOT) levels were not significantly different between the two groups (146.5 +/- 116.8 versus 140.8 +/- 147.7 IU/L), the serum glutamic-pyruvic transaminase (GPT) levels among Japanese alcoholics were higher (38.6 +/- 31.4 versus 87.4 +/- 99.1 IU/L) and in about one quarter of these patients, serum GPT was higher than serum GOT, a feature not seen in the patients in the U.S.A. Comparative histopathologic study of 337 U.S. patients and 210 Japanese patients disclosed a higher frequency of
cirrhosis
(46.9% versus 33.8%), the presence of Mallory bodies (58.5% versus 13.8%) and marked neutrophilic exudation (45.1% versus 6.2%). Thus, the majority of Japanese alcoholics exhibited progression of liver disease, eventually leading to
cirrhosis
, due to hepatocellular drop-out and fibrosis caused by a mechanism different from alcoholic hepatitis. In addition, ALD in the U.S.A. revealed more striking extension of fibrosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The characteristics of alcoholic liver disease in Japan. Clinicopathologic comparison with alcoholic liver disease in the United States. 369 16
We measured the activity of carnosinase, a prominent hepatic peptidase, in sera from 69 patients with liver disorders. Mean values (and SDs) for those with
liver cirrhosis
(17 cases) and hepatoma (seven cases) were 0.51 (0.28) and 0.68 (0.21) mumol/mL per hour, respectively--clearly less than for normal adults: 4.19 (0.95) mumol/mL per hour. Samples from 17 cases of chronic hepatitis also showed moderately decreased activity, 1.41 (0.97) mumol/mL per hour. In contrast, 14 cases of acute hepatitis generally showed values falling within the normal limits: 3.41 (1.97) mumol/mL per hour. Our results for carnosinase correlated with those for cholinesterase (r = 0.70) and with the concentration of albumin in serum (r = 0.59), but not with the activity of either creatine kinase,
aspartate aminotransferase
, or alanine aminotransferase in serum. Carnosinase values differed more among groups of disorders than did the values for cholinesterase or albumin. Measurement of serum carnosinase activity may be of clinical value in assessing the severity of chronic liver-cell damage, but not in differentiating liver disease from nutritional, muscle, or endocrine disorders.
...
PMID:Decreased activity of carnosinase in serum of patients with chronic liver disorders. 373 53
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