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)

1. The mineralocorticoid 9 alpha-fluorohydrocortisone was given to 12 patients with cirrhosis without ascites. In seven an 'escape' from its sodium-retaining effects was observed, the other five continuing to retain sodium. 2. Changes in plasma renin activity (PRA) and inulin clearance (Cinulin) were used in the assessment of possible changes in the 'effective' extracellular fluid volume. PRA fell and Cinulin increased to a similar extent in each of the two groups of patients. The findings do not support the concept that the failure to show the mineralocorticoid escape in some patients with cirrhosis is due to a failure of expansion of the effective extracellular fluid volume. 3. Sodium reabsorption in the different segments of the nephron as estimated by clearance techniques under conditions of maximal water diuresis showed that the greatest changes to account for both mineralocorticoid escape and sodium retention were in the part of the nephron beyond the diluting segment.
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PMID:Studies on mineralocorticoid 'escape' in cirrhosis. 47 24

Study on a diurnal rhythm of plasma aldosterone (PA) and plasma renin activity (PRA) was performed in 8 patients with congestive heart failure. All patients had been digitalized and received diuretics under mild sodium restriction. An obvious diurnal rhythm of PA similar to the normal subjects, with the lowest value in the evening and the highest value in the morning, was observed in 7 of 8 cases, while a diurnal rhythm of PRA was obscure except in one case. The PA generally did not run parallel with PRA. Although the reason of the absence of PRA diurnal rhythm in congestive heart failure was not clear, it was considered that reninangiotensin system did not play a significant role for the development of PA diurnal rhythm in congestive heart failure. The determined PA values were entirely within normal range except in 2 cases, although they were administered the potent diuretics chronically. A high PA value was observed only in early morning in one case, while all determined PA values were extremely high in another case with severe congestive heart failure involved in cardiac liver cirrhosis. The PRA values were relatively low in 2 cases, normal in 5 and high in one.
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PMID:The diurnal rhythm of plasma aldosterone and plasma renin activity in patients with congestive heart failure. 56 23

Because of the unusual clinical course of a patient with hepatic cirrhosis, refractory ascites, and hepatorenal syndrome, we were able to examine the complex interrelationships between massive ascites, renin-aldosterone activity, and renal and hepatic function before and after placement of a peritoneojugular vein (LeVeen) shunt. Measurements indicated that when the shunt was functioning, renin-aldosterone production was suppressed, the hepatorenal syndrome was reversed, and ascites remitted. These data suggest that hyperreninemia, hyperaldosteronism, and functional renal abnormalities of this disorder are potentially reversible and arise primarily from the imbalance between formation and drainage of hepatosplanchnic lymph rather than from hepatocellular dysfunction, lowered plasma oncotic pressure, or portal hypertension.
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PMID:Peritoneovenous (LeVeen) shunt. Control of renin-aldosterone system in cirrhotic ascites. 57 28

Plasma renin activity (PRA), plasma renin concentration (PRC), angiotensinogen, angiotensin II (AT II) and plasma aldosterone were determined by radioimmunoassay in 77 patients with cirrhosis of the liver [group I: with ascites, untreated (n=23); group II: patients with ascites during treatment (n=32); group III: after removal of fluids, but under further spironolactone therapy (n=10); group IV: untreated subjects without ascites (n=12)]. With the exception of decreased angiotensinogen values in all groups ranging between 39% (group IV) and 73% (group III) no significant changes of the other parameters of the RAAS were found in untreated patients. A highly significant increase of PRA, PRC, AT II and plasma aldosterone was observed in treated cirrhotics with (group II) or without (group III) ascites. In the total series of patients AT II was closely related to PRA, PRC and aldosterone emphasizing aldosterone secretion. Plasma sodium was inversely correlated to PRA, PRC, AT II and aldosterone, but no relationship was detected between these parameters of the RAAS and plasma potassium. Our results indicate that hyperaldosteronism in cirrhosis appears unlikely to be the major determinant of avid renal sodium retention and ascites formation. An increased activity of the RAAS is most often initiated by therapeutic factors and/or markedly altered electrolyte metabolism. Therefore, basal conditions of the patients to be studied must be well defined to exclude any artificially induced stimulation of the RAAS.
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PMID:Studies on the activity of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) in patients with cirrhosis of the liver. 64 12

Twelve patients with cirrhosis, refractory ascites, and varying degrees of renal failure (creatinine clearance, 5 to 44 ml/min) were studied before and up to 2 weeks following peritoneovenous shunt. Creatinine clearance increased 60% or more in seven patients (group I) and 22% or less in five patients (group II). There were no significant differences in maximum urine output or sodium excretion between groups (group I, 4,272 ml/14 hr, 372 mEq/24 hr; group II, 3,722 ml/24 hr, 255 mEq/24 hr). Aldosterone and renin concentrations were higher in group I and showed a greater decrease after shunting. Renin substrate levels also were higher in group I and rose following shunt insertion, while group II remained low. Ascitic fluid was found to contain renin substrate in concentrations of approximately 25% to 50% of plasma concentrations. Patients with the greatest increase in creatinine clearance showed the largest rise in substrate concentration and fall in renin and aldosterone secretion, suggesting a dynamic relationship between these factors. That a diuresis could occur without significant change in these parameters in five of 12 patients suggests independent control mechanisms for renal salt and water excretion and glomerular filtration in the ascitic patient.
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PMID:Improved renal function and inhibition of renin and aldosterone secretion following peritoneovenous (LeVeen) shunt. 66 20

Renal prostaglandins have several potential functions in renal physiology. Perhaps their best documented role is the maintenance of renal blood flow during renal ischemia, although they are apparently not essential to blood flow autoregulation in the absence of ischemia. Alterations in sodium excretion parallel the hemodynamic changes induced by prostaglandin infusions and prostaglandin inhibition with indomethacin. A direct action on sodium balance is unproven. Numerous studies, in vivo and in vitro, have convincingly demonstrated that prostaglandins or their precursors stimulate renin release and prostaglandin inhibition blunts renin release independent of hemodynamic and electrolyte balance. These functions of prostaglandins have implicated them in the manifestations of Bartter's syndrome, the nephropathy of liver cirrhosis, renovascular hypertension, and other nephropathies.
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PMID:Prostaglandins: renin release and renal function. 72 86

In an attempt to evaluate the role of renin-angiotensin system in the contols of blood pressure and aldosterone secretion in the patients with cirrhosis and asictes, 7 patients were infused of an antagonist of angiotensin II, Sar-1 Ile-8 angiotensin II, intravenously to inhibit the action of renin-angiotensin system and to observe changes in arterial pressure and plasma aldosterone. In 1 patient with recent onset of severe ascites and high plasma renin activity, blood pressure and plasma aldosterone decreased during the infusion. In contrast, mild rise in blood pressure and various changes in plasma aldosterone were observed in the other 6 patients with normal plasma renin activity. These results suggest variable angiotensin dependency in the controls of blood pressure and plasma aldosterone in the patients with cirrhosis and ascites according to the stage of the disease, the states of sodium and water balance and/or palasma renin activity.
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PMID:Role of renin-angiotensin system in the controls of blood pressure and aldosterone in patients with cirrhosis and ascites. 73 36

1. The intrarenal distribution of plasma flow was determined with a technique based on the analysis of the transit time of sodium o-[131I]- iodohippurate through the kidney in 43 patients with cirrhosis with near-normal total renal perfusion. 2. Twenty-five of the patients had an abnormal pattern of transit times, suggesting a redistribution of plasma flow from outer cortical to juxtamedullary nephrons. 3. Plasma renin activity ranged from below normal to six times normal and high values were found only in patients showing an abnormal pattern of transit times. The latter was also found to be related to sodium retention and a reduced renal capacity to excrete free water.
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PMID:Intrarenal distribution of plasma flow in cirrhosis as measured by transit renography: relationship with plasma renin activity, and sodium and water excretion. 86 40

Supine plasma aldosterone and plasma renin activity were determined in patients with cirrhosis of the liver and ascites (n = 10). Most of the patients initially showed an increase in plasma aldosterone and plasma renin activity. However, values within the normal range were observed (plasma aldosterone, n = 3; plasma renin activity, n = 4). In the ascitic fluid renin activity could not be detected, whereas aldosterone concentrations correlated significantly with the respective plasma levels (r = 0.8, p less than 0.01). During therapy with spironolactone alone (n =2) or in combination with furosemide (n = 4), diuresis and natriuresis showed no correlation with changes in plasma aldosterone and/or plasma renin activity. Our results suggest that other factors than renin and aldosterone secretion may be important in the formation of ascites in patients with cirrhosis of the liver. In addition, the inverse correlation between mean arterial blood pressure and plasma renin activity (r = -0.65, p less than 0.05) found in our patients supports the assumption that the increase in renin secretion is probably induced by changes in (renal) hemodynamics.
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PMID:[Aldosterone and renin in liver cirrhosis with ascites]. 92 37

1-Sar-8-ala angiotensin II (saralasin) was infused intravenously in graded doses of from 0.1 to 10 mug/kg/min to five patients with cirrhosis and ascites after three days of restricted sodium intake. In each patient blockade of AII by saralasin produced a marked fall in blood pressure, a rise in plasma renin activity (PRA) and plasma renin concentration (PRC) and, in four of the five, a fall in plasma aldosterone (PA). The rise in PRA and PRC correlated poorly with changes in blood pressure. The effects of saralasin rapidly reversed after cessation of the infusion. Plasma volume was normal or high in each case. Three patients were mildly hypotensive in the control state, and all five were resistant to the pressor effect of infused AII. After three days of salt loading, the above effects of saralasin were diminished but not abolished. In four normal subjects, after salt depletion, saralasin infusion induced qualitatively similar but much smaller changes in blood pressure, PRA and PRC. In two cirrhotic patients without ascites, after salt depletion, saralasin infusion caused a rise in blood pressure with no significant changes in PRA, PRC or PA. These results provide evidence that in patients with cirrhosis and ascites circulating AII is active in support of blood pressure, in direct suppression of renal renin release, and in stimulation of aldosterone release.
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PMID:Effect of blockade of angiotensin II on blood pressure, renin and aldosterone in cirrhosis. 94 Feb 84


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