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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ultrastructural studies with the transmission (TEM) and scanning (SEM) electron microscopes have added greatly to our knowledge of cellular structure and function in the liver. The normal polyhedral hepatocyte has numerous subcellular organelles, such as mitochondria, peroxisomes, lysosomes and complex rough (rer) and smooth (ser) endoplasmic reticulum. The normal hepatocyte stores glycogen, and sometimes lipid droplets, and secretes bile through the bile canaliculi between adjacent liver cells. It receives nutrients from the sinusoidal lumen across a fenestrated endothelium which is separated by the Space of Disse' from the plasma membrane. The Space of Disse' contains a scant network of reticulin fibers but no basal lamina. Two types of parasinusoidal cells are found in Disse's space: the fat storing cells of Ito, and the Pit cells which may have an endocrine function. The diseased liver has yielded much information in studies with TEM and SEM. The studies with TEM have been most helpful in studying the etiology of infectious diseases such as hepatitis B; have revealed organelle changes such as megamitochondria in
cirrhosis
and the fibrillar nature of alcoholic hyaline; have led to the identification of specific deposits in metabolic and storage diseases such as hemochromatosis (iron). Wilson's disease (copper), and alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency (glycoprotein) have proven useful in identifying drug induced liver cell changes such as proliferation of
SER
and cholestasis, and are useful for identifying specific cell types in inflammatory and neoplastic diseases. In the future, both TEM and SEM coupled with histochemical, cytochemical, immunohistochemical and other analytic techniques will continue to add greatly to our understanding of the liver in health and disease.
...
PMID:Ultrastructure of the liver and biliary tract in health and disease. 637 90
Plasma amino-acid concentrations were measured in 167 patients with liver disease of varying aetiology and severity, all free of encephalopathy, and the results compared with those in 57 control subjects matched for age and sex. In the four groups of patients with chronic liver disease (26 patients with chronic active hepatitis, 23 with primary biliary cirrhosis, 11 with cryptogenic
cirrhosis
, and 48 with alcoholic hepatitis +/-
cirrhosis
) plasma concentrations of methionine were significantly increased, while concentrations of the three branched chain amino-acids were significantly reduced. In the first three groups of patients plasma concentrations of aspartate,
serine
, and one or both of the aromatic amino-acids tyrosine and phenylalanine were also significantly increased, while in the patients with alcoholic hepatitis +/-
cirrhosis
plasma concentrations of glycine, alanine, and phenylalanine were significantly reduced. In the three groups of patients with minimal, potentially reversible liver disease (31 patients with alcoholic fatty liver, 10 with viral hepatitis, and 18 with biliary disease) plasma concentrations of proline and the three branched chain amino-acids were significantly reduced. Patients with alcoholic fatty liver also showed significantly reduced plasma phenylalanine values. Most changes in plasma amino-acid concentrations in patients with chronic liver disease may be explained on the basis of impaired hepatic function, portal-systemic shunting of blood, and hyperinsulinaemia and hyperglucagonaemia. The changes in patients with minimal liver disease are less easily explained.
...
PMID:Plasma amino-acid patterns in liver disease. 707 13
The amino acid composition of proteins from liver microsomes has been studied in rats and in human subjects with normal liver, with obstructive jaundice or
liver cirrhosis
. The pattern of the amino acid composition of microsomes appeared to be species-specific. Phenylalanine, threonine,
serine
, proline, histidine and [aspartic acid plus asparagine] were increased, while alanine, tyrosine, glycine and arginine were decreased in the human compared to the rat microsomes. In patients with obstructive jaundice of short duration (less than two months) only a slight decrease in leucine and phenylalanine could be noticed, while in the case of
liver cirrhosis
amino acid composition was markedly changed.
...
PMID:Amino acid composition of rat and human liver microsomes in normal and pathological conditions. 757 35
This paper documents dose-dependent effects of ornithine aspartate (OA) on postprandial hyperammonemia and plasma amino acids. Ten patients with
cirrhosis
were randomized to undergo 1 out of 4 infusion series. Each series consisted of four 8-h infusions (09:00 h-17:00 h), with placebo (NaCl), 5 g, 20 g or 40 g of OA being administered on separate days in varying sequences. This 4-fold crossover design was double-blind. On infusion days, patients received 2 oral protein loads (0.25 g/kg at 09:00 h and 0.5 g/kg at 13:00 h). Venous blood samples were drawn every 2 h and the 24-h urine was collected. In addition to measuring plasma ammonia and amino acids, the urea production rate, serum glucose and serum insulin were analyzed. A significant postprandial rise in the ammonia concentration was noted during the infusions of placebo and 5 g of OA but did not occur with the dosages of 20 g (after the second protein load) and 40 g (after both protein loads). Furthermore, the latter dose, compared with placebo, significantly reduced plasma ammonia after the minor protein load. Urea production rate increased when 20 g or 40 g of OA was administered. Of the amino acids involved in the metabolic pathways of ornithine and/or aspartate, glutamate showed a rise in its plasma level following infusion of 40 g of OA, whereas glutamine did not. Concentrations of methionine, phenylalanine, tyrosine, threonine,
serine
and glycine declined progressively with increasing doses of OA (5-40 g). The highest dose of the drug caused hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of ornithine aspartate on plasma ammonia and plasma amino acids in patients with cirrhosis. A double-blind, randomized study using a four-fold crossover design. 815 Nov 4
A patient with
liver cirrhosis
who progressed to hepatocellular carcinoma was found to develop novel antinuclear antibodies. The serum was used to isolate full-length cDNA clones encoding related proteins of 530 amino acids (representative clone HCC1.4) and 524 amino acids (representative clone HCC1.3). Affinity-purified antibodies eluted from recombinant proteins recognized a 64-kD nuclear protein in Western blotting and decorated the nucleoplasm in a speckled-network fashion in immunofluorescence, colocalizing with antibodies to pre-mRNA splicing factor SC35 and uridine-rich small nuclear RNAs. The deduced amino acid sequence contained an arginine/
serine
-rich (RS) domain and three-ribonucleoprotein consensus sequence domains, two classes of motifs present in several splicing factors. A repeating octapeptide of Arg-Ser-Arg-Ser-Arg(Lys)-Glu(Asp)-Arg-Lys(Arg) was present in RS region of HCC1. This octapeptide sequence called RS-ERK motif was also found in splicing factors U2AF 35- and 65-kD proteins and 70-kD U1 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein. The molecular features and immunolocalization data suggest that the HCC1 autoantigen may be associated with splicing activities and are consistent with observations that autoantibody responses frequently target molecules involved in important cellular biosynthetic functions.
...
PMID:Novel nuclear autoantigen with splicing factor motifs identified with antibody from hepatocellular carcinoma. 822 58
The absolute and relative concentrations of 16 plasma amino acids in 48 mostly dystrophic infants and children (median of age 1 1/2 years) with extrahepatic biliary atresia and mainly stable preterminal
cirrhosis
were compared with those of controls. Patient plasma amino acid data were analysed statistically for diagnostic usefulness and correlated with standard biochemical quantities of liver function and of liver perfusion. In the patients the total amounts of non-essential and essential amino acids were reduced by 19% and with the same significance (p < 0.0005). Plasma tyrosine was increased (+40%), while taurine (-44%) and branched chain amino acids (+28.8% to -34.7%) were decreased. Methionine values varied widely. In the molar fractional plasma amino acid profile, only alanine, valine, and leucine were decreased, while threonine, methionine, tyrosine, phenylalanine, ornithine, and
serine
were increased. Discriminate function analysis showed that the plasma amino acid data discriminated 93.8% of the patients from controls. The concentrations of some amino acids in plasma seemed to have been influenced by protein-calorie deficiency in the patients. The valine/tyrosine ratio and the Fischer index (ratio branched chain/aromatic amino acids) were significantly reduced in the patients versus controls (1.54 +/- 0.55 vs 3.08 +/- 0.55 and 1.66 +/- 0.39 vs 3.00 +/- 0.48). A number of significant correlations (range of r: 0.37-0.59, p < 0.05, 30-48 data pairs) were calculated between plasma amino acid data and several standard biochemical quantities of liver function. The statistical analyses also showed that the Fischer index began to decrease gradually and linearly early in the progression of liver failure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The plasma amino acid profile and its relationships to standard quantities of liver function in infants and children with extrahepatic biliary atresia and preterminal liver cirrhosis. 831 65
1. alpha 1-antitrypsin is an antiprotease that inhibits the neutrophil elastase enzyme, and belongs to a family of structurally related
serine
proteinase inhibitors (serpins). Its methionine358 residue determines the specificity for elastase. 2. The normal M-type alpha 1-antitrypsin is mainly synthesized in the liver parenchymal cells and transported to the plasma. Abnormal Z-mutant alpha 1-antitrypsin is retained in the endoplasmic reticulum, which leads to its intracellular accumulation and to markedly decreased plasma levels. 3. In normal conditions, alpha 1-antitrypsin protects the lungs from destruction by the proteolytic neutrophil elastase. A protease/antiprotease imbalance in the lung is responsible for the development of emphysema in severe alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency and in cigarette smokers, and accounts for the marked acceleration of the lung disease in smoking alpha 1-antitrypsin deficient patients. Smoking has to be avoided in alpha 1-antitrypsin deficient patients. Replacement therapy with plasma-derived alpha 1-antitrypsin seems indicated in alpha 1-antitrypsin deficient patients with emphysema. 4. Intracellular accumulation of abnormal Z-alpha 1-antitrypsin molecules in liver parenchymal cells may lead to liver disease, ranging from neonatal cholestasis to adulthood
cirrhosis
and hepatocellular carcinoma. End-stage liver disease can be treated by liver transplantation, which is followed by a phenotypic conversion. 5. Diagnosis of alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency related disease relies on the presence of a low serum concentration of alpha 1-antitrypsin, and of periodic-acid Schiff positive globules in the liver parenchymal cells. Isoelectric focusing of the serum identifies the protease inhibitor phenotype. The protease inhibitor phenotype is determined by the independent expression of the two parental alpha 1-antitrypsin alleles. It is determinant of the serum level and of the risk for development of lung or liver disease.
...
PMID:Alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency: an overview. 839 99
Glutathione and amino acid concentrations were measured in arterial and hepatic vein plasma in four healthy volunteers and two patients with
cirrhosis
. There was no significant splanchnic efflux of glutathione (95% confidence limits, -0.501 to 0.405 mumol/min). After infusion of N-acetylcysteine (NAC) in a high dose (150 mg/kg body weight primer plus 15 mg/(h x kg BW), corresponding to treatment of acetaminophen overdose, there was no change in the splanchnic glutathione efflux (95% confidence limits, -0.531 to 0.375 mumol/min). NAC increased hepatic plasma flow rate from 0.90 +/- 0.531 min-1 to 0.97 +/- 0.11 (mean +/- SEM; p < 0.05). The effects of NAC treatment on plasma amino acids corresponded to an increased load on hepatic metabolic N conversion and transamination among nonessential amino acids. Splanchnic uptake of
serine
, alanine, cystine, isoleucine, and phenylalanine increased after NAC compatible with stimulated hepatic glutathione synthesis. In contrast to the rat, plasma glutathione in man probably originates mainly from extrahepatic tissues.
...
PMID:No net splanchnic release of glutathione in man during N-acetylcysteine infusion. 851 1
To date, no attempt has been made to study alterations occurring in the amino acid profile in chronic models of thioacetamide-induced
liver cirrhosis
. In this work, changes in serum amino acids and proteins in rats with thioacetamide-induced
liver cirrhosis
are reported, together with changes in enzyme activities in the liver and serum. Seventeen female Wistar rats were used. Eight rats were given 300 mg thioacetamide/l in drinking water for 4 months and nine rats were given water ad libitum during the same time-period. Significant increases in glycine, alanine,
serine
, methionine, glutamate, ornithine, phenylalanine, tyrosine, histidine and proline were observed in rats with the resulting experimental
liver cirrhosis
. Threonine, taurine, glutamine, lysine and citrulline tended to increase while isoleucine, leucine, aspartate, arginine and tryptophan tended to decrease. Total and nonessential amino acids increased significantly in cirrhotic animals. Total essential and aromatic amino acids tended to increase in the thioacetamide-treated group, whereas branched chain amino acids tended to decrease in the same group. Regarding serum proteins, a decrease in albumin concentration in the thioacetamide-treated animals was the only change detected. The liver enzyme activities under observation (aspartate and alanine aminotransferases, glutamate dehydrogenase and threonine deaminase) were lower in the thioacetamide group. Decreases were significant for both transaminases and threonine deaminase. Results for serum activities showed that transaminases did not change in thioacetamide-treated rats in comparison with controls. In contrast, alkaline phosphatase rose dramatically in cirrhotic rats. We conclude that the serum amino acid pattern in this chronic model of
liver cirrhosis
resembles in part that of the corresponding human disease.
...
PMID:Serum amino acid changes in rats with thioacetamide-induced liver cirrhosis. 857 92
This paper evaluates the role of decreased food intake in protein metabolism in cirrhotic animals by comparing the changes with those observed in pair-fed controls. Rats were injected with [14C]leucine and then divided into 3 groups.
Liver cirrhosis
was induced in 1 group of rats by repeated intragastric administration of CCl4 in oil over a period of 8 weeks. Control animals were gavaged with oil and either pair-fed or given access to food ad libitum. Three days after the last intragastric dose, rats were injected with [3H]leucine and sacrificed 20 min later. The daily food intake of CCl4 rats declined to 60% of that of the ad libitum controls. Both the pair-fed control group and the cirrhotic group showed decreased body weight gain, and a decline in muscle and intestinal protein degradation. The pair-fed and the cirrhotic groups differed from one another in many metabolic abnormalities. In the cirrhotic group we observed higher levels of
serine
, asparagine, proline, methionine, tyrosine, phenylalanine, ornithine and histidine, and lower levels of valine, isoleucine and arginine. In these animals higher relative (per kilogram body weight) weights and protein content of the spleen, kidneys and heart were observed. Additionally higher liver weight despite lower protein concentration, as well as lower liver protein degradation and lower skeletal muscle protein synthesis were found.
...
PMID:Protein metabolism in cirrhotic rats: effect of dietary restriction. 867 70
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