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)

In order to identify the most useful marker to diagnose hepatic fibrosis, type III procollagen peptide (P-III-P), laminin P1, and prolyl-hydroxylase (PH) in sera obtained from patients with liver diseases were simultaneously measured and compared with histological features of chronic hepatitis and with tumor size estimated on abdominal CT scan. Further more, the diagnostic accuracy of these markers was evaluated by using discriminant analysis. P-III-P and laminin P1 were closely correlated with the activity of chronic hepatitis. These two markers most accurately discriminated between the compensated stage of liver cirrhosis and the decompensated stage, and between liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Laminin P1 was found to most clearly distinguish chronic hepatitis from liver cirrhosis. P-III-P was significantly correlated with the size of hepatocellular carcinoma. However, PH failed to discriminate among liver diseases, and showed no significant correlation with a liver tumor size. And none of the markers examined were correlated with a degree of hepatic fibrosis. From these results, the analysis of both serum P-III-P and laminin P1 is a useful approach to evaluate hepatic collagen metabolism.
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PMID:[Assay of serum collagen markers in chronic liver diseases and liver cancer]. 217 Jul 16

Circulating AC levels as well as antibodies against AC-protein adducts are increased in non-alcoholic liver injury. To identify the adducts, we used rats with CCl4-induced cirrhosis. Liver subcellular fractions were analyzed by immunochemical staining of protein slot blots and of electrophoretically separated proteins, transferred to nitrocellulose, using AC-protein adduct-specific antibodies. One reactive protein of about 200 kD was detected in the liver soluble fraction and in the cytosol of isolated hepatocytes and, to a lesser extent in the liver microsomes of CCl4-treated rats; in control animals, this reactivity was much weaker. The immunopositive AC adduct co-migrated with the beta 1,2 dimer of rat collagen type I; it was sensitive to digestion by a highly purified collagenase and also reacted with anti-rat collagen type I-specific IgG. In addition, comparison of peptides of the CNBr-digested, immunoprecipitated AC adduct with those of rat collagen type I revealed a high degree of similarity. Thus, AC adduct formation occurs in liver injury of non-alcoholic origin, and a target protein appears to be related to collagen type I, most likely the procollagen precursor.
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PMID:Acetaldehyde-collagen adducts in CCl4-induced liver injury in rats. 217 75

Although there is no established therapy for the fibrogenesis of hepatic cirrhosis, many potential therapies are now emerging. The requirements for the "perfect therapy" for hepatic fibrosis can be listed: (1) the pharmacologic agent should be active only in the liver; (2) its effect should be specific for collagen (or another critical extracellular matrix component); and (3) it should not be toxic. To date no agents fulfill these criteria. Of the agents we reviewed, only colchicine appears sufficiently safe for use outside of controlled clinical trials for cirrhotic patients whose underlying disease is not otherwise treatable. However, confirmation of the efficacy of colchicine in additional well-controlled clinical trials is still required. Agents such as collagen propeptides require extensive in vitro development, while trials in animal models are required for prolyl 4-hydroxylase inhibitors, proline analogues, and prostaglandins. For more developed agents, such as malotilate and gamma-interferon, there is now a need for well-designed long-term clinical trials.
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PMID:Therapy for hepatic fibrosis. 218 90

Hepatocytes respond to injury by a few basic pathological reactions that are reflected in cell death, different types of degeneration, regeneration, or tumorous transformation. At the ultrastructural level, alterations of cell organelles can be observed in different combinations as a result of the injury, depending on the etiological agent(s) or pathological conditions developed. Nuclear bodies, dilation and fragmentation of rough endoplasmic reticulum (rer), swelling of mitochondria, and an increased number of lysosomes occur during acute viral hepatitis. The core and surface components of the hepatitis B virus can be localized in the liver cells in chronic hepatitis and in carriers. Close contact of hepatocytic and lymphocytic cell membranes were observed in chronic active hepatitis. Hepatocytes surrounded by an increased amount of collagen fibers are characteristic of cirrhosis. Loosely arranged, fine fibrils or condensed forms of Mallory bodies are pathognomic for alcoholic injury. A wide spectrum of alterations are noted after drug treatment: the proliferation of smooth endoplasmic reticulum (ser) as an adaptive phenomenon, focal or complete necrosis of the cell, inflammation, and the like. The fine structural analysis of hepatocytic inclusions in storage diseases has a differential diagnostic value. The storage of copper and other elements can be measured by x-ray microanalysis. The study of the hepatocytic differentiation in liver tumors is highly important in establishing the diagnosis and in proving the hepatocytic origin of the tumor.
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PMID:Fine structure of hepatocytes during the etiology of several common pathologies. 218 62

A case of idiopathic portal hypertension (IPH) developing after renal transplantation is reported. A 33-year-old Japanese male who had undergone renal transplantation 8 years previously was transferred to our hospital because of hematemesis from ruptured esophageal varices. He had no history of any liver disease before the renal transplantation, but had a history of receiving blood transfusion. Abdominal computed tomography (CT) and ultrasonography revealed marked splenomegaly and collateral channels, but no obliteration which might cause portal hypertension in the hepatic or portal vein. No findings suggestive of hepatitis or liver cirrhosis were found either macroscopically on laparoscopy or by liver biopsy. Light microscopic study of the liver biopsy specimen showed mild periportal fibrosis, inconspicuous portal branches in the most peripheral tracts, but no pseudolobule formation or piecemeal necrosis. However collagen deposition was found in the perisinusoidal space and partly in intercellular space on electron microscopy. We consider that the development of portal hypertension in this case is responsible for the collagen deposition, which may be related to the administration of azathioprine after renal transplantation. There are few reports on IPH after renal transplantation, and it is stressed that a lower amount of azathioprine than previously reported may induce IPH under such conditions.
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PMID:A case of idiopathic portal hypertension after renal transplantation. 222 56

Alcoholic hepatitis is a necrotizing, often inflammatory, process that is an important precursor to the development of cirrhosis. Acetaldehyde, which is derived from alcohol by the action of alcohol dehydrogenase, is apparently the most important factor leading to alcohol-induced liver injury. Other factors of importance in determining the appearance and rate of progression of liver diseases in patients who are chronic alcoholics include sex, nutritional status, and various immunologic reactions. In addition, there is an incompletely understood genetic predisposition to the development of alcoholic hepatitis. Several histologic features found in patients with alcoholic hepatitis have been evaluated in efforts to determine which are of prognostic value. The predominance of the alcohol-induced injury in zone III of the hepatic lobule; deposition of collagen, IgA, and fibronectin in the space of Disse; defenestration of endothelial cells; and transformation of lipocytes and myofibroblasts to fibroblasts have been investigated. Prolongation of the prothrombin time and marked elevation of serum bilirubin levels are indicators of a subgroup of patients with alcoholic hepatitis who have a poor prognosis, especially if there is also evidence of hepatic encephalopathy. Supportive care and abstinence from alcohol are the foundations of therapy. Corticosteroid therapy appears to decrease the number of early deaths in patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis. Other experimental approaches to therapy include the use of propylthiouracil, anabolic-androgenic steroids, and insulin and glucagon.
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PMID:Alcoholic hepatitis: pathogenesis and approaches to treatment. 223 74

Type III procollagen peptide (PCP) is a byproduct of type III collagen synthesis and a potential marker of collagen secretion. In chronic diffuse interstitial lung diseases, elevated PCP concentrations have been found in serum as well as in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. It has been proposed that PCP is a marker of early, active stages of fibrosis. As severe fibrosis is a frequent complication in adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), we investigated PCP in patients with ARDS and compared the results with those from patients requiring mechanical ventilation because of heart failure and after neurosurgical and surgical interventions, and those from spontaneously breathing patients, including healthy volunteers and patients with pneumonia, liver cirrhosis, and renal failure. PCP concentrations in patients with ARDS were extremely elevated compared with those in control subjects (p less than 0.001) and correlated positively with FiO2 (r = 0.71, p less than 0.01). These results support the pathophysiologic concept of early fibrogenesis in ARDS. As preventing pulmonary fibrosis in ARDS is essential in improving survival rate, we believe PCP can be a valuable diagnostic tool in ARDS.
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PMID:Determination of serum concentrations of type III procollagen peptide in mechanically ventilated patients. Pronounced augmented concentrations in the adult respiratory distress syndrome. 224 Aug 30

Increased elastic stained material has been described in fibrotic and cirrhotic liver processes. The aim of this work was to follow the development and distribution of elastic fibers from 48 chronic alcoholic patients. Patients were scored for fibrosis as 0, without fibrosis or minimal (n = 5); 1, incipient or early fibrosis (n = 9); 2, fibrosis or incomplete cirrhosis (n = 12); and 3, cirrhosis (n = 22). Elastica staining was performed by orcein, resorcin-fuchsin and iron hematoxylin and confirmed by immunofluorescence staining with an anti-human elastin antibody (Institut Pasteur). Electron microscopy of representative cases of each group and electron microscopy of immunolabelled elastin (n = 5) were also performed. In early alcoholic fibrosis, oxytalan fibers were pointed out in terminal hepatic veins and in Disse space. In fibrous portal extensions and cirrhotic internodular septa, oxytalan and elaunin fibers represented the major elastin components in association with the alcoholic liver fibroplasia. Immunostaining with anti-elastin Ab exhibits the same distribution as with histochemical methods in portal and septal zones. Electron microscopy confirmed abundant microfibrillar bundles between collagen fibers that mesh and are in continuity with elaunin fibers. Immunoelectron microscopy confirmed elastin deposits in the amorphous material and in association with the microfibrillar material in the portal and septal zones and disclosed elastin even in the thin strands of fibrotic tissue. In conclusion, elastogenesis, mainly represented by oxytalan and elaunin fibers, develops in alcoholic disease and takes part, with collagen deposits, in the fibrotic process.
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PMID:Elastin in alcoholic liver disease. An immunohistochemical and immunoelectron microscopic study. 228 92

Hepatic fibrosis represents an important stage in the progression of chronic liver disease to cirrhosis. In the present paper we have investigated whether capsaicin-sensitive neuropeptide-containing sensory neurons may participate in the development of liver fibrosis. The expression of hepatic fibrosis induced by common bile duct obstruction has been studied both in capsaicin- and vehicle-treated rats. Common bile duct-induced liver fibrosis was less marked in capsaicin-treated rats than in vehicle-treated rats. Diffuse alterations of liver parenchyma structure with marked collagen deposition and nodular regeneration occurred 8 weeks after common bile duct ligation in vehicle-treated animals, while none of the capsaicin-treated rats exhibited the formation of complete connective septa altering the parenchyma architecture. Both vehicle- and capsaicin-treated rats showed an increasing number of desmin-positive cells in the perivenular zone, but the density of these cells was lower in treated animals than in untreated rats. The hydroxyproline content of the liver increased after common bile duct ligation in a time-dependent manner. Eight weeks after bile duct obstruction vehicle-treated rats showed a 7-fold increase of liver collagen content in comparison to normal animals. This enhancement was about 3.5-fold in capsaicin-treated rats. These findings raise the possibility that the peripheral release of neuropeptides stored in sensory nerves might participate in the development of liver fibrosis following common bile duct obstruction.
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PMID:Effect of sensory denervation with capsaicin on liver fibrosis induced by common bile duct ligation in rat. 229 20

Common features of chronic alcoholic liver disease are progressive hypoalbuminemia and a spectrum of liver fibrosis. The molecular mechanisms that account for these effects are still the subject of controversy. Therefore, in the present study we evaluated albumin and collagen gene expression in livers of alcohol abusers and patients with virus-induced liver disease. Albumin and pro alpha 1(I) collagen messenger RNA levels were determined in 30 patients who underwent diagnostic liver biopsy. Of 14 alcoholics, 7 had alcoholic hepatitis alone and the other 7 had cirrhosis plus alcoholic hepatitis. Of 16 nonalcoholic patients with chronic viral infection, 6 had chronic active hepatitis and 10 had cirrhosis plus chronic active hepatitis. Total RNA was extracted from a portion of each biopsy specimen, hybridized with a human albumin or collagen complementary DNA clone, and compared with 2 normal surgical specimens, which served as controls. The Northern hybridization studies showed that (a) despite the presence of inflammation and fibrosis, the albumin messenger RNA levels of alcoholics were similar to those of the controls; (b) these alcoholics had significantly higher levels of albumin messenger RNA than did patients with similar histological levels of disease due to viral infection; and (c) all the categories of patients had markedly increased procollagen messenger RNA levels compared with controls. Given these results it is tempting to speculate that alcohol may actually increase albumin messenger RNA content in humans as it does in animals. Furthermore, the increased procollagen messenger RNA levels in fibrotic livers suggest that an increase in collagen syntheses may be a significant factor in the pathogenesis of hepatic fibrosis.
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PMID:Albumin and collagen gene regulation in alcohol- and virus-induced human liver disease. 229 78


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