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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Administration of total parenteral nutrition (TPN) solutions high in branched chain amino acids (BCAA) is thought to improve metabolic support during stress. This prospective, randomized, double blind study compared 45 per cent BCAA with 25 per cent BCAA in 12 patients. Seven patients had multiple trauma; two, gastrointestinal surgery; one, pancreatitis; and two,
cirrhosis
. The TPN regimen was 1.0-1.5 gm/kg/day amino acids and 30-45 glucose kcal/kg/day. The BCAA formula used was high in isoleucine and valine, but not leucine. Amino acid plasma levels, blood chemistries, 3-methylhistidine excretion, and nitrogen balance were studied. Control studies showed negative nitrogen balance (-7.1 +/- 2.9 gm) (mean +/- SEM), elevated insulin (61 +/- 21 microunit/ml), and elevated 3-methylhistidine (3MH) excretion (688 +/- 309 micromol); plasma leucine (93 +/- 11 nmol/ml) and isoleucine (37 +/- 23) were low, and valine (155 +/- 20) was elevated. Plasma methionine (40 +/- 9) and tyrosine (70 +/- 12) were high normal.
Phenylalanine
(85 +/- 5) was elevated. Both groups showed increased nitrogen excretion and positive nitrogen balance during the study (25 per cent, 2.0 +/- 1.4 gm/day; 45 per cent, 1.2 +/- 2.6 gm/day). Three-methylhistidine excretion changed little in either group (557 +/- 149, 414 +/- 91), insulin rose (135 +/- 27, 65 +/- 19), and plasma leucine (82 +/- 4, 71 +/- 9) changed little. Plasma isoleucine (51 +/- 3, 155 +/- 16) and valine (173 +/- 11, 691 +/- 23) both rose, more in the 45 per cent group. Methionine (67 +/- 12, 37 +/- 4) and tyrosine (51 +/- 6, 50 +/- 10) changed little.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Comparison of total parenteral nutrition with 25 per cent and 45 per cent branched chain amino acids in stressed patients. 393 93
Plasma levels of tyrosine were assayed in the fasting state and after oral administration of either tyrosine (tyrosine tolerance test) or
phenylalanine
(phenlyalanine conversion test) in normal subjects and in patients with hepatitis, biliary obstruction, or
cirrhosis
. Fasting tyrosine levels tended to be slightly increased in patients with hepatitis and biliary obstruction and markedly increased in patients with
cirrhosis
. Tyrosine tolerance tests in patients with
cirrhosis
were characterized by larger than normal increments in tyrosine levels and by delayed returns toward fasting levels. The results of
phenylalanine
conversion tests were abnormal in approximately one-half of patients with either hepatitis or biliary obstruction and four-fifths of patients with
cirrhosis
. Abnormalities were characterized by elevated fasting plasma tyrosine levels, or small and delayed increments in tyrosine levels, or both. Abnormal
phenylalanine
conversion test results in patients with
cirrhosis
did not correlate closely with any clinical feature of
cirrhosis
or with the results of any standard liver function test; there was positive correlation only with abnormal ammonia tolerance, a test of portalsystemic shunting. Tests of tyrosine metabolism do not appear to be useful for routine clinical assessment of liver function. Tyrosine tolerance tests and
phenylalanine
conversion tests done for purposes of diagnosis of other diseases may yield misleading results in patients with liver disease.
...
PMID:Tyrosine metabolism in patients with liver disease. 607 4
The purpose of our study was to evaluate the effect of somatostatin (500 microgram/h intravenously) upon insulin, c-peptide, glucagon and plasma amino acids concentrations in patients with and without
cirrhosis of the liver
. The typical plasma amino acid pattern in
cirrhosis
is characterised by increased concentrations of the aromatic amino acids and decreased concentrations of the branched chain amino acids and of alanine and glycine. After administration of somatostatin insulin, c-peptide and glucagon concentrations decreased and those of the branched chain amino acids in both groups increased; in addition in patients with
cirrhosis
the plasma concentrations of threonine, serine, glycine, alanine, lysine, and arginine increased also. Infusion of somatostatin plus insulin in patients with
cirrhosis
succeeded in preventing the increase in the branched chain amino acid concentrations, while the infusion of somatostatin plus glucagon decreased threonine, serine, glycine, alinine,
phenylalanine
, tyrosine, lysine and arginine concentrations. It is therefore suggested that the effect of somatostatin on the plasma amino acids may be because of the reduction of insulin and glucagon concentrations; however, other effects of somatostatin cannot be excluded at present.
...
PMID:Correction of altered plasma amino acid pattern in cirrhosis of the liver by somatostatin. 614 82
In order to investigate disturbances in glycoregulation and plasma amino acids and their possible relationship in alcoholic liver diseases, plasma concentrations of insulin, C-peptide, glucagon and branched-chain (valine, leucine, isoleucine) as well as aromatic (
phenylalanine
, tyrosine) amino acids were measured during an arginine test (i.v infusion of arginine chloride 0.5 g/kg over 30 min) in 21 alcoholic patients: 11 with
cirrhosis
(group C) and 10 with steatosis (group S). Insulin responses to arginine was reduced in both groups, whereas glucagon response was increased in group C and reduced in group S. Plasma concentrations of branched-chain amino acids were reduced in both groups, irrespective of the degree of hyperinsulinism. Plasma concentrations of aromatic amino acids were increased only in cirrhotic patients; the increase was independent of the degree of hyperglucagonism and of the plasma insulin/glucagon molar ratio. These results suggest that disturbances of glycoregulation in plasma amino acids imbalance do not play a major role in alcoholic cirrhosis and steatosis.
...
PMID:[Disturbances in glycoregulation and plasma amino acids in alcoholic hepatopathies. Study using the arginine test]. 623 16
A girl with chronic hereditary tyrosinemia is described in whom the diet caused an immediate resolution of tubular defect and rapid healing of the rickets. However
cirrhosis
was not prevented and at the age of 8 she developed a hepatoma. Complete surgical excision was possible and she remained well 15 months later. The value of blood alpha-fetoprotein levels and liver echotomography to monitor the course of the disease is emphasized. The apparent ineffectiveness of the low
phenylalanine
and tyrosine diet in preventing hepatic complications is discussed.
...
PMID:[Surgical excision of a hepatoma complicating chronic tyrosinemia (author's transl)]. 625 35
Repeated plasmaphereses were done in 7 patients with acute hepatic failure (5 of them with coma stage IV and two with stage III). Acute liver insufficiency was induced by fulminant viral hepatitis in 4 cases, by drugs in one case, and was caused by a dystrophic exacerbation of
liver cirrhosis
in two further cases. Four of the 7 treated patients have survived. Beginning improvement of hepatic function was evidenced by an increase of factor VII and prothrombin in plasma. Significant lowering of bilirubin could be observed in all cases. While ammonia values decreased continuously in the four successfully treated patients while on plasmapheresis, the opposite behaviour was observed in the decreased patients. The influence of plasmapheresis on the pathologically altered aminoacid pattern in hepatic coma was investigated in two patients: Before treatment clearly to excessively increased values of methionine and aromatic aminoacids (
phenylalanine
and tyrosine) were seen. Branched-chain aminoacids leucine, isoleucine and valine were normal to moderately decreased. After termination of plasmapheresis methionine and aromatic aminoacids were significantly lower, branched-chain aminoacids were slightly below the initial values. Improvement of consciousness correlated with increase of the quotient (val+leu+ile)/(phe+tyr).
...
PMID:[Treatment of acute liver failure by plasmapheresis]. 640 57
It has been proposed that hepatic encephalopathy and malnutrition in
cirrhosis
can be reversed by infusion of a protein formula (F080) enriched with branched-chain amino acids (valine, leucine, isoleucine) and containing decreased amounts of aromatic amino acids (
phenylalanine
, tyrosine, tryptophan). This hypothesis was tested by measuring changes in encephalopathy status, plasma ammonia, amino acid profile, and liver function during seven metabolic balance studies in three patients with
cirrhosis
and subclinical encephalopathy given increasing amounts (20-100 g/d) of F080. The results showed the following: 1) positive nitrogen balance was achieved only with 80 and 100 g F080/day; 2) plasma ammonia fell during negative, but increased during positive nitrogen balance; 3) plasma tyrosine and cystine fell significantly (p less than 0.05) with all intakes of F080; 4) the abnormal branched-chain to aromatic amino acid ratio was reversed; 5) extracellular volume was expanded in all patients; 6) albumin, bilirubin, prothrombin time became abnormal; and 7) encephalopathy did not significantly change from baseline. It is concluded that, in this population, F080 is an inadequate nutritional formula when given as the sole protein source because it produces hypotyrosinemia and hypocystinemia. The marked changes in the ratio of branched-chain to aromatic amino acids are not accompanied by improvement in encephalopathy.
...
PMID:Total parenteral nutrition with F080 in cirrhotics with subclinical encephalopathy. 640 94
A new nutritional product (SF-1008C) containing a high proportion of branched chain amino acids (BCAA) and low proportion of aromatic amino acids (AAA) and methionine was tested to see its effect on the impaired protein metabolism and abnormal nutritional state frequently observed in patients with advanced
liver cirrhosis
. A sharp increase in plasma BCAA levels and fall of AAA and methionine levels were found following the administration of an SF-1008C-supplemented diet to healthy controls and cirrhotic patients, which the BCAA levels increased only slightly following an isocaloric control diet. Blood ammonia levels increased within the normal range transiently following the diets. The SF-1008C-supplemented diet was given for 2 weeks to cirrhotic patients with histories of hepatic encephalopathy, who were taking a low-protein diet because of hyperammonemia. Serum prealbumin levels, nitrogen balance, molar ratio of plasma BCAA/
phenylalanine
and tyrosine, the number connection test and electroencephalograms improved during the period of the experimental diet. The results, therefore, indicate that a BCAA-supplemented diet is well tolerated by patients with advanced
cirrhosis
and useful for treatment of impaired protein metabolism. Furthermore, this product is beneficial in preventing hepatic encephalopathy in cirrhotics.
...
PMID:Effect of a branched chain amino acid-enriched nutritional product on the pathophysiology of the liver and nutritional state of patients with liver cirrhosis. 662 32
A simplified method for the assay of antithrombin III (AT) with the highly reactive thrombin substrate 2AcOH X H-D-CHG-Ala-Arg-pNA (substrate Th-1) is described. The assay may be performed at either 30 degrees C or 37 degrees C, and alternatively with the substrate H-D-
Phe
-Pip-Arg-pNA (S-2238). The standard curve is linear in the 12.5-150% range. For routine assays, 3 standard dilutions of plasma are sufficient, and these may be stored at -20 degrees C for 3 weeks. As only the test plasma must be diluted prior to the assay procedure, the test is more rapidly performed than previous manual assays. In 80 patients plasma samples, with AT in the 19-108% range, there was a high correlation with the results of immunoquantification (r = 0.96). There was also a high correlation between the results obtained with the manual method and the automated version described using the Cobas-Bio Centrifugal Analyser and substrate Th-1 (r = 0.96). Low AT levels in hereditary deficiency (particularly during heparin treatment), in
liver cirrhosis
, in disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), and heparin-treated thrombosis were confirmed.
...
PMID:Simplified assay for antithrombin III activity using chromogenic peptide substrate. Manual and automated method. 664 56
Mean arterial pressure,
phenylalanine
, tyrosine, norepinephrine and plasma renin activity (PRA) were determined in the plasma of 6 healthy controls and 8 patients with
liver cirrhosis
receiving a controlled sodium intake (40 mEq/day), after 1 h of bed rest and 10 min after being tilted up at 90 degrees. After resting, patients showed lower arterial pressure (p less than 0.025) and higher plasma levels of
phenylalanine
(p less than 0.005), tyrosine (p less than 0.05), norepinephrine (n.s.) and PRA (n.s.) than controls. In spite of a prolonged and marked stimulation of the adrenergic system induced by tilting, arterial pressure of cirrhotics, after an initial increase, decreased significantly. A significant PRA increase was observed in both groups but in patients it was greater and lasted longer, up to 30 min, when PRA and arterial pressure were inversely and significantly correlated. The adrenergic system of
cirrhosis
then appeared unable to maintain adequate levels of arterial pressure, even though hyperstimulated. The renin-angiotensin system played an important compensatory role in this contest.
...
PMID:Impairment of blood pressure control in patients with liver cirrhosis during tilting: study on adrenergic and renin-angiotensin systems. 675 27
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