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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Of 26 patients hospitalized with mild to moderate alcohol-associated
cirrhosis
, 14 had dark-adaptation abnormalities consistent with marginal vitamin-A status. The response of dark adaptation and the plasma
retinol
transport proteins, retinol-binding protein and prealbumin, was studied in 12 of these patients after daily oral vitamin-A supplements of 3300 microgram. Vitamin-A supplementation was associated with significant (p less than 0.05-0.005) improvement in dark adaptation and increased plasma concentrations of retinyl esters,
retinol
, and retinol-binding protein. Thus in patients with
cirrhosis
and marginal vitamin-A status, supplemental vitamin-A therapy appears to stimulate retinol-binding protein release from the liver. This enhancement of plasma
retinol
transport and delivery of
retinol
to peripheral tissues such as the retina is one of several factors that may serve to optimize vitamin-A nutritional status in patients with
cirrhosis
.
...
PMID:Vitamin-A reversal of abnormal dark adaptation in cirrhosis. Study of effects on the plasma retinol transport system. 56 8
Vitamin A
absorption tests using vitamin A palmitate and alcohol separately in oil and oil-water emulsions were done on 43 patients with cystic fibrosis. Patients were given 7,000 units of vitamin A per kilogram of body weight with a fatty breakfast. Pancreatic enzymes were not given with the test meal and were withheld for five hours from start of test. Blood was drawn before administration of the vitamin and at three and five hours after administration. Serum vitamin A levels were estimated using the Carr-Price technique. The percentages of patients with normal vitamin A absorption were 85 with vitamin A alcohol in oil-water emulsion, 61 with vitamin A alcohol dissolved in oil, 64 with vitamin A palmitate in oil-water emulsion, and 19 with vitamin A palmitate in oil. The number of stools per day is an inverse indicator of retention time in the intestine. Absorption of fat soluble vitamins is always abnormal when a patient has four or more stools a day. The observations that cystic fibrosis patients with abnormal liver biopsies have poor absorption of vitamin A were not statistically significant. The question of the effect of
cirrhosis
in cystic fibrosis on vitamin A absorption remains unresolved.
...
PMID:Absorption of vitamin A in patients with cystic fibrosis. Absorption is best with emulsified vitamin A alcohol. 78 64
The fenestrated endothelium of the liver sinusoids forms a sieve between the circulation and hepatocytes. Fenestrae selectively permit the entrance of relatively small chylomicron remnants into the space of Disse to contact hepatocyte receptors, but obstruct the passage of the larger parent chylomicrons. Much of dietary cholesterol and most of
retinol
are transported as esters in the core of chylomicrons. In the dimethyl nitrosamine rat model of
cirrhosis
, we have described a rapid reduction in size and number of fenestrae well before the onset of
cirrhosis
. Concurrent with this decreased porosity is a decreased trapping of radio-labelled dietary cholesterol and
retinol
by these livers. We postulate that the less porous "liver sieve" hinders the hepatic uptake of chylomicron remnants, with consequent disturbance of cholesterol and
retinol
metabolism.
...
PMID:Decreased hepatic uptake of cholesterol and retinol in the dimethylnitrosamine rat model of cirrhosis. 144 66
The authors report on occurrence, causes and diagnostics of liver affections observed in fattening bulls in Ukrainia between 1982 and 1988. For this purpose, 2747 bulls in 10 fattening plants had been controlled clinically once during the last month of their final fattening period (lasting, according to the feeding schedule, from the 4th until the 12th, or from the 6th until the 18th month of life), and 1318 of them were controlled for eventual hepatic lesions at slaughter. The authors found an increase in liver affections during the final fattening period. The type of lesion found preferentially in the different fattening plants showed a certain correlation with feeding used in these: The prevalence of liver lesions (i.e. in 87.2% of the animals controlled) were found in fattening bulls fed cereal branstraw-pellets; among these, liver abscesses were most frequent (i.e. 55.2% of all lesions observed in this group). Steatosis of the liver was prevalent in fattening bulls receiving eating offalls (i.e. 82.7% of all lesions found in that group), whereas
liver cirrhosis
was prevalent in fattening bulls fed with sugar beet chips-silage. In Holstein-bulls, liver lesions were about double as frequent as in Fleckvieh-bulls (i.e. 37.3 and 16.7% of the livers controlled were found involved, respectively). Diagnostical value of several clinical parameters controlled is discussed (i.e. size and sensitivity of liver percussion field, activity of SDH, LDH, AST and ALT in serum, serum concentration of vitamin A, D3-25 and E, concentration of
Vitamin A
in liver, and concentration of cholic acids and of their glucoconjugates in bile).
...
PMID:[Liver diseases of fattening bulls]. 150 64
Portal hypertension consecutive to hypervitaminosis A has seldom been well documented. Two cases are reported here. The first case concerns a 39-year old woman who had taken meladinine (8-methoxypsoralen) for the purpose of tanning. In the second case, a 43-year old woman had absorbed Plethoryl (a combination of tiratricol, cyclovalone and
retinol
) in order to lose weight. Both patients had histological hepatic lesions, such as hypertrophic Ito cells, perisinusoidal
cirrhosis
and spontaneous autofluorescence, suggestive of vitamin A overload, associated with a hepatic vein pressure gradient of 10 mmHg or more and high liver concentrations of vitamin A. The responsibility of Plethoryl in case 2 is beyond any doubt, but the mechanism of hypervitaminosis in case 1 is controverted. A review of the literature has provided detailed information on the signs of vitamin A overload, the frequency of which is probably underestimated. Patients with portal hypertension of unknown origin should be investigated for hypervitaminosis A.
...
PMID:[Portal hypertension and hypervitaminosis A. Apropos of 2 cases and review of the literature]. 175 70
The role played by carotenoids,
retinol
and tocopherol in quencing oxidative cellular damage and combatting tumor growth is well documented, but little is known about their activity in human
liver cirrhosis
(LC), where oxidative damage and tumoral complications are common-place. We investigated 59 patients with LC of different etiology on admission to hospital and compared them with 32 healthy controls, matched for age and sex. Nutritional (cutaneous skinfolds, creatinine-height index) and serum parameters were determined; of these, alpha- and beta-carotene, cryptoxanthin, lycopene,
retinol
and alpha-tocopherol were detected by an high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) technique, devised in our laboratory, which afforded an accurate and simultaneous resolution of all six compounds. The results point to a significant reduction in almost all the vitamin factors in LC, as well as in total serum lipids. In consequence, the ratio tocopherol/total serum lipids remains almost unchanged: 2.45 +/- 0.08 (m +/- se) in controls and 2.34 +/- 0.16 in patients. The effects of age, sex, nutritional habits, alcohol, malnutrition and the severity of the disease were also evaluated in relation to the vitamin-factor levels. It is suggested that the reduced levels observed in LC patients are due to a number of factors including portal hypertension and lymphatic circulation impairment, and it is concluded that thorough screening and improved diet are beneficial in the follow-up of LC.
...
PMID:Carotenoids and liposoluble vitamins in liver cirrhosis. 185 80
Vitamin A
and synthetic retinoids have recently been used increasingly in a variety of health related concerns. Hepatic toxicity is an uncommon but serious side-effect of several
Vitamin A
derivatives which may lead to
cirrhosis
. This review will focus on the clinical and pathologic findings of hepatic involvement in chronic hypervitaminosis A and on the evidence concerning the potential hepatotoxicity of currently available synthetic retinoids.
...
PMID:Hepatic toxicity of vitamin A and synthetic retinoids. 210 14
All-
trans-retinol
(vitamin A1) levels were determined in the sera of patients with
cirrhosis of the liver
and in normal healthy individuals, using a recently developed method involving high-performance liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection. The vitamin levels were significantly lower in the cirrhotic group. (P less than 0.01), and the correlation between
retinol
and retinol-binding protein levels was good (r = 0.9678, 0.0000 less than P less than 0.0001). It is suggested that
retinol
levels may be used to monitor the disease, the assay described being less time-consuming and more convenient than the commonly used retinol-binding protein or 'dark adaption' methods.
...
PMID:Electrochemical determination of all-trans-retinol, and correlation with retinol binding protein in liver cirrhosis. 261 88
Levels of serum zinc,
retinol
and retinol-binding protein (RBP) were measured in 16 male hypogonadal cirrhotics and compared with 13 male cirrhotic patients without evidence of hypogonadism. Their ages ranged from 20 years to 76 years with a mean of 40.06 +/- 15.6 years (+/- s.e.m.) while non-hypogonadal patients had an age range of 30-55 years with a mean of 41.23 +/- 7.2 years. Mean testicular volume for hypogonadal patients was 6.69 +/- 3.5 cm3 (+/- s.e.m.) while for non-hypogonadal ones it was 12.15 +/- 6.0 cm3. Mean serum zinc level in hypogonadal patients was 4.43 +/- 0.05 mumol/l which was significantly lower than for those without hypogonadism (6.8 +/- 0.09 mumol/l). Similarly serum
retinol
was lower in hypogonadal patients (0.40 +/- 0.07 mumol/l) than in patients without hypogonadism (0.53 +/- 0.12), although this difference was not statistically significant. RBP was also lower in the hypogonadal patients (0.79 +/- 0.49 mumol/l) than in those without (1.36 +/- 0.74 mumol/l, P less than 0.05). It is concluded that hypogonadal cirrhotics have lower levels of serum zinc and RBP than those without hypogonadism. These deficiencies may contribute to the genesis of hypogonadism in
cirrhosis of the liver
and supplementation of zinc alone or with vitamin A early in the disease may retard the development of this feature of the disease.
...
PMID:Serum zinc, retinol and retinol-binding protein levels in cirrhotics with hypogonadism. 273 97
Vitamin A
metabolism involves storage in the liver. Hypervitaminosis A results in liver abnormalities, including fibrosis and
cirrhosis
. Ito cells are increased and promote fibrogenesis, which results in
cirrhosis
. Retinoids (Accutane and Tegison) are used clinically for the treatment of a variety of skin diseases. Since retinoids are analogs of vitamin A, their potential to produce liver disease is reviewed. Animal and human studies of liver function tests suggest some abnormalities in the liver in about 25% of patients treated. Liver biopsy studies have included isolated case reports and two retrospective and one prospective liver biopsy study of retinoids in humans. Although some increase in histologic liver changes have been noted, most liver biopsy specimens showed no change or improvement. Retinoids do not appear to produce consistent toxic liver abnormalities.
...
PMID:Liver toxicity of retinoid therapy. 304 64
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