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)

Fifty autopsy cases (35 male and 15 female) of mucin-secreting cholangiocarcinoma in Chinese were reviewed. The peak incidence was in the 7th decade for males and in the 6th for females. Massive (37), multinodular (8), diffuse (1) and hilar (4) types were recognized grossly. The hilar tumours arose from the main intrahepatic ducts and the other types originated from smaller ducts. The overall association with stones was 20% and clonorchiasis 92%. Cirrhosis occurred in only 4% of cases. There was an association between the degree of mucin secretion and the presence and severity of clonorchiasis.
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PMID:Mucin-producing cholangiocarcinoma: an autopsy study in Hong Kong. 19 May 76

Hyperplastic changes of intrahepatic peribiliary glands have rarely been reported, with the exception of hepatolithiasis. To determine whether there are any hyperplastic changes in the glands in livers without hepatolithiasis, we examined 1,000 consecutive autopsy liver specimens that had no hepatolithiasis. The glands were divided into intramural mucous glands and extramural seromucous glands. The hyperplastic changes were found in "normal" livers and in livers with various hepatobiliary diseases, and they were classified into three categories: hyperplasia of intramural glands (49 cases; 4.9%), hyperplasia of extramural serous acini (35 cases; 3.5%), and hyperplasia of extramural mucous acini (92 cases; 9.2%). Two or more of these three hyperplastic changes occasionally coexisted in the same liver. Hyperplasia of intramural glands was seen rather evenly in normal livers and in livers with various hepatobiliary diseases. Prevalence of hyperplasia of extramural serous acini was high in intrahepatic cholangitis and submassive hepatic necrosis. Prevalence of hyperplasia of extramural mucous acini was high in cirrhosis, submassive hepatic necrosis, cholangitis, systemic infection, and extrahepatic biliary obstruction. The hyperplastic intramural glands and mucous acini of extramural glands contained more neutral, carboxylated, and sulfated mucin than normal glands. Although their pathogenesis is unclear, these hyperplastic changes may enhance seromucous secretion into biliary lumens and may lead to biliary dysfunctions such as retardation of bile flow and increased bile viscosity. These hyperplastic changes may be preexisting conditions predisposing to hepatolithiasis.
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PMID:Pathologic observations of intrahepatic peribiliary glands in 1,000 consecutive autopsy livers: IV. Hyperplasia of intramural and extramural glands. 156 45

Metastasis of hepatoma to the brain is a rare event. Even rarer is massive hemorrhage of the brain associated with metastatic hepatoma. A 57-year-old man had cirrhosis of the liver with hepatocellular carcinoma. The tumor spread to the lungs and left occipital lobe of the brain. The primary and secondary neoplasms were negative in detection of mucin, but were immunohistochemically positive to cytokeratin CAM 5.2 and KC; the finding supported the hepatocellular origin of the tumor. The metastatic tumor formed papillae in the lung and produced massive hemorrhage in the left occipital lobe. This case raised the total number of intracranial metastatic hepatic carcinomas to 34 cases. Five of 34 hepatic carcinomas metastatic to brain, including the current one, were hepatocellular carcinoma that produced massive hemorrhage.
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PMID:Massive cerebral hemorrhage from metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma. 166 19

The asialocarbohydrate antigen YH206 is expressed on adenocarcinoma-associated mucin molecules which lack epitopes of CA19-9 and DU-PAN-2. To further characterize this molecule, the monoclonal antibody BM2 against the affinity-purified antigen YH206 was established. It was demonstrated by an inhibition test that antigen BM2 was an X-hapten-like structure, one of the representative oncodevelopmental antigens. Although the sensitivity of antigen BM2 in sera of stomach and pancreas cancer patients did not appear to be superior to that of antigen YH206, both antigens were complementary to each other resulting in the improvement of sensitivity. Interestingly, double-determinant enzyme immunoassays showed that antigen BM2 and YH206, both having a cryptic nature for neuraminidase, were co-expressed on the same mucin molecule in sera of patients with stomach cancer or liver cirrhosis. These data suggest that mucin molecules in serum might be classified into several groups based on the distribution of tumor-associated epitopes.
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PMID:Co-expression of X-hapten-like antigen and antigen YH206 on mucin molecules. 170 71

Black and brown pigment gallstones are morphologically, compositionally, and clinically distinct. Black stones form primarily in the gallbladder in sterile bile and are associated with advanced age, chronic hemolysis, alcoholism, cirrhosis, pancreatitis, and total parenteral nutrition. Brown stones form not only within the gallbladder but also within the intrahepatic and extrahepatic ducts; they are uniformly infected with enteric bacteria and are usually associated with ascending cholangitis. Brown stones are related to juxtapapillary duodenal diverticula and are the predominant type of de novo common bile duct stones. Cholecystectomy is usually curative in black pigment stone disease, whereas stones often recur after cholecystectomy for brown stone disease. The pathogenesis of black stones is probably related to nonbacterial, nonenzymatic hydrolysis of bilirubin conjugates. At the pH of bile, this results in two monohydrogenated bilirubin anions that precipitate with calcium ions. Bilirubin monoconjugates that are increased in several conditions, such as Gilbert's syndrome and chronic hemolysis, may play a pivotal role in black stone formation as a source of unconjugated monohydrogenated bilirubin and as a possible co-precipitant with calcium. The precipitation of calcium carbonate and phosphate is influenced by local gallbladder factors. Brown pigment stones are formed in bile infected with enteric bacteria that elaborate hydrolytic enzymes: beta-glucuronidase, phospholipase A, and conjugated bile acid hydrolase. The resulting anions of bilirubin and fatty acids form insoluble calcium salts. We used nb/nb mice with a chronic hemolytic anemia as a model of hemolysis-induced black stone disease. The presence of 40% bilirubin monoconjugates in mouse gallstones indicated the importance of this moiety in the pathogenesis of black stones. Other data obtained by marrow transplantation experiments in mice revealed the relative importance of genotype versus the hemolytic anemia on determinants such as biliary bile acid composition and mucin secretory glands in the mouse gallbladder neck. Additional physical chemical studies of the interaction of unconjugated bilirubin in model bile solutions will be helpful in further delineating the pathogenesis of both black and brown pigment gallstones.
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PMID:Pigment gallstone disease. 202 17

To clarify the morphology and pathogenesis of intrahepatic calculi in the incipient stage, we examined biliary sludge and microcalculi in intrahepatic bile ducts by morphologic and X-ray microanalytical methods in 18 (1.5%) among 1,179 autopsied livers. The hepatobiliary conditions of these 18 livers were intra- and extrahepatic biliary obstruction in 14 cases, hepatic fibrosis in three cases, and cirrhosis with hepatocellular carcinoma in the remaining one. Grossly, brown-pigmented microcalculi were observed floating in biliary sludge. Microscopically, the biliary sludge was composed of mucin, fibrinous materials, desquamated epithelial cells and a few bilirubin granules. The microcalculi were embedded in the sludge and consisted of mucin and precipitates of bilirubin with a granular, lamellar or amorphous appearance. Bacterial colonies were recognized in both the sludge and microcalculi in all but three cases. Intrahepatic bile ducts harboring sludge and microcalculi showed a minimal to moderate degree of glandular proliferation with mucin production. X-ray microanalysis disclosed that the sludge contained little calcium ion, whereas microcalculi were calcium-rich. These findings suggest that biliary obstruction, bacterial infection and mucin hypersecretion play an important role in the formation of intrahepatic biliary sludge and microcalculi, and that sludge is causally related to the formation of intrahepatic microcalculi. Intrahepatic microcalculi and biliary sludge may represent a pathogenetic sequence in the early stage of calcium bilirubinate hepatolithiasis.
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PMID:Biliary sludge and microcalculi in intrahepatic bile ducts. Morphologic and X-ray microanalytical observations in 18 among 1,179 consecutively autopsied livers. 209 92

Combined hepatocellular-cholangiocarcinoma is a rare form of primary liver cancer showing features of both hepatocellular and biliary epithelial differentiation. In a review of 24 cases of this tumor, three histologic types were encountered. Four cases were Type I or "collision tumors," apparently a coincidental occurrence of both hepatocellular carcinoma and cholangiocarcinoma in the same patient. Twelve cases were Type II or "transitional tumors," in which there were areas of intermediate differentiation and an identifiable transition between hepatocellular carcinoma and cholangiocarcinoma. Eight cases were Type III or "fibrolamellar tumors" which resembled the fibrolamellar variant of hepatocellular carcinoma but which also contained mucin-producing pseudoglands. Type III tumors differ from other combined tumors, occurring at a younger age, in the absence of cirrhosis, and having a slightly longer survival. Immunohistochemical (immunoperoxidase) staining for intracellular antigens showed that alpha-fetoprotein is a fairly specific, although insensitive, marker of hepatocellular differentiation in primary liver cancers, being present in 50% of typical hepatocellular carcinomas and in hepatocellular areas in 29% of combined tumors, but in no cholangiocarcinomas or cholangiocellular areas of combined tumors. Keratin is a good marker of biliary epithelial differentiation, being found in 90% of cholangiocarcinomas and in 52% of combined hepatocellular cholangiocarcinomas, but in no hepatocellular carcinomas. Alpha-1-antitrypsin, fibrinogen, IgG, and carcinoembryonic antigen may be found in both hepatocellular carcinoma, cholangiocarcinoma, and in combined tumors; these antigens are therefore of limited use in differential diagnosis.
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PMID:Combined hepatocellular-cholangiocarcinoma. A histologic and immunohistochemical study. 257 78

Sixteen patients with peripheral cholangiocarcinoma of the liver were examined with computed tomography (CT). None of the 16 patients presented with jaundice or had documented cirrhosis. On scans obtained both before and after the injection of contrast material, the tumors were depicted as low-attenuation masses in all cases, with wide variations in homogeneity. The tumor margin was irregular in 12 cases, and there was minimal contrast enhancement of the tumor in 14 cases. In 11 (69%) patients, CT demonstrated masses of markedly low attenuation, which corresponded to areas of diffuse microcystic change seen at histologic examination of resected specimens. In ten (63%) patients, the results of stool or intradermal tests for Clonorchis sinensis were positive. In all ten cases of clonorchiasis, mild, diffuse dilatation of the intrahepatic bile ducts was seen in addition to the low-attenuation masses, but there was no dilatation of the extrahepatic biliary tree. In five of the ten patients with clonorchiasis, stippled or aggregated, powderlike areas of high attenuation were seen on precontrast CT scans; at pathologic examination, those areas were found to be mucin. Extrahepatic metastases were demonstrated in ten (63%) patients. Peripheral cholangiocarcinoma should be the primary diagnostic consideration when these characteristic CT findings are detected in a noncirrhotic patient.
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PMID:Peripheral cholangiocarcinoma and clonorchiasis: CT findings. 284 40

The monoclonal antibody-defined CAR-3 antigen is a new carcinoma associated marker which is expressed on a mucin-like molecule. Serum concentrations of CAR-3 were assayed in 181 patients with carcinomas of different organs, 20 patients with non-carcinomatous malignancies, 123 patients with inflammatory diseases and 150 healthy controls. Serum levels of CAR-3 were significantly increased in 51% of the patients with pancreatic carcinomas, in 60% of patients with biliary tract carcinomas and in about 15% of the patients with carcinomas of the digestive apparatus. Sera from patients with breast carcinomas were negative, as well as sera from patients with melanomas or sarcomas. CAR-3 values in samples from patients with chronic pancreatitis were constantly negative, as were samples from healthy donors. Significant concentrations of CAR-3 were detected in 20% of the sera from patients with acute pancreatitis and in 15% of the sera from patients with cirrhosis. Because of its high specificity for pancreatic carcinomas compared to chronic pancreatitis, CAR-3 seems a promising marker for distinguishing between neoplastic and chronic inflammatory diseases of the pancreas, whose differential diagnosis is difficult.
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PMID:The monoclonal antibody-defined CAR-3 antigen is a serological marker associated with pancreatic carcinoma. 297 86

The ratio R, defined as (percent of dose of 14C)/(percent of dose of 3H) in the leucine of plasma fibrinogen, albumin, immunoglobulin G (IgG), red cell globin, and salivary mucin, was measured in 7 normal adults and in 5 cirrhotic patients during continuous intragastric infusion of 1-14C-labeled alpha-ketoisocaproate (KIC) and 3H-labeled leucine. The ratio R measured in whole body protein has been shown in rat experiments to be a measure of the nutritional efficiency of KIC relative to leucine. In normal subjects, R in albumin and fibrinogen became constant (0.63 +/- 0.05) after the third hour and were indistinguishable from one another. The ratio R in IgG was similar and constant. The ratio R in plasma leucine (0.62 +/- 0.06) was significantly lower than R in mucin (0.86 +/- 0.04) or globin (0.73 +/- 0.04), indicating that these latter proteins derive a significant fraction of their leucine from KIC transaminated locally, rather than from circulating leucine. Results in 5 cirrhotic patients were the same, except that R in IgG and R in globin were significantly increased. Thus, cirrhosis does not alter the efficiency, relative to leucine, with which oral KIC is used for synthesis of export proteins by the liver, but increases the efficiency with which it is used for the synthesis of some proteins peripherally.
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PMID:Utilization of alpha-ketoisocaproate for synthesis of hepatic export proteins and peripheral proteins in normal and cirrhotic subjects. 369 3


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