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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Plasma aldosterone levels and the serum electrolytes potassium, sodium and magnesium of 38 patients with healthy adrenals were determined. Under physiological conditions there were no significant correlations between these parameters. In two patients with an aldosterone producing adenoma of the adrenals (syndrome of Conn) we found very low levels of potassium and low levels of magnesium. The levels of sodium lay in the upper normal range. Plasma aldosterone levels are raised strongly. After resection of the tumors the mentioned parameters normalized. In 16 patients with cirrhosis and ascites we generally found values of aldosterone, potassium, sodium and magnesium which lay in the lowest normal range. Under treatment with spironolactone the aldosterone levels raised and reached values which are characteristical of the syndrome of Conn. Potassium raised to the upper normal range, magnesium raised significantly, sodium diminished slightly.
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PMID:[Plasma aldosterone and electrolytes in primary and secondard aldosteronism (author's transl)]. 49 54

Study on a diurnal rhythm of plasma aldosterone (PA) and plasma renin activity (PRA) was performed in 8 patients with congestive heart failure. All patients had been digitalized and received diuretics under mild sodium restriction. An obvious diurnal rhythm of PA similar to the normal subjects, with the lowest value in the evening and the highest value in the morning, was observed in 7 of 8 cases, while a diurnal rhythm of PRA was obscure except in one case. The PA generally did not run parallel with PRA. Although the reason of the absence of PRA diurnal rhythm in congestive heart failure was not clear, it was considered that reninangiotensin system did not play a significant role for the development of PA diurnal rhythm in congestive heart failure. The determined PA values were entirely within normal range except in 2 cases, although they were administered the potent diuretics chronically. A high PA value was observed only in early morning in one case, while all determined PA values were extremely high in another case with severe congestive heart failure involved in cardiac liver cirrhosis. The PRA values were relatively low in 2 cases, normal in 5 and high in one.
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PMID:The diurnal rhythm of plasma aldosterone and plasma renin activity in patients with congestive heart failure. 56 23

The RBF was measured by means of the 133Xe washout method in seventy patients with cirrhosis. The average RBF in controls was 3.72 ml/g-min compared with 2.34 in the patients without ascites, 1.82 in the decompensated patients, 1.47 in the patients with azotaemia and 1.13 in the patients with additional oliguria. The RBF was not significantly correlated to changes in the systemic or portal haemodynamics. Likewise it was not correlated to any biochemical test of liver function except the serum albumin concentration (P less than 0.01). From the present results it can be concluded that a reduction in RBF in cirrhosis frequently is present before sodium and water retention is clinically evident and before laboratory proof of impairment of renal function, and that a subnormal serum albumin concentration may be a factor among several leading to renal hypoperfusion in cirrhosis.
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PMID:Renal blood flow in cirrhosis: relation to systemic and portal haemodynamics and liver function. 59 43

Experimental cirrhosis was produced in dogs by the sporadic feeding of dimethylnitrosamine for the purpose of studying the temporal relationships between urinary sodium retention, plasma volume expansion, and ascites formation. Sodium retention started about 16 days following the onset of cirrhosis and preceded ascites formation by about 10 days. Plasma volume increased by 9% (P less than 0.05) within 3-4 days of sodium retention and expanded further as ascites accumulated. Splanchnic plasma volume was greater by 161 ml in 10 cirrhotic dogs with ascites than in 14 normal dogs. Nonsplanchnic volume was greater by 96 ml (P less than 0.05). Thus, the "effective" as well as the splanchnic component of the vascular space was expanded. Paracentesis did not cause the re-formation of ascites in five dogs as long as dietary salt was denied. Refeeding permitted reaccumulation of ascites and further plasma volume expansion. Renal perfusion remained constant as dogs became progressively cirrhotic. We conclude that ascites formation depends on the prior retention of urinary sodium, and occurs as an "overflow" phenomenon. A contracted effective plasma volume does not appear to be necessary for continuing sodium retention.
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PMID:Sodium retention and ascites formation in dogs with experimental portal cirrhosis. 59 55

Fluid retention and ascites are rarely seen in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC). This contrasts with the conspicuous tendency of patients with Laennec's cirrhosis to retain salt and water. In an attempt to clarify this clinical observation, renal handling of sodium was studied during extracellular volume expansion (ECVE) and maximal suppression of antidiuretic hormone in five patients with PBC. These PBC patients were compared with two control populations: five edema-free patients with Laennec's cirrhosis and nine healthy volunteers. The natriuretic and diuretic response to ECVE was significantly greater in the patients with PBC as compared with the two control groups. CH2O for given rates of urine flow were similar in PBC patients as compared with normal subjects. The data suggest that a supranormal rejection of sodium at the proximal tubule in response to ECVE underlies the exaggerated natriuresis of PBC. The augmented elimination of salt during ECVE in patients with PBC may explain the rarity of ascites and edema in this variety of cirrhosis.
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PMID:Exaggerated natriuretic response to volume expansion in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis. 60 57

Tubular handling of sodium and phosphate were studied in 4 patients with cirrhosis and ascites. The control group consisted of 5 patients with cirrhosis without sodium retention. The degree of phosphaturia was assumed to reflect proximal tubular reabsorption. Whereas fractional excretion of phosphate was comparable in both groups, fractional excretion of sodium was strikingly diminished in the patients with ascites. This observation suggests that sodium retention in these patients occurs beyond the proximal tubule. This interpretation is in accord with our previous observation, based on clearance data, that the proximal tubular reabsorption of sodium in cirrhosis may be normal even in the face of edema formation.
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PMID:Tubular handling of sodium and phosphate in cirrhosis with salt retention. 62 15

Renal handling of sodium was studied in five dogs where an end-to-side portacaval fistula was constructed prior to the induction of cirrhosis with DMN. Such a model permits the effects of cirrhosis to be studied separately from the consequences of portal hypertension. Three control animals without cirrhosis maintained normal liver and kidney function and remained in sodium balance for as long as 8 weeks following surgery. In the five cirrhotic dogs, urinary sodium retention preceded ascites formation and was independent of hyperaldosteronism, hypoalbuminemia, hepatic ischemia, or decreased renal perfusion. Portal venous pressure remained normal in all cirrhotic dogs, and the splanchnic area remained free of venous collaterals. Plasma volume expansion also preceded ascites formation, and this variable increased by 8.4% (p less than 0.05) following 6 days of sodium retention. These temporal relationships between sodium retention, expanded plasma volume, and ascites formation are similar to those observed in ordinary cirrhotic dogs previously studied in this laboratory. Total plasma volume increased by 13.2% (p less than 0.05) when measured during the ascitic phase of cirrhosis. However, when the splanchnic and nonsplanchnic ("effective") components of plasma volume were measured by an exclusion technique, the ratio of these components to total plasma volume was not different from that observed in normal dogs. Thus no preferential consignment of retained salt and water had occurred. We conclude that urinary sodium retention in cirrhotic dogs occurs independently of portal hypertension or augmented splanchnic vascular capacity and is associated with expansion of the effective plasma volume, even though ascites is present.
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PMID:Renal sodium retention and ascites formation in dogs with experimental cirrhosis but without portal hypertension or increased splanchnic vascular capacity. 62 53

Measurements of urinary lysozyme were used to evaluate renal tubular integrity in 34 patients with cirrhosis or fulminant hepatic failure who had developed renal impairment. In 18 of the patients the lysozyme values were normal but in the remaining 16 were increased, supporting previous concepts that renal failure complicating hepatocellular disease may occur both without and with tubular necrosis. The lysozyme values were inversely related to the creatinine clearance, suggesting that the development of tubular necrosis may be determined by the level of renal perfusion. The validity of simpler laboratory tests often used to assess renal tubular integrity--namely, the urine sodium concentration, the urine:plasma osmolality ratio, and casts in the urine sediment--was evaluated by comparison with the lysozyme measurements. The urine sodium concentration was of most value and the findings in the sediment were of no value at all.
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PMID:Spectrum of renal tubular damage in renal failure secondary to cirrhosis and fulminant hepatic failure. 63 52

Plasma renin activity (PRA), plasma renin concentration (PRC), angiotensinogen, angiotensin II (AT II) and plasma aldosterone were determined by radioimmunoassay in 77 patients with cirrhosis of the liver [group I: with ascites, untreated (n=23); group II: patients with ascites during treatment (n=32); group III: after removal of fluids, but under further spironolactone therapy (n=10); group IV: untreated subjects without ascites (n=12)]. With the exception of decreased angiotensinogen values in all groups ranging between 39% (group IV) and 73% (group III) no significant changes of the other parameters of the RAAS were found in untreated patients. A highly significant increase of PRA, PRC, AT II and plasma aldosterone was observed in treated cirrhotics with (group II) or without (group III) ascites. In the total series of patients AT II was closely related to PRA, PRC and aldosterone emphasizing aldosterone secretion. Plasma sodium was inversely correlated to PRA, PRC, AT II and aldosterone, but no relationship was detected between these parameters of the RAAS and plasma potassium. Our results indicate that hyperaldosteronism in cirrhosis appears unlikely to be the major determinant of avid renal sodium retention and ascites formation. An increased activity of the RAAS is most often initiated by therapeutic factors and/or markedly altered electrolyte metabolism. Therefore, basal conditions of the patients to be studied must be well defined to exclude any artificially induced stimulation of the RAAS.
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PMID:Studies on the activity of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) in patients with cirrhosis of the liver. 64 12

Twelve patients with cirrhosis, refractory ascites, and varying degrees of renal failure (creatinine clearance, 5 to 44 ml/min) were studied before and up to 2 weeks following peritoneovenous shunt. Creatinine clearance increased 60% or more in seven patients (group I) and 22% or less in five patients (group II). There were no significant differences in maximum urine output or sodium excretion between groups (group I, 4,272 ml/14 hr, 372 mEq/24 hr; group II, 3,722 ml/24 hr, 255 mEq/24 hr). Aldosterone and renin concentrations were higher in group I and showed a greater decrease after shunting. Renin substrate levels also were higher in group I and rose following shunt insertion, while group II remained low. Ascitic fluid was found to contain renin substrate in concentrations of approximately 25% to 50% of plasma concentrations. Patients with the greatest increase in creatinine clearance showed the largest rise in substrate concentration and fall in renin and aldosterone secretion, suggesting a dynamic relationship between these factors. That a diuresis could occur without significant change in these parameters in five of 12 patients suggests independent control mechanisms for renal salt and water excretion and glomerular filtration in the ascitic patient.
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PMID:Improved renal function and inhibition of renin and aldosterone secretion following peritoneovenous (LeVeen) shunt. 66 20


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