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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Erythrocyte antioxidant enzymes (superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione peroxidase) and reduced glutathione, serum ceruloplasmin, and serum trace elements (copper, zinc, iron, and selenium) related to antioxidant enzymes were assayed in subjects with alcoholic liver disease of different degrees of severity. The erythrocytes of subjects with moderate and severe alcoholic liver cirrhosis had an unbalanced antioxidant system (normal superoxide dismutase, low catalase and glutathione peroxidase activities, and low glutathione content). Serum ceruloplasmin levels were in the normal range. Levels of the serum trace elements zinc and selenium were significantly low in subjects with moderate and severe
cirrhosis
, whose red cell half-life was also significantly short, as measured by radioactive
chromium
. These data suggest that the erythrocytes of subjects with moderate and severe alcoholic liver cirrhosis are less protected against oxidant stress. The particular erythrocyte antioxidant system and serum trace element pattern may play a role in the genesis of hemolytic disorders and of alcoholic hepatic damage.
...
PMID:Erythrocyte antioxidant activity, serum ceruloplasmin, and trace element levels in subjects with alcoholic liver disease. 837 44
To evaluate the role of severe liver damage on natural killer cell activity, 29 patients with
liver cirrhosis
were examined. The natural killer cell activity was measured with a 4-hr
chromium
release assay, and the K562 cell line was employed as target cells. The natural killer cell activity was significantly decreased in cirrhotic patients compared with normal controls and patients with chronic active hepatitis. Cirrhotic patients with Pugh's C grade of severity of liver disease had lower natural killer cell activity. The depression of natural killer cell activity in cirrhotic patients was inversely correlated with prothrombin time ratios, and the natural killer cell activity in cirrhotic patients with hepatic encephalopathy was lower than in patients without hepatic encephalopathy. Thus, the diminished natural killer cell activity in cirrhotic patients might be related to the severity of liver damage.
...
PMID:Natural killer cell activity in patients with liver cirrhosis relative to severity of liver damage. 199 65
Studies were carried out on eight patients with primary biliary cirrhosis. Four patients were found to have a haemolytic anaemia; one had Coombs red cell antibodies. Two patients had evidence of splenic sequestration of red cells using the radio-
chromium
technique. There was a significant correlation between the red cell survival and the bromsulphthalein retention test and the red cell survival and the serum level of bilirubin. It was concluded that the anaemia of
cirrhosis of the liver
, including primary biliary cirrhosis, may be due to a number of mechanisms and a unifying hypothesis based on the degree of liver dysfunction is suggested.
...
PMID:Red cell survival in biliary cirrhosis. 547 66
In defining host resistance factors in uremia, experiments were designed to assess the effect of renal failure serum upon the reactivity of normal human lymphocytes to phytohemagglutinin in vitro. Normal buffy coat cells were resuspended in sera obtained from normal subjects and from 14 patients with renal failure, then stimulated with phytohemagglutinin M and the cellular response measured by the increase in thymidine or uridine uptake. The mean thymidine uptake by stimulated cells in normal sera was 14,389 +/-1695 (SEM) cpm per 2 x 10(6) lymphocytes. Uridine uptake under the same conditions was 12,540 +/-1887 cpm. Compared to these are a mean thymidine uptake of 2740 +/-457 cpm and uridine uptake of 3928 +/-667 cpm in renal failure sera. Both differences are significant at P<0.01 level. For controls representing "chronic illnesses," sera from patients with pneumococcal meningitis,
cirrhosis of the liver
without jaundice, rheumatoid arthritis, and paraplegia with urinary tract infection did not cause suppression. No single drug had been taken by all the renal failure patients; three patients were taking no drugs. The serum from one patient with acute renal failure suppressed thymidine uptake while her serum obtained after recovery from her illness supported a normal lymphocyte response. Improvement of lymphocyte response was also noted in 9 of 10 sera obtained from patients immediately after hemodialysis. These observations plus the inhibition of stimulated cells by normal serum mixed with renal failure serum indicate the presence of a dialyzable inhibitory factor rather than the absence of a supporting factor in the renal failure sera. Lymphocytes preincubated for 24 hr in renal failure serum responded normally when transferred to normal serum and stimulated. Cells stimulated in normal serum and transferred to renal failure serum within the initial 24 hr of incubation demonstrated depressed thymidine uptake. Also, cell survival for 72 hr incubation as judged by trypan blue exclusion and
chromium
-51 release was similar in normal and renal failure sera. Thus, the suppressive effect of renal failure serum does not depend upon the initial phytohemagglutinin-cell interaction nor upon a significant cytotoxic effect. These studies demonstrate that a dialyzable factor(s) in the serum of patients with renal failure can greatly suppress one parameter by which an immune function of circulating lymphocytes is assessed and provides at least, a partial explanation for delayed homograft rejections in renal failure as well as the susceptibility of such patients to various infections.
...
PMID:Defective cellular immunity in renal failure: depression of reactivity of lymphocytes to phytohemagglutinin by renal failure serum. 557 33
A method for the simultaneous measurement of gastrointestinal protein loss and total albumin turnover entailing the use of a combination of (125)iodine- and (51)
chromium
-labeled albumin is described. Albumin turnover was calculated by the measurement of albumin-(125)I plasma decay and cumulative urinary excretion, and the results obtained agreed closely with previous studies utilizing albumin-(131)I. Gastrointestinal catabolism was calculated from the rate of fecal excretion of (51)Cr and the specific activity of plasma albumin-(51)Cr, and these data were related to the calculated albumin turnover results. During the period of 6-14 days after administration, the ratio of specific activties of albumin-(125)I and -(51)Cr in plasma and in extravascular spaces or gastric and biliary secretions remained almost identical. Fecal excretion of (51)Cr was also quite stable at this time. In six normal subjects gastrointestinal catabolism accounted for less than 10% of total albumin catabolism. Excessive gastrointestinal protein losses did not contribute to the low serum albumin in three patients with
cirrhosis
or in two adults with the nephrotic syndrome. Multiple mechanisms leading to hypoalbuminemia were demonstrated in other subjects with a variety of gastrointestinal disorders.
...
PMID:Use of 125-I- and 51-Cr-labeled albumin for the measurement of gastrointestinal and total albumin catabolism. 563 Apr 19
Intestinal permeability was investigated with a
chromium
-51-EDTA (edetic acid) absorption test in 36 non-intoxicated alcoholic patients without
liver cirrhosis
or overt clinical evidence of malabsorption or malnutrition. Patients abstaining from alcohol for less than 4 days almost invariably had higher intestinal permeability than controls, and in many the abnormality persisted for up to 2 weeks after cessation of drinking. The presence of gastritis did not correlate with the presence of increased permeability. The site of altered intestinal permeability was shown by an in-vitro permeability test to be the small bowel. The increased intestinal permeability to toxic "non-absorbable" compounds of less than 5000 molecular weight may account for some of the extraintestinal tissue damage common in alcoholic patients.
...
PMID:The leaky gut of alcoholism: possible route of entry for toxic compounds. 614 32
Health hazards due to exposure to
chromium
in the
chromium
plating industry has been documented in only a few epidemiological studies. A prospective cohort study was conducted to examine the health hazards of
chromium
plating with a follow-up period of over sixteen years. Subjects were 1193 male metal platers in the small-scale
chromium
plating plants in Tokyo. They were divided into a
chromium
plater subgroup (n = 623) and non-
chromium
plater subgroup (n = 567) and were followed up from October 1976 through December 1992. The 95% confidence interval (95%CI) of the standardized mortality ratio (SMR) was used to evaluate statistical significance. In the
chromium
plating subgroup, the risk of chronic hepatitis or
liver cirrhosis
was significantly elevated (SMR 2.34; 95%CI 1.17-4.19) and a trend toward statistical significance was seen for the risk of lung cancer (SMR 1.18; 95%CI 0.99-3.04). No significantly elevated risk was seen in the non-
chromium
plating subgroup. We concluded that, as the number of disease-specific deaths was small, further follow-up is necessary.
...
PMID:[Mortality of chromium plating workers in Japan--a 16-year follow-up study]. 885 7