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)

Liver biopsies from 60 patients with acute alcoholic hepatitis (AAH) developing against the background of steatosis, chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis were studied histologically, histochemically and electron microscopically. AAH is characterized by necrosis of hepatocytes with deposition of alcoholic hyalin, obesity of the organ, and polymorphonuclear leukocyte infiltration. Hyperplasia of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum, the appearance of megamitochondria, and an increased amount of peroxisomes reflect the participation of MEOS and the catalase system in alcohol metabolism with a progressive decrease in the activity of alcoholdehydrogenase. Acute alcoholic hepatitis is a connecting link between steatosis and cirrhosis of the liver in which the accompanying autoimmune mechanism and microcirculation disorder followed by activation of lipofibroblasts are conducive to the progression of the pathologic process.
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PMID:[Morphological characteristics of acute alcoholic hepatitis]. 7 56

Histochemical and electron microscopic examinations of liver punctates from 57 patients with chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis of the liver were carried out. "Ground Glass" hepatocytes were found to occur with similar frequency both in patients with HB-antigen in the blood serum and in patients with alcoholic involvement of the liver and no antigen in the blood serum. The presence of HB-antigen in the cytoplasm of such hepatocytes can be detected by staining of the sections with orsein, aldehydethionine and aldehydefucsin. The latter stain is more specific. Electron microscopically, the "Ground Glass" hepatocytes are characterized by marked hyperplasia of agranular endoplasmic reticulum in the lumen of which peculiar filaments are found in the presence of HB-antigen.
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PMID:[Morphological characteristics of ground glass hepatocytes in chronic hepatitis and liver cirrhosis]. 7 56

The effects of ethanol on hepatic cellular metabolism and structure depend mainly on the dose and duration of intake. Following the ingestion of a substantial amount of ethanol, its presence alters a number of hepatic functions in part because of the change in the hepatic redox state (NADH/NAD ratio), resulting for instance in reduction of lipid oxidation. Furthermore, chronic ethanol consumption, at least in its early stages, produces adaptive metabolic changes in the endoplasmic reticulum which result not only in increased metabolism of drugs and accelerated lipoprotein production but also in activation of hepatotoxic compounds. Even more extended periods of ethanol intake result in damage to cell organelles in what can be considered a third stage of the alcohol effect namely that of injury. The injury involves primarily mitochondria, possibly as a consequence of effects of acetaldehyde, the first product of ethanol metabolism. Metabolites of ethanol also alter microtubular function. A defect in protein secretion may be the basis for protein retention and "ballooning" of the hepatocyte. Prolongation of ethanol induced injury eventually culminates in hepatic lesions such as alcoholic hepatitis and cirrhosis. Ethanol can be incriminated as a direct etiologic agent of the liver injury, since liver cirrhosis has been reproduced experimentally in baboons fed alcohol, despite an adequate diet.
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PMID:[Pathogenesis of alcoholic liver injury (author's transl)]. 11 23

In spontaneous hepatomas of Swiss mice a great number of eosinophilic globular bodies was observed without cirrhosis. Electron microscopy revealed their protein nature and origin from the rough endoplasmic reticulum cisternae.
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PMID:Study of globular bodies found in hepatomas of Swiss mice. 17 68

The enzyme gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase is widely distributed throughout the body, notably kidney, seminal vesicles, pancreas, liver, spleen and brain. Being one of the enzymes of the gamma-glutamyl cycle, it is involved in aminoacid transport, catalysing a transpeptidation reaction between gamma-glutamyl peptides and most common amino acids. Methods of assay of the enzyme are based on its ability also to act on synthetic amides of glutamic acid; kinetic methods monitoring the release of p-nitroaniline from the substrate L-gamma-glutamyl p-nitroanilide are the most satisfactory. In diseases of the liver, the highest levels occur in association with cirrhosis, alcoholism, hepatic secondaries and cholestasis. As the enzyme is present in the endoplasmic reticulum of the hepatocyte, its activity is increased in situations leading to microsomal enzyme induction. Raised levels can also occur in pancreatitis, diabetes, myocardial infarction, congestive cardiac failure, chronic renal failure, cerebrovascular accidents, cerebral tumours and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Although the lack of specificity must be recognised, the estimation can be useful in the elucidation of some clearly defined problems arising during investigation of patients with suspected hepatic disease, especially where performed as part of a biochemical profile.
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PMID:Role of gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activity in the diagnosis of hepatobiliary disease. 24 76

Two unreleated adult males were found to be suffering from an association of pan-lobular severe emphysema and hepatomegally of unknown origin which led to the discovery of a marked deficit in alpha-1 antitrypsin (A1-AT) in relation to a PiZ phenotype. Liver biopsy revealed cirrhosis with portal fibrosis in one case and in both cases fatty infiltration with the accumulation of a glycoprotein antigenically identical to A1-AT. Electron microscopy showed this protein to be situated within the dilated lumina of the endoplasmic reticulum of the hepatocytes. A1-AT deficiency is usually associated with pulmonary involvement only in the adult and liver involvement only in the child. The association of the two remains rare--hence the interest of the two cases reported.
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PMID:[Pulmonary emphysema and hepatic involvement by alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency in two adults with a PiZ phenotype (author's transl)]. 30 25

The metabolism of amphetamine was studied in three groups of mice, including normal mice (N), mice given chronic doses of phenobarbital via their drinking water (PB), and mice exposed to carbon tetrachloride vapors daily during the course of chronic phenobarbital consumption (PB/CCl4). Renal and hepatic tissue from animals of each group were examined by electron microscopy. Mice in the PB/CCl4 group demonstrated the classical symptoms of carbon tetrachloride-induced hepatic cirrhosis, and structural damage to the kidney. The PB group presented a normal renal pathology, but ultrastructural changes including swollen mitochondria and dilation of the endoplasmic reticulum were evident in the hepatocytes. The N, PB and PB/CCl4 mice excreted 84.5, 61.5 and 72.3 percent respectively of a dose of 14C-amphetamine sulfate in the 0-72 hour urine. Seven major urinary metabolites were detected in the normal group, 4 in PB group, and 3 in the PB/CCl4 group. Unchanged amphetamine, rho-hydroxyamphetamine and benzoic acid were tentatively identified by combined techniques of gas chromatography and thin-layer chromatography with autoradiography.
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PMID:Amphetamine metabolism in mice exposed chronically to phenobarbital and to phenobarbital with carbon tetrachloride. 44 95

Extremely deficient levels of alpha-1-antitrypsin (ALPHA1AT) predispose such deficient individuals to the development of emphysema and cirrhosis. Protease inhibitor (Pi) typing has clarified that the inherited deficiency is codominant. A glycoprotein with antigenic characteristics of alpha1AT is found in the endoplasmic reticulum of the hepatocytes of individuals with PiZ phenotype. No therapy is available except liver transplantation. Although biochemical advances in defining the nature of alpha1AT deficiency are progressing, the pathogenesis of the liver disease remains an enigma.
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PMID:The current status of alpha-1-antityrpsin, a protease inhibitor, in gastrointestinal disease. 76 97

Using a micromethod, hepatic bilirubin UDP-glucuronyl transferase has been assayed in percutaneous needle biopsy samples obtained from patients with infectious hepatitis, postnecrotic cirrhosis, Gilbert's disease, noncirrhotic portal fibrosis (NCPF), granuloma of the liver, and extrahepatic portal vein obstruction. The results were compared with those obtained from 10 control subjects. Patients with cirrhosis and infectious hepatitis revealed normal bilirubin transferase levels, whereas those with Gilbert's disease showed significantly low enzyme levels. Many patients with NCPF, some with extrahepatic portal vein obstruction, and patients with granulomatous involvement of the liver demonstrated significantly low levels. This low hepatitic-enzyme activity was not associated with hyperbilirubinemia. The mechanism of such low values in NCPF and other disorders is not known. It is postulated that low heaptic-enzyme activity in noncirrhotic portal fibrosis is due to sparse smooth endoplasmic reticulum. This study also emphasizes that serum bilirubin may remain normal with very low hepatic-enzyme activity. Although induction of the microsomal enzyme bilirubin transferase was observed following phenobarbitone administration in noncirrhotic portal fibrosis, this was not apparent in patients with cirrhosis, possibly due to maximal enzyme induction having been achieved by endogenous substrate.
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PMID:Estimation of hepatic bilirubin UDP-glucuronyl transferase in patients with noncirrhotic portal fibrosis and liver disease: Significance and limitations. 81 Nov 12

Electron microscopic findings made on microsomal fractions of rat liver after treatment with microsomal antibodies obtained from the blood of patients diagnosed as having chronic aggressive hepatitis and liver cirrhosis and after incubation with peroxidase-labelled antihuman IgG are described and presented in this paper. Interpretation of these findings as the substrate of an antibody reaction directed against membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum of hepatocytes is discussed.
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PMID:The immunoelectron-microscopical demonstration of antibodies against endoplasmic reticulum (microsomes) in chronic aggressive hepatitis and liver cirrhosis. 88 90


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