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)

This study was conducted on 40 Egyptian children (21 males and 19 females) with various chronic liver diseases, selected from the out-patient Pediatric Hepatology Clinic of Ain Shams University Hospital. Their ages ranged from 1.5 to 13 years with a mean of 5.98 +/- 3.72 years. Twenty healthy children of comparable age and sex to the patients were chosen as controls. All children were subjected to detailed history taking, thorough clinical examination and laboratory investigations including full blood picture, urine and stool examination, liver function tests, prothrombin time and hepatitis B surface antigen in addition to sigmoidoscopy with rectal snip examination, abdominal ultrasonography and liver biopsy. Moreover, immunological investigations were done, that included estimation of the serum complement levels of C3 and C4 by using single radial immunodiffusion method, assessment of the phagocytic and intracellular killing activity of polymorphonuclear leucocytes by living Candida albicans uptake and detection of non organ specific autoantibodies in the serum by indirect immunofluorescence technique. This study showed that the serum level of C3 was increased and C4 was decreased significantly in patients with chronic liver disease, especially in chronic active hepatitis. Regarding phagocytosis, there was significant impairment of the neutrophil phagocytic function but not the intracellular lytic activity of candida albicans. This reduced phagocytic function was more pronounced in patients having chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis than in bilharzial and other cases. Serum autoantibodies; antinuclear and antimitochondrial antibodies were absent in the sera of both patients and controls, while antismooth muscle antibodies were found in the sera of 47.5% of patients with chronic liver diseases and non of the control sera. The highest incidence of these antibodies was present in HBs Ag negative patients with chronic active hepatitis (80%). We concluded that patients with chronic liver diseases have disturbed functions of both complement and phagocytic systems that may lead to increased susceptibility to recurrent infections. So, routine assessment of immunological status with early diagnosis and treatment of infections are important in the proper management of these patients. In addition, detection of serum auto-antibodies in these patients is helpful in the early diagnosis of auto-immune liver diseases.
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PMID:Some immunological aspects of chronic liver diseases in Egyptian children. 187 66

To analyze relating factors to early repairment of the surgical margin of the remnant liver we measured plasma fibronectin (FN), coagulation factor XIII (XIII), polymorphonuclear leukocyte elastase (PMNE), platelet counts (Plt), prothrombin time (PT%) before and at the first, third, 7th and 14th days after liver resection in 25 patients. Changes in these factors (1) were compared with their clinical status, such as liver cirrhosis, high fever, abscess formation, duration of drainage and use of microwave tissue coagulator (MTC) (2). The multivariate analysis about the factors influencing the duration of hospital stay (3) were carried out. (1) In the all cases FN, XIII (14th), PT%, Plt decreased and PMNE increased significantly versus pre-operative data. There were significant correlations between FN and XIII, FN and PMNE. (2) In the cirrhotic group FN, XIII, PT% and Plt were significantly lower than those of non cirrhotic group. In the abscess formation group PT% was significantly lower than the no abscess formation group. In the MTC group XIII, PT% and Plt were significantly lower than those of the no-MTC group. In conclusion, FN, XIII, Plt and PT% in the cirrhotic, high fever, abscess formation or longer drainage group were in lower levels compared with the each control group. (3) By the multivariate analyses, abscess formation, high fever and liver cirrhosis were the most influencing factors for the duration of hospital stay.
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PMID:[Analysis of factors relating to early repairment of the surgical margin following liver resection--factors relating to duration of hospital stay]. 187 92

In a randomized clinical trial of the effect of prednisone versus placebo on survival in patients with liver cirrhosis, follow-up visits were scheduled after 3, 6 and 12 months of treatment and thereafter once a year. At each follow-up the prothrombin index, a measure of liver function, was recorded and scored as either low or normal. The interaction between treatment and prothrombin index was analysed using a three-state illness-death model with recovery. The continuous-time Markov process model with constant or piecewise constant intensities suggested by Kay allows inference to proceed even though the status of the disease indicator, here the prothrombin index, is only known at the time of each visit and not between visits. We compare the analysis with the theoretically incorrect, but practically rather common approximation, where the status of the disease indicator is assumed to remain constant from one visit until just before the next. Under this approximation both standard parametric methods and non-parametric approaches developed by Aalen and Johansen are available.
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PMID:Assessing the influence of reversible disease indicators on survival. 187 94

Seventy-eight patients with cirrhosis were prospectively followed for up to 20 months, on the average. At entry into the study, galactose elimination capacity, aminopyrine breath test, and ICG clearance were measured. At the end of the study, 27 patients had died. Univariate analysis using the Kaplan-Meier method showed that both quantitative liver function tests (galactose elimination capacity: P less than 0.025; aminopyrine breath test: P less than 0.001; ICG clearance: P less than 0.005) and common clinical and biochemical data (encephalopathy: P less than 0.001; ascites: P less than 0.001; serum bilirubin: P less than 0.005; serum albumin: P less than 0.001; prothrombin index: P less than 0.05) were significant predictors of survival. To investigate whether quantitative liver function tests could contribute to a better definition of the prognosis, once Pugh score had already been taken into account, a multiple regression analysis according to the Cox model was performed. Pugh score and galactose elimination capacity resulted in the only independent prognostic covariates. From them a prognostic index was calculated, and the model was validated in an additional sample of 70 patients investigated according to the same protocol. The contribution GEC gave to the assessment of overall prognosis over that obtained using the Pugh score was slight, as estimated by the statistical parameters of the Cox's model, but was significant as assessed by a ROC curve analysis (P = 0.05). These data show that all quantitative liver function tests were predictors of survival in cirrhosis, and that the galactose elimination capacity added some new prognostic information to those already available using the Child-Turcotte-Pugh classification.
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PMID:Prognostic value of galactose elimination capacity, aminopyrine breath test, and ICG clearance in patients with cirrhosis. Comparison with the Pugh score. 189 4

During the period 1950-1985, a total of 179 cases of clinically overt hereditary haemochromatosis (HH) were registered in Denmark, 140 males and 39 females. Median age at diagnosis was 55 years (range 29-81). Diagnostic approaches, symptoms and physical signs at discovery are described. All patients had grade 3-4 liver haemosiderin iron, and cirrhosis was present in 84%. Serum (S-) transaminase was elevated in 92%, S-alkaline phosphatase in 47% and S-bilirubin in 23%, while plasma prothrombin time was below normal in 34%. Females had higher alkaline phosphatase than males (p less than 0.05). Bone marrow haemosiderin iron (n = 81) showed no relation to iron status indicators and was unsuitable as a diagnostic tool. Skin biopsy (n = 56) was positive for haemosiderin iron in 67% and for melanin in 57%, but was of limited value in the assessment of HH. Arthropathy was registered in 44%; arthralgias and clinical joint abnormalities occurred more frequently in females than in males (p less than 0.05). Latent diabetes mellitus was found in 34% and overt diabetes in 55%, being more frequent in males than in females (p less than 0.05). Other endocrine abnormalities were seen in 66%. Cardiac failure was observed in 9% and abnormal ECG in 35%. Males had higher haemoglobin (p less than 0.0001) and S-iron (p less than 0.01) than females, while S-transferrin, transferrin saturation, S-ferritin and mobilizable iron stores showed no significant sex differences. Median transferrin saturation was 87% (range 52-100); values greater than 62% were observed in 96% of the patients. Median S-ferritin was 3,400 micrograms/l (800-12,700) and median iron stores 14.8 g (4.5-36.4).
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PMID:Hereditary haemochromatosis in Denmark 1950-1985. Clinical, biochemical and histological features in 179 patients and 13 preclinical cases. 191 39

In an attempt to identify variables predicting prognosis, 100 consecutive patients with compensated cirrhosis of the liver were followed for a mean of 4.9 (SD 0.7) yr. Fifty-one patients belonged to Child-Pugh class A, 49 to class B. At entry, five laboratory parameters were considered, together with sex, the grade of esophageal varices, and seven variables measured by ultrasonography (liver and spleen volume and the calibers of the splanchnic vessels). In a subgroup of 56 patients, the galactose elimination capacity also was determined. Forty-six patients were alive at the end of follow-up. Survival was analyzed according to Cox's model. Six parameters were able to predict survival (albumin, bilirubin, liver volume, prothrombin activity, cholesterol, varices). However, step-wise Cox regression analysis identified only four variables that independently correlated with survival: albumin, bilirubin, cholesterol, and liver volume. Galactose elimination failed to add any significance to routine liver function tests. This prospective study confirms the ability of routine liver function tests in predicting survival in compensated cirrhosis. The measurement of liver volume, easily obtained by ultrasonography, is also significant for prognosis, and may be introduced into clinical practice.
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PMID:Prognostic indicators in compensated cirrhosis. 192 47

Colchicine may have benefit in primary biliary cirrhosis and alcoholic liver disease. It is currently used in patients with impaired liver function, yet little is known about its elimination in such patients. Colchicine clearance in the rat is significantly impaired in various models of liver disease. To study this in human beings, colchicine pharmacokinetics were compared in normal subjects and patients with alcoholic cirrhosis. Colchicine clearance was impaired in the cirrhotic patients. Normal subjects had a mean clearance of 10.65 +/- 1.82 ml/min.kg, whereas cirrhotic patients had a mean clearance of 4.22 +/- 0.45 ml/min.kg (p less than 0.01). The half-life was 57.4 +/- 14.2 min in control subjects vs. 114.4 +/- 19.7 min in cirrhotic patients (p = 0.054). Volume of distribution was not different in the two groups (0.718 +/- 0.1 L/kg in control subjects; 0.716 +/- 0.158 L/kg in cirrhotic patients, p greater than 0.99). No correlation was seen between colchicine clearance and bilirubin, albumin, prothrombin time or Child-Pugh classification, but this may be the result of the small number of patients studied. Based on the values measured, it is estimated that colchicine steady state would change from an average 1.12 ng/ml in normal individuals to 2.82 ng/ml in the cirrhotic patients if 0.6 mg were taken every 12 hr. It is unknown whether this change would be clinically significant. These data show that cirrhosis impairs colchicine clearance and demonstrates that the liver is a major route of colchicine elimination.
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PMID:Colchicine clearance is impaired in alcoholic cirrhosis. 195 47

The aim of this prospective study was to examine the usefulness of flow-dependent dynamic liver function tests and conventional methods of evaluating liver function as predictors of pretransplant survival in patients with advanced cirrhosis. Patients who underwent orthotopic liver transplantation within the follow-up period of 365 days were excluded. One hundred one patients with histologically confirmed cirrhosis were studied. Fifty-eight patients had post-hepatitic cirrhosis, 13 had cryptogenic cirrhosis and 30 had biliary cirrhosis. During follow-up, 28 patients died of their liver diseases. At entry, we recorded indocyanine green half-life, monoethylglycinexylidide formation from lidocaine, bilirubin and albumin serum concentrations, activities of cholinesterase and alkaline phosphatase, prothrombin time, clinical complications of ascites and encephalopathy and the Pugh score. These variables were subjected as covariates to a stepwise survival analysis by use of the Cox proportional-hazards model. At the final step, Pugh score, monoethylglycinexylidide formation and indocyanine green half-life were found to be the only independent variables significantly related to 1-yr survival. The parallel combination of Pugh score and monoethylglycinexylidide test yielded the highest prognostic sensitivity (82%). The series approach combining either the Pugh score and indocyanine green test or the monoethylglycinexylidide and indocyanine green tests was associated with the highest specificity (96%/97%) and high predictive values of a positive result (81%/82%). These findings suggest that appropriate combinations of the studied flow-dependent dynamic liver function tests and the Pugh score could be useful in improving transplant candidate selection and the timing of transplantation.
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PMID:Predictors of one-year pretransplant survival in patients with cirrhosis. 195 50

Two hundred eighty-one alcoholic patients were prospectively evaluated by clinical, biochemical, and histologic parameters during a 4-yr period to assess their prognosis. They were stratified into four categories of injury: 1) fatty liver (26 patients), 2) acute alcoholic hepatitis (106), 3) cirrhosis (39), and 4) cirrhosis with superimposed alcoholic hepatitis (111). The rate of survival and variables correlating with survival varied according to the group. At 48 months, 70% of the patients with fatty liver were alive, 58% in the alcoholic hepatitis group, 49% in cirrhosis, and 35% in alcoholic hepatitis superimposed upon cirrhosis. Within group one, deaths were due to causes unrelated to liver disease. In the alcoholic hepatitis group, factors significantly correlating with survival were ascites, alanine amino-transferase levels, grams of alcohol consumed, continuation of alcohol intake, and clinical severity of disease. Survival in patients of group three correlated significantly with prothrombin time and histologic severity score. Patients with combined cirrhosis and alcoholic hepatitis exhibited the worst prognosis, with the most significant predictors of survival being age, grams of alcohol consumed, the ratio of serum aminotransferases (AST:ALT) and the histologic and clinical severity of the disease. Although a different pattern of correlates was observed for each pathologic level of injury, knowledge of the various correlates aids in prognostic assessment.
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PMID:Prognostic factors in alcoholic liver disease. VA Cooperative Study Group. 199 35

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.
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PMID:Natural killer cell activity in patients with liver cirrhosis relative to severity of liver damage. 199 65


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