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)

Serum ferritin concentrations were found to be raised, often considerably, in 58 of 76 black patients with primary liver cancer (PLC). No correlation could be demonstrated between the serum ferritin concentration and several other measurements, including the following: hepatic iron stores measured chemically, the size of the tumour, serum transaminase values, and the presence or absence of cirrhosis in the non-tumorous liver. There was, however, a negative correlation between serum ferritin and alpha-foetoprotein concentrations. Ferritin was purified from PLC tissue obtained from three patients at necropsy and the distribution of isoferritins was determined by isoelectric focusing. Acidic isoferritins similar to those previously found in PLC tissue were obtained. Their acidic nature was confirmed chromatographically using DEAE cellulose. Because the serum ferritin in patients with PLC probably consists of a mixture of normal and acidic isoferritins, it is likely that the serum assay used in the present study underestimated the actual concentrations present. With the development of an assay which utlises a specific antibody against acidic PLC isoferritins, serum ferritin may prove to be a second marker for PLC.
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PMID:Serum and tumour ferritins in primary liver cancer. 7 42

Liver cell dysplasia (LCD) was investigated for hepatitis B virus (HBV) markers, alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) and ferritin by serologic and immunohistochemical methods in 101 patients with cirrhosis. LCD was found in 30 cases (29.7%), with the highest incidence in cases of posthepatitic cirrhosis (67%). In the group of dysplastic cirrhosis (DC) 46.6% of the patients had active HBV infection (hepatitis B surface antigen [HBsAg] serum positivity) compared with 7% of the patients with nondysplastic cirrhosis (NDC) (P less than 0.01). The mean serum AFP concentration was significantly raised in the DC group compared with that in the NDC group (P less than 0.05). In seven patients with LCD at the initial biopsy, the histologic followup showed the persistence of LCD in all cases, and the development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in three cases. In serologic HBsAg-positive cases, dysplastic cells, at variance with the surrounding liver parenchyma, were almost always negative for tissue HBsAg, and always negative for tissue hepatitis B core antigens (HBcAg). AFP was never detected in either normal or dysplastic cells. Ferritin was found in all cases, but dysplastic foci displayed a lesser amount of this protein. These serologic and immunohistochemical data strongly suggest a preneoplastic significance of LCD. The importance of monitoring cirrhotic patients with LCD and particularly those with HBV infection and/or increased AFP levels with more aggressive follow-up is also stressed.
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PMID:Liver cell dysplasia in cirrhosis. A serologic and immunohistochemical study. 241 42

Surgically resected specimens, consisting of tumor and adjacent non-neoplastic liver tissue, were obtained from 40 patients with primary liver cancer at Zhong Shan Hospital, Shanghai Medical University, the People's Republic of China, between March 1983 and July 1984. All were hepatocellular carcinomas (HCC), one being admixed with cholangiocarcinoma. The relationship of hepatitis B virus (HBV) markers with iron and ferritin was evaluated in liver tissues from patients with primary liver cancers. The serum HBsAg (Hepatitis B surface antigen) positive rate was 80.0% (32/40). Cirrhosis was observed in 97.5% (39/40). HBsAg was identified in 82.5% (33/40) of uninvolved liver, and 35.0% (14/40) of HCC tissues (P less than 0.001). HBcAg (hepatitis B core antigen) was detected in 25.0% (10/40) of liver, and 7.5% (3/40) of HCC tissues (P less than 0.05). Stainable iron was found in 65.0% (26/40) of unaffected livers, and 10.0% (4/40) of HCC tissues (P less than 0.001). Ferritin was demonstrated in 75% (30/40) of non-neoplastic liver, and 40% (16/40) of HCC tissues (P less than 0.001). Twenty-two of 33 HCC patients (66.7%) with HBsAg positive cells in their livers also showed stainable iron. Of 16 patients positive for ferritin in HCC cells, iron was found in only two. Iron was found in nine of ten patients with HBcAg in non-neoplastic hepatocytes (P = 0.056); a finding compatible with the hypothesis that iron accumulates in cells replicating HBV. The other results indicate that: immunohistologic ferritin in HCC is not due to increased stainable iron; tumor cells may produce ferritin; polyclonal antibodies to human liver ferritin react better with non-neoplastic hepatocytes than with HCC cells; the high prevalence of HBsAg and cirrhosis in HCC suggests that HBV plays a major etiologic role in hepatocarcinogenesis in China; and one case of HCC is attributed to Schistosoma japonicum infestation via cirrhosis.
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PMID:Iron, ferritin, hepatitis B surface and core antigens in the livers of Chinese patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. 302 1

In this paper the clinical usefulness of CEA and ferritin in the diagnosis of pancreatic cancer was pointed out. CEA was found to be increased in 51% of patients with pancreatic cancer; it was also abnormal in 22% of chronic pancreatitis and 31% of extra-pancreatic diseases. In patients with metastatic pancreatic cancer CEA was found to be more elevated than in those with localized tumor. CEA correlated with the age of the subjects in all material; in liver cirrhosis with IgG and in extra-pancreatic gastro-intestinal malignancies with alkaline-phosphatase. Ferritin was found to be increased in 73% of pancreatic cancer patients; it was also abnormal in 40% of chronic pancreatitis and in 38% of extra-pancreatic diseases. Patients with chronic pancreatitis studied during a relapsing phase all had elevated serum ferritin. We can conclude that neither CEA nor ferritin are useful indices of pancreatic malignancy, due to the lack of sensitivity or specificity. Both are influenced by several factors: CEA mainly by age and liver dysfunction, ferritin by the presence of an acute inflammation with cell necrosis.
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PMID:Limits of CEA and ferritin in the diagnosis of pancreatic cancer. 320 64

We studied 29 patients with thalassaemia major who had received intensive chelation for between 6.2 and 8.8 years. All patients had normal oral glucose tolerance tests before subcutaneous chelation therapy was introduced and 22 of 29 patients had normal liver function tests. At the end of the period of study 12 patients still had normal oral glucose tolerance (7 with normal liver function tests and 5 with chronic active hepatitis). On the other hand, 11 patients had developed impaired glucose tolerance tests (3 patients had normal liver function tests, 5 with chronic active hepatitis and 3 with cirrhosis), and 6 patients had developed frank diabetes mellitus (one with chronic active hepatitis and 5 with cirrhosis). Patients with chronic active hepatitis showed 91% positivity for one or more hepatitis B markers whilst all patients with cirrhosis were positive. Ferritin levels before subcutaneous chelation in patients with normal oral glucose tolerance tests were lower than in those patients with abnormal oral glucose tolerance or diabetes (P less than 0.05) but none had normal serum ferritin levels. In addition, a positive correlation was found between glucose area under the curve after chelation therapy and serum ferritin levels (r = 0.47, P less than 0.01). It is apparent that long term chelation therapy does not prevent the development of abnormal oral glucose tolerance in chronically transfused patients. More intensive chelation therapy is needed to prevent tissue damage. Chronic liver disease may have an important role to play in the deterioration of glucose tolerance.
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PMID:The development of diabetes mellitus and chronic liver disease in long term chelated beta thalassaemic patients. 354 13

Serum ferritin, an index of iron stores, was studied in 60 patients with porphyria cutanea tarda (PCT), in 21 patients who had other liver diseases without siderosis (cirrhosis [LC] and chronic active hepatitis [CAH]), and in 32 patients with associated liver siderosis (alcoholic LC, LC and CAH in minor thalassemia). Ferritin levels were higher in patients with porphyria than in healthy controls and patients without liver siderosis (P less than 0.001), whereas no statistical difference was observed between patients with porphyria and those with liver siderosis. Because iron removal is considered the treatment of choice for PCT, some patients with PCT underwent phlebotomy and others received chelating therapy with subcutaneous infusion of deferoxamine. Follow-up of the patients showed a correlation between serum ferritin level and urinary porphyrin excretion; when the clinical and biochemical syndrome became normal, serum iron and ferritin had fallen to normal values (t test pair data analysis before and after: P less than 0.001 in each group). No appreciable difference was found between controls and patients with PCT whose conditions had been normalized, irrespective of the chronic liver damage always present in PCT. Our results suggest that serum ferritin increase in PCT is related more to liver iron overload than to liver damage, and ferritin follow-up is recommended to indicate the exhaustion of hepatic iron stores during iron depletion therapy, as well as to detect an early replenishment after remission.
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PMID:Serum ferritin in the assessment of liver iron overload and iron removal therapy in porphyria cutanea tarda. 394 Dec 93

Serum ferritin concentrations are elevated in 35% to 100% of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). With an immunoperoxidase technique, ferritin was demonstrated in tumor tissue from 32 of 74 (43%) black southern African patients, and from 12 of 19 (63%) American patients with HCC (P greater than 0.1). Ferritin was present in nonneoplastic liver in 82% of African and 100% of American patients (P greater than 0.1). Moderate to large amounts of stainable hepatic storage iron (hemosiderin) were present in 76% of African and 67% of American patients (P greater than 0.1). Fifty-two (70%) African patients had macronodular cirrhosis. In the literature, 80% to 90% of American patients with HCC have cirrhosis. High serum ferritin levels in patients with HCC may be due to ferritin production by the tumor, or related to the associated iron overload and/or cirrhosis.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical ferritin in hepatocellular carcinoma. 632 63

Some parameters of iron metabolism in 26 patients with porphyria cutanea tarda (PCT) which is often associated with mild iron overload and hepatic siderosis, are studied. Serum iron, percent transferrin saturation and ferritin were pathologically increased. Statistical comparisons were performed between PCT patients and healthy controls, liver disease patients (cirrhosis, chronic active hepatitis) and patients with associated liver siderosis (alcoholic cirrhosis, cirrhosis and chronic active hepatitis in thalassemia). Ferritin levels are higher in patients with porphyria than in healthy controls (p less than 0,001) and in patients without liver siderosis (p less than 0,001). No statistical difference is observed between patients with porphyria and patients with siderosis. A significant decrease in ferritin levels is registered after venesection therapy. The conclusion is drawn that serum ferritin increase in PCT is related to hepatic iron store amounts rather than hepatic necrosis. It is assumed that ferritin follow-up during phlebotomy therapy and also during remission is useful to indicate the exhaustion or an early replenishment of hepatic iron stores.
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PMID:[Determination of serum ferritin in porphyria cutanea tarda. A reliable sign of hepatic siderosis]. 670 23

Blood serum ferritin levels were measured by indirect hemagglutination test in patients with diseases of the liver, bile duct, and gastrointestinal tract. Ferritin levels were found increased in the majority of patients, though to a different measure. Its concentrations were the highest in patients with virus hepatitis A, cirrhosis of the liver, and reactive nonspecific hepatitis, normalizing in the course of treatment, These data prompt the use of ferritin measurements in the diagnosis, monitoring the course of treatment, and prediction of the outcomes of acute and chronic diseases of the liver, bile duct, and gastrointestinal tract.
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PMID:[The assessment of the ferritin level in gastroenterological diseases]. 762 Jul 92

Better awareness of the clinical presentation of idiopathic haemochromatosis is a key element for early diagnosis and treatment. We retrospectively analysed the medical records of 105 patients (80 males, 25 females) diagnosed with idiopathic haemochromatosis over the past two decades in the two academic hospitals of Louvain University. Age at diagnosis was 50 +/- 12 years (mean +/- SD). Median ferritin levels were 1,803 micrograms/L-1. Cirrhosis was found at histology in 51%. Ferritin levels were significantly higher in cirrhotic than non-cirrhotic subjects (P < 0.05). Impaired glucose tolerance and diabetes were found at admission in 7 and 40% of all patients. Diabetes was more frequent when cirrhosis was present (53 vs. 25% in cirrhosis-negative patients, P < 0.05). Accordingly, cirrhosis was also more frequent in diabetic than non-diabetic patients (70 vs. 40%, P < 0.05). Diabetic subjects with cirrhosis frequently presented with symptomatic hyperglycaemia at diagnosis, had higher HbA1c levels, and were more insulin-requiring than their non-cirrhotic diabetic counterparts (P < 0.05). There was also a trend towards more frequent chronic complications of diabetes in the former group. Diabetic patients with cirrhosis had slightly higher insulin levels but lower C-peptide values (P < 0.05) than diabetic subjects without cirrhosis. Chronic phlebotomy did not affect subsequent insulin requirements. Thus, diabetes is still a frequent complication of haemochromatosis in Belgium, and its presence and severity are markedly associated with that of cirrhosis at diagnosis of idiopathic haemochromatosis.
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PMID:Clinical aspects of diabetes secondary to idiopathic haemochromatosis in French-speaking Belgium. 934 44


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