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 microsomes of rats poisoned with thioacetamide show a significant reduction of cytochrome P-450. Consequently, oxidative reactions of drug metabolism and the estrogen 2-hydroxylase are diminished. Enhancement of microsomal transformation of estradiol to estrone and 16alpha-hydroxyestrone is observed after treatment of rats with thioacetamide, due to diminished metabolism of estradiol by the alternative oxidation at C-2. Estriol formation is reduced by thioacetamide pretreatment. These changes in estrogen breakdown closely correlate with those observed in humans suffering from cirrhosis of the liver. It is concluded that the thioacetamide poisoned rat should be an experimental model suitable for studying estrogen metabolism in liver injury.
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PMID:[The thioacetamide-poisoned rat as an animal experimental model for endocrinological studies of estrogen metabolism in chronic liver injury)]. 121 89

A model has been developed for the administration to rats and baboons of ethanol as part of a nutritionally adequate liquid diet. With this regimen, ethanol intake was much higher than with conventional procedures. All animals gained or maintained their body weight, and liver morphology was normal in the controls. Isocaloric substitution of carbohydrate by ethanol (36% of total calories in rats and 50% in baboons) resulted in the production of fatty liver in all animals, while the baboons also developed alcoholic hepatitis and cirrhosis with increased activities of serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase. Inebriation and manifestation of dependence upon withdrawal of the diet were observed in baboons and quantitated in the rat. Chemical alterations produced by ethanol at the fatty liver stage were characterized by hyperlipemia, striking triglyceride accumulation in the liver and enhanced activities of microsomal drug metabolizing enzymes, including the microsomal ethanol oxidizing system (MEOS). Ultrastructural changes of the mitochondria and the endoplasmic reticulum were already present at the fatty liver stage and persisted throughout the hepatitis and cirrhosis. The lesions were similar to those observed in alcoholics (including the inflammation and the central sclerosis), and differed strikingly from the alterations produced by other models of liver injury. In showing that all aspects of liver injury observed in alcoholics can be reproduced in animals by the feeding of pure ethanol with an adequate diet, this study incriminates ethanol itself as a cause for the hepatic complications. This new experimental model is proposed as a tool for the study of the pathogenesis and treatment of alcoholic liver injury and dependence.
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PMID:Alcoholic liver injury: experimental models in rats and baboons. 123 25

Liver cell functional heterogeneity has been shown to persist in toxic CCl4 cirrhosis in growing rats, but the zonation observed in cirrhotic nodules may be different in other types of cirrhosis. To investigate this possibility, we looked at the zonal activities of two microsomal enzymes, glucose-6-phosphatase and NADPH dehydrogenase, in cirrhotic nodules from growing rats with chronic cholestasis. Zonal activities were measured by quantitative cytochemistry and microdensitometry. Liver cell heterogeneity was demonstrated, and we confirmed that the metabolic zonation is the mirror image of that observed in toxic cirrhosis, with periportal activity at the nodule periphery and perivenular activity at the nodule centers. Glucose-6-phosphatase activity was 2.06 times higher at the peripheries of the nodules than at the centers, whereas NADPH dehydrogenase activity at the nodule periphery was 72% of the nodule center activity. We conclude that a liver cell functional heterogeneity persists in biliary rat cirrhosis, with zonation the reverse of that previously found in toxic CCl4 cirrhosis.
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PMID:Liver metabolic zonation in rat biliary cirrhosis: distribution is reverse of that in toxic cirrhosis. 131 72

A recent case-control study on 577 lichen planus (LP) patients and 1008 controls confirmed that LP patients may significantly associate with a chronic liver disease (CLD) which is independent from drug or alcohol intake and has some connection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. The study, however, failed to define the nature of CLD. This has been investigated through the clinical and laboratory features of 50 patients with LP and impaired liver function tests. Overall, the laboratory signs of cell necrosis prevailed over those of cholestasis and a good relationship with the HBV and HCV infections was found. Ninety percent of patients with LP and CLD had antibodies to one or another of the major viruses involved in infectious hepatitis. No patient had anti-liver kidney microsomal antibodies type 1. Liver biopsies were done in 12 cases and mostly revealed a chronic active hepatitis evolving into cirrhosis. No evident cases of primary biliary cirrhosis were found. It appears that LP associated CLD is post-viral in nature.
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PMID:Clinical and laboratory presentation of lichen planus patients with chronic liver disease. 132 93

Reports of an increase in a serum epoxide hydrolase (sEH), immunochemically related to microsomal EH in humans and rats with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), suggested its use as a serum marker for this disease. We have now measured sEH levels (as either immunochemically determined content or enzyme activity) in a number of human and experimental models of liver disease. sEH was elevated above the normal range in at least 50% of individuals with HCC, including: 3 of 6 northern Californians; 4 of 7 Koreans with hepatitis B-associated HCC; hepatitis B-associated HCC in woodchucks; and male rats receiving chronic treatment with aflatoxin B1 or ciprofibrate. sEH was rarely elevated in other forms of chronic liver disease. Only 2 of 9 Koreans with hepatitis B-associated cirrhosis, 1 of 8 carriers, but none with chronic active hepatitis or infection with no apparent liver disease had elevated sEH. In addition, no elevations were found in woodchucks with noncancerous viral hepatitis. In aflatoxin B1- and M1-treated rats sEH was not elevated in those with only hyperplastic foci or hepatocellular adenomas, and in two rat initiation-promotion protocols sEH was elevated only in those rats which received the entire set of treatments. sEH was also increased during acute hepatotoxicity in rats treated with CCl4 or 1,2-dibromo-3-chloropropane. The mechanism of increase in sEH during hepatocarcinogenesis appears to be different from that of other markers of HCC, for in the Korean patients, there was no correlation between sEH concentrations and those of alpha-fetoprotein or ferritin, nor was there a correlation with alpha-fetoprotein concentrations in the aflatoxin-treated rats. Furthermore, the increase in sEH does not correlate with induction of microsomal EH in the liver of experimental animals. Studies to date indicate that sEH is selective for HCC and severe hepatonecrotic injury, and may be of some use in the diagnosis of HCC, particularly as a complement to other serum markers.
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PMID:Serum epoxide hydrolase (preneoplastic antigen) in human and experimental liver injury. 133 49

The present paper is devoted to overview the basic concepts of ethanol-induced hepatic injury and therapeutic modalities by which alcoholic liver disease can be alleviated. The role of alcohol dehydrogenase of both hepatic and gastric origin as well as the importance of the number one metabolite acetaldehyde are discussed, furthermore the effects of microsomal ethanol oxidizing system are also described. The features of the major clinicopathological consequences of alcohol abuse fatty liver, alcoholic hepatitis are briefly outlined, and the basic pathogenetic mechanisms that lead to cirrhosis--cell necrosis, regeneration and fibroplasia--are shown. The understanding of the pathophysiology of alcohol-induced liver injury may improve the therapy with drugs and nutritional factors, and allow successful prevention through the early recognition of heavy drinkers before their social or medical disintegration. In the management of alcoholic liver diseases, among the true hepatoprotective agents a naturally occurring flavonoid silymarin and an active methyl-donor metabolite S-adenosyl-L-methionine seem to be promising. An antifibrotic treatment with colchicine might also be of importance. Further prospective, well-designed, controlled clinical trials are still warranted to evaluate real efficacy of these drugs. The hepatic consequences of alcohol abuse may be treatable, however, prevention would be the true resolution of the major global health problem of alcoholism.
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PMID:Pathogenesis and management of alcoholic liver injury. 134

The microsomal content and activity of the principal male-specific cytochrome P450 2C11 are reduced in cirrhotic rat liver. In order to define the pathophysiological mechanism for such changes, the present study was undertaken to determine the time course of impaired P450 2C11 expression in relation to the development of cirrhosis during intake of a choline-deficient diet. Fatty infiltration of the liver was evident after 6 weeks of intake but hepatic fibrosis was not present until 10 weeks, when fine fibrotic bands in a perisinusoidal distribution were observed. Fibrotic bands were progressively more prominent at 20 and 25 weeks and cirrhosis was established by 30 weeks of dietary intake. Portal pressure, as measured by saline manometry and indicated by splenomegaly, appeared to increase gradually after 6 weeks and by 25 weeks values were significantly greater than controls. The microsomal content of P450 2C11 and its associated steroid 16 alpha-hydroxylase activity were unchanged at 6 weeks but were decreased to around 30% of control from 10 weeks of intake of the choline-deficient diet to the end of the experimental period (30 weeks). Serum bile acids were approximately 2-fold greater in choline-deficient rats from 10 weeks. Similarly, serum estradiol concentrations were elevated (to 2.5-fold of control) in male rats after 10 weeks intake of the choline-deficient diet; this increase was sustained in 30-week cirrhotic rats. On the other hand, there was no evidence of altered serum testosterone until 30 weeks of dietary deficiency.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Impaired expression of microsomal cytochrome P450 2C11 in choline-deficient rat liver during the development of cirrhosis. 156 Mar 81

We determined to what extent a change in the lipid composition of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum contributes to altered microsomal function in cirrhosis. Rats were rendered cirrhotic either by chronic exposure to phenobarbital/CCl4 (MCIR) or by bile duct ligation (BCIR). Microsomal function was tested in vivo by the aminopyrine breath test (ABT), then microsomes were prepared and their phospholipid and cholesterol composition analysed. ABT was reduced by 35 and 41% in BCIR and MCIR, respectively. Cholesterol in microsomes was increased in both cirrhotic groups. (BCIR + 154%, MCIR + 75%) while total phospholipid content was not affected. As shown in other membrane systems, the phospholipid/cholesterol (PL/XOL) ratio showed an excellent inverse correlation with fluorescence anisotropy determined by diphenylhexatriene fluorescence polarization (r = -0.896). The PL/XOL ratio was significantly correlated with aminopyrine N-demethylation in vivo (r = 0.649). Alterations in the composition of phospholipid groups (an increase in sphingomyelin in both cirrhotic groups, and a decrease in phosphatidylcholine and an increase in phosphatidylethanolamine in BCIR) also contributed to increased membrane rigidity. We conclude that altered membrane fluidity contributes to diminished microsomal function but that other factors must also be involved since the PL/XOL ratio explained only 42% of the variance in aminopyrine N-demethylation.
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PMID:Abnormal lipid composition of microsomes from cirrhotic rat liver--does it contribute to decreased microsomal function? 160 Nov 13

Despite the epidemiological evidence of a correlation between ethanol abuse and hepatocellular carcinoma, some of the results of experimental and clinical studies remain controversial. Apart from inducing cirrhosis, which may be viewed as a precancerous liver lesion, ethanol may act as a cocarcinogen. Most investigations on this topic have focused on two aspects: ethanol's capacity to induce the cytochrome P-450-dependent microsomal biotransformation system and its interference with at least one DNA repair mechanism. Ethanol exposure enhances the capacity of mixed function oxidases to activate many chemical carcinogens, such as dimethylnitrosamine (DMN). On the other hand, ethanol exposure fails to influence DMN-induced liver carcinogenesis. The capacity of alcohol to inhibit DMN-demethylase activity has not been clearly demonstrated in experiments carried out with human tissue. In conclusion, both the effects of ethanol and their underlying mechanisms as regards liver carcinogenesis are open to debate. The link between ethanol abuse and hepatocellular carcinoma appears to be mediated mainly by its capacity to induce cirrhosis.
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PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma, alcohol, and cirrhosis: facts and hypotheses. 165 Jun 91

A biologic role of ethyl alcohol is analysed. The function of the liver in alcohol metabolism (90% of the total intake) in three oxidizing systems with the use of alcohol dehydrogenase, microsomal ethanol oxidizing system, and H2O2 catalase is described. Epidemiological data are given, clinical course of the alcohol-produced lesions to the liver starting from fatty degeneration, through the acute and chronic hepatitis, alcohol-produced cirrhosis up to the primary cancer of the liver are also presented in the light of authors experience.
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PMID:[Alcohol and the liver]. 166 43


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