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)

The clinical usefulness of measuring serum bile acid concentrations as a diagnostic test for hepatobiliary disease was examined in 80 cats that were suspected of having hepatic disease. Serum values of total bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase (ALP), alanine transaminase (ALT), and aspartate transaminase (AST) also were measured. Fasting serum bile acid values were determined by use of solid-phase radioimmunoassay for total conjugated bile acids or by a direct enzymatic spectrophotometric method. A definitive diagnosis was established by histologic examination of the liver, and on the basis of these findings, cats were assigned to groups (1 to 8, respectively) including: extrahepatic bile duct obstruction, hepatic lipidosis, cirrhosis, intrahepatic cholestasis (cholangiohepatitis, cholangitis), neoplasia, hepatic necrosis, portosystemic vascular anomalies, and miscellaneous. Cats in group 8 had no morphologic evidence of hepatobiliary disease or had hepatic lesions that were mild. Test efficacy of fasting serum bile acids, total bilirubin, ALP, ALT, and AST were expressed by use of 4 indices: sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value. The diagnostic efficacy of fasting serum bile acids was examined alone and in combinations with the other tests. There was wide overlapping of values of fasting serum bile acids, total bilirubin, ALP, ALT, and AST among cats in groups 1 to 7. The specificity of fasting serum bile acids for the diagnosis of hepatic disease exceeded 90% at values greater than or equal to 5 mumol/L and reached 100% at greater than or equal to 15 mumol/L.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Bile acid concentrations in the diagnosis of hepatobiliary disease in the cat. 377 58

To assess the spectrum of hepatic abnormalities in acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), we reviewed clinical, biochemical, and pathological material in 32 patients with AIDS. Eight-four percent of AIDS cases had a history of intravenous drug abuse. Ninety percent of AIDS patients has some liver biochemical abnormality at the first presentation of illness. During the course of AIDS, significant (p less than 0.05, paired Student's t test) rises in alkaline phosphatase and bilirubin occurred, without rises in aminotransferases. Mean abnormalities were mild, reflecting approximately 2-fold increases over baseline. Liver failure was not believed to contribute to the death of any AIDS patient. Pathological findings in AIDS included specific infectious diagnosis in 26%, granulomas in 16%, hemosiderosis in 26%, nonspecific abnormalities in 39%, cirrhosis in 23%, and chronic active hepatitis in 3%. AIDS cases were also compared to 10 selected age, sex, and epidemiologically similar non-AIDS patients. Although granulomas or infections were not seen in our comparison group, only the incidence of chronic active hepatitis was significantly different between the groups. If only those with intravenous drug abuse were studied, then none of 24 AIDS patients versus four of eight non-AIDS cases (p less than 0.005) had chronic active hepatitis. AIDS patients with specific hepatic infections tended to have a higher alkaline phosphatase and aspartate aminotransferase (p less than 0.05) than noninfected cases. However, substantial overlap existed, and no difference in hepatomegaly was noted. Ninety percent of AIDS patients were ingesting at least one potentially hepatotoxic drug. We conclude that AIDS patients have a high incidence of underlying hepatic abnormalities. However, clinical and biochemical abnormalities are similar in our selected liver biopsy patients with intravenous drug abuse with or without AIDS. As expected, AIDS patients have a higher incidence of hepatic granulomas and infections, but these patients were not clearly distinguishable from other AIDS cases. Histological examination showed a wide array of changes by light microscopy, but no specific lesion of AIDS was noted. The low incidence of chronic active hepatitis in this AIDS population may imply that the altered T lymphocyte function in AIDS could influence the course of liver disease in these patients.
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PMID:The liver in acquired immune deficiency syndrome: emphasis on patients with intravenous drug abuse. 382 29

Ninety-six liver cirrhosis patients with bleeding esophageal varices receiving long-term sclerotherapy with the flexible endoscope were studied prospectively to analyze mortality and rebleeding risk factors. The difference in the 1-year survival rates of Child's groups A (100%) and B (82%) versus Child's C patients (38%) was highly significant (p less than 0.001). Multivariate analysis revealed that, as single factors, serum bilirubin, grade of ascites, and prothrombin time and, as a combination, the four variables bilirubin, ascites, aspartate aminotransferase, and age distinguished best between survivors and non-survivors during the first 6 months after inclusion in the study. For the separation of rebleeders and non-rebleeders during the first 2 months, prothrombin time and grade of ascites gave the best distinction. Thus, cirrhotics with variceal hemorrhage, ascites, jaundice, and a prolonged prothrombin time remain a high-risk group also with long-term sclerotherapy.
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PMID:Long-term sclerotherapy of bleeding esophageal varices in patients with liver cirrhosis. An evaluation of mortality and rebleeding risk factors. 387 6

We have followed up 69 patients who developed non-A, non-B posttransfusion hepatitis in 1972-1978. Chronic hepatitis, defined by biochemical criteria, was observed in 46 patients (67%), the majority of whom subsequently failed to resolve the abnormalities. Chronic hepatitis was a sequela of non-A, non-B posttransfusion hepatitis less often after the blood bank changed to a policy of all volunteer donors. (However, this association may be explained by other coexistent factors.) The alanine aminotransferase level was more likely to be abnormal than the aspartate aminotransferase level during the chronic phase of non-A, non-B posttransfusion hepatitis. By actuarial means it was calculated that the probability of developing normal enzymes after 6-10 yr was 0.47. However, in spite of this high incidence of biochemical disease, virtually all of the patients have remained asymptomatic. Histologic evidence of cirrhosis has been obtained in 4 of these patients, but in only 2 patients at most has clinical evidence of hepatic failure supervened.
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PMID:Non-A, non-B posttransfusion hepatitis--a decade later. 392 Jan 12

The EEG, grades of hepatic encephalopathy, and biochemical indices of 16 beagles with portacaval anastomosis were recorded throughout their lives and correlations between these parameters were investigated. The degree of deterioration of some biochemical indices, such as the ammonia concentration, glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase and alkaline phosphatase activities in the plasma, and percentage loss of body weight showed a progressive increase parallel to the severity of the hepatic encephalopathy (HE) grade (grading scale O-IV), but other biochemical indices such as the concentrations of aromatic or branched-chain amino acids, the molar ratio of branched-chain to aromatic amino acids, or the total protein concentration in the plasma did not show such relationship. The SW ratio, an index of the incidence of slow-waves in the EEG, was calculated from frequency distribution histograms which were obtained by frequency analyses of EEG recordings. A slight but significant correlation was found between the SW ratio and the plasma ammonia concentration. In addition, the SW ratio consistently increased with increase in the HE grade, although the SW ratio in HE grade IV was below the normal range for beagles. These results show that only the ammonia concentration in the plasma correlates with deterioration of the HE grade and of the SW ratio, suggesting that changes in ammonia concentration in the plasma should be of diagnostic value in assessing changes in mental state and the EEG in patients with liver cirrhosis. The importance of ammonia in pathogenesis of HE is stressed.
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PMID:Correlation between electroencephalogram, hepatic encephalopathy grade, and biochemical indices in beagles with portacaval anastomosis. 400 21

To further assess the molar ratio of branched-chain to aromatic amino acids as a measure of disease activity, we correlated results of this test with histologic features of inflammation, standard biochemical tests, and prognosis in 68 patients with severe chronic active hepatitis. An abnormal molar ratio (less than 3.0) reflected histologic findings of chronic active hepatitis in 26 of 35 instances. A normal molar ratio (greater than or equal to 3.0), however, was associated with histologic features of chronic active hepatitis in nine of 14 instances. Molar ratio abnormalities occurred more frequently in patients with cirrhosis than without cirrhosis (95% vs 45%, P less than 0.01). Only one of 20 patients with cirrhosis had a normal ratio, and none of 12 followed serially during therapy improved the ratio to normal. No correlation was seen between the molar ratio and severity of inflammation or serum levels of aspartate aminotransferase, albumin, bilirubin, and gamma globulin. When corticosteroids were discontinued, relapse occurred as frequently in patients with a normal molar ratio as in others (80% vs 71%), and the presence of an abnormal ratio did not preclude a sustained remission after treatment. We conclude that the plasma molar ratio does not reflect histologic activity, correlate with standard liver function tests, or indicate disease behavior after treatment withdrawal. A normal molar ratio during or after treatment, however, may exclude cirrhosis.
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PMID:Diagnostic and prognostic implications of plasma amino acid determinations in chronic active hepatitis. 402 12

An experimental animal model designed specifically to simulate liver fibrosis and cirrhosis in childhood is described. Phenobarbitone was administered continuously from the 4th day of life and carbon tetrachloride intermittently from the 13th day to developing rats for 10 weeks. Treated animals showed hepatic necrosis, hepatic regeneration and a progressive increase in hepatic fibrosis; cirrhosis developed before the animals reached sexual maturity at 72 days or were fully grown. Hepatic prolyl hydroxylase activity increased to a maximum level after 20 days of treatment, before increased hepatic collagen could be detected, and fell to a lower level as cirrhosis became established. Serum activities of alkaline phosphatase, aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase gave a similar pattern, a marked increase at 20 days of age followed by a fall to near normal levels as hepatic damage became more severe. By the 26th day of life hepatic collagen levels were increased significantly and rose thereafter progressively as fibrosis became more widespread throughout the liver. Cirrhosis developed between the 38th and 75th days. Cirrhosis remained 10 weeks after discontinuation of treatment with phenobarbitone and carbon tetrachloride treatment.
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PMID:Carbon tetrachloride-induced hepatic fibrosis and cirrhosis in the developing rat: an experimental model of cirrhosis in childhood. 630 21

Although Wilson's Disease is a treatable disorder, 9 of 15 cases referred with undiagnosed liver disease in the present series died in 3 to 53 days of admission. We have reviewed these cases to identify features that would allow earlier diagnosis and improvement in management. The presenting symptoms were lethargy and malaise (11 cases), jaundice (11), abdominal pain (9), and deteriorating school performance (4). At diagnosis, all fatal cases had jaundice and ascites, while only one of the 6 survivors had ascites and two had jaundice. Evidence of hemolysis was found in 3 fatal cases and 5 survivors. Serum bilirubin concentrations, aspartate transaminase, and prolongation of prothrombin time were significantly more abnormal in the fatal cases (p less than 0.01) as compared with the survivors. Cirrhosis was present in all fatal cases and in 2 of the 6 survivors. Wilson's Disease must be excluded in children presenting with frank liver disease as well as those with hemolytic anemia, persisting lethargy, abdominal pain, or deteriorating school performance.
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PMID:Wilson's disease in childhood. Variability of clinical presentation. 661 55

Liver morphology and biochemistry were investigated in 61 morbidly obese subjects selected by defined criteria. Median overweight was 82 per cent (range 61 to 170 per cent), and median duration of overweight was 20 years (range two to 45 years). No patient had more than a moderate alcohol consumption and only one was diabetic. Four biopsies (7 per cent) showed normal liver tissue, while fatty change was the main diagnosis in most cases (85 per cent). Increasing degrees of fatty change was significantly (P less than 0.02) associated with presence of lipogranulomas (found in 54 per cent of the biopsies), focal necroses (found in 28 per cent), slight parenchymal inflammation (found in 33 per cent), and Kupffer cell proliferation (found in 49 per cent). Slight portal inflammation was seen in 23 per cent but portal fibrosis in only 2 per cent of the biopsies. No case of cirrhosis was registered. Patients with moderate or severe fatty change, lipogranulomas , focal necroses or with parenchymal inflammation were significantly more obese than patients without these changes (P less than 0.05). Even in absence of fatty change, obese subjects showed a markedly decreased serum albumin concentration and an elevated serum alkaline phosphatase activity (P less than 0.0001) compared with non-obese controls. Serum lactate dehydrogenase and aspartate aminotransferase were significantly raised only in patients with fatty change. With respect to serum bilirubin and plasma cholesterol concentrations no significant differences were detected between patient subgroups and controls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The liver in consecutive patients with morbid obesity: a clinical, morphological, and biochemical study. 672 92

Twenty-two patients with cirrhosis were evaluated by the 2 hr.-(C14)-aminopyrine breath test, the conventional liver tests and two systems for grading the severity of liver disease. Twenty-three patients with noncirrhotic liver disease and 15 controls were also studied. Reduced 14CO2 values were found in 21 of the 22 cirrhotic patients and seven of those had noncirrhotic liver disease associated with severe functional reserve impairment. The values in patients with minor liver diseases or cholestasis were normal. In the cirrhotic patients 2 hr.-(C14)-aminopyrine breath test scores correlated with prothrombin time, retention of bromosulfalein, fasting serum bile acid, albumin, bilirubin, serum aspartate aminotransferase and, above all, with the scores of the two clinical rating systems. The 2 hr.-(C14)-aminopyrine breath test was superior to conventional tests in quantifying the degree of hepatic functional reserve and forecasting the prognosis.
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PMID:The relationship between aminopyrine breath test and severity of liver disease in cirrhosis. 679 21


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