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)

Since transcobalamin II is the plasma binder of vitamin B12(cobalamin) that mediates delivery of cobalamin to tissues, we measured circulating levels of transcobalamin II after intravenous injection unlabeled cyanocobalamin in 12 control subjects and, because the liver is a major source of transcobalamin II, in eight patients with decompensated cirrhosis. Thirty minutes after injection of cyanocobalamin (200 ng per kilogram of body weight), total transcobalamin II (unsaturated plus cobalamin bound) declined in all 20 subjects to levels that averaged (+/- S.E.) 53.5 +/- 4.6 per cent of initial values. Subsequently, unsaturated transcobalamin II rapidly increased so that by eight hours, total transcobalamin II approached preinjection levels. Rates of regeneration of transcobalamin II were similar in control subjects and patients with liver disease. Unlike total transcobalamin II, total transcobalamin I was unaltered by injection of cyanocobalamin. Moreover, addition of cyanocobalamin to plasma in vitro did not alter measurements of total transcobalamin II. The rapid response of circulating transcobalamin II to cyanocobalamin injection strongly supports a dynamic role for this polypeptide during transport of a relatively large load of cobalamin.
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PMID:Changes in circulating transcobalamin II after injection of cyanocobalamin. 86 12

We report on the occasional presence of iron granules in plasma cells in two male patients respectively 64 and 71 years old, both with excessive drinking habits. One patient also had liver cirrhosis. In both patients the bone-marrow biopsy showed a macrocytic anemia without megaloblasts. We refer the morphologic data because the cases reported are not many and the presence of iron granules in plasma cells was a curious and rare aspect. The most important feature appearing from the data issued is the gap concerning both the source and mechanism that cause this phenomenon. Some investigations have suggested that the plasma cell iron is located in mitochondria, others have noted that iron granules were located between the Golgi region and the rough endoplasmic reticulum. Moreover, the morphologic data are not related to the number of plasma cells in the bone-marrow and there is no causal relation between alcoholic abuse and plasma cell iron. The first problem is common, the second is rare.
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PMID:With regards to the presence of iron granules in plasma cells. 181 5

In 62 patients with cystic fibrosis the serum vitamin B12 concentration ranged from 160-2600 pmol/l with a mean of 1 105 pmol/l. Both vitamin B12-binding proteins in the serum, transcobalamin II and R-binders, carried increased amounts of vitamin B12, but showed relatively normal levels of unsaturated vitamin B12-binding capacity. This combination is rather typical for hepatic dysfunction, although the recurrent pulmonary infections might exert an upward effect on plasma R-binder concentration through increased turnover of myeloid cells. A significant positive correlation between transcobalamin II-vitamin B12 and serum alkaline phosphatase suggests that transcobalamin II-bound vitamin B12 might be an early indicator of focal biliary cirrhosis, which is known to occur in these patients.
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PMID:Elevated serum vitamin B12 in cystic fibrosis. 652 65

Multiple symmetric lipomatosis (MSL) (or Madelung's disease or Launois-Bensaude syndrome) is a rare inherited disease clinically characterized by a massive development of large symmetric unencapsulated lipomas on the subcutaneous tissue of face, neck, trunk and arms, resulting in a grotesque aspect of the patient. Less frequently the accumulation of excessive fatty tissue can spread deeply to the superficial fascia. Peripheral neuropathy, macrocytic anemia and chronic hepatopathy have been reported to cohesist. Macrocytic anaemia and chronic hepatopathy are probably secondary to high alcohol consumption, that is frequently associated. MSL, that was first described by Sir Benjamin Brodie in 1846, affects mainly the men (ratio man/woman 30:1), with an incidence in Mediterranean area of 1:25.000 men; the ages at onset range from 20 to 50 years. It is not known yet the pathway of inheritance and the molecular basis of the genetic defect responsible for the development of fat accumulation. It has been postulated a defective lipolytic response to catecholamines; this altered response could be due to an abnormal amount or a defective function of Gs-protein, the coupler between beta-adrenergic receptors on the surface of adipocytes and adenylate cyclase, or, alternatively, the defect could be in the catalytic unit of adenylate cyclase. The number and function of alpha- and beta-adrenergic receptors and the lipolytic response to cAMP (the second messenger) are normal. Recently it has been hypothesized that the defective lipolysis is due to a disorder in the mitochondria of brown fat, whose distribution is similar to the peculiar position of the lipomas in this pathology; the brown fat, unlike white adipose tissue, has abundant mitochondria. The alcohol abuse, frequently present in these subjects, might facilitate the clinical expression of the molecular defect. The therapy of lipomas is essentially surgical, but this approach is not easy, because the lipomas are not capsulated and extremely vascularized. Moreover the surgical excision is not always a successful treatment for the lipomas as they frequently recurrent after a short period from the exeresis. In this report we describe a 59-years old white man, alcohol abuser, with a typical clinical picture of MSL, developed when he was 37 years old. The patient presented multiple lipomas around the shoulders, face, neck and arms, that had been surgically excised eight times. Magnetic resonance imaging showed the presence of fat deposits also in the mediastinum, that caused a tracheal compression. Hepatic cirrhosis and serious side effects from peripheral neuropathy, represented by Charcot's joint and neuropathic ulcer on the sole foot were observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Symmetric multiple lipomatosis with Charcot's joint and neuropathic ulcer. Description of a clinical case]. 838 91

A 78-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with anemia and jaundice. Hematological studies revealed hyperchromic macrocytic anemia, and biochemical studies revealed findings of hemolysis. The folic acid level was low and megaloblasts were observed in the bone marrow. From these findings, the patient was diagnosed as having megaloblastic anemia due to folic acid deficiency. This patient had been a heavy alcohol drinker in the habit of drinking alcohol without meals. He began to eat regular meals in the hospital, and the anemia and jaundice improved gradually. Since liver cirrhosis was suspected, amino acid analysis of the urine was performed, and abnormal excretion of beta-amino-isobutyric acid (BAIB) was found. According to the amount of BAIB excreted, the Japanese population can be divided into low and high BAIB excretors comprising 65% and 36%, respectively. BAIB is also considered to reflect dissimilation of thymine. The present patient was included in the high excretion group because of the abnormally high urine level of BAIB, which was considered to be caused by ineffective hematopoiesis in the bone marrow as a result of his megaloblastic anemia. For this reason, dissimilation of thymine was considered to have been active in this patient.
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PMID:[A case of megaloblastic anemia with abnormally high urine level of beta-aminoisobutyric acid]. 847 30