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)

In a retrospective study a total of 754 sera from 397 hepatitis patients were assayed for delta antigen and antibody by radioimmunoassay. The study included patients of all age groups (3 months up to 85 years) whose first serum sample, taken from 1978 until January 1984, was positive for HBsAg. Clinically the patients could be subdivided into three major groups: 311 sera were from 181 patients with acute hepatitis, 296 from 135 CPH/CAH patients, including a few cases of liver cirrhosis and 3 cases of HCC, and 147 sera were from 81 asymptomatic carriers. Delta markers were found in 30 patients (7.6%). 20 of these were under the age of 30, and 13 presented with acute, often fulminant hepatitis or (in a minority of cases) exacerbations of preexisting HBV infection. Only two symptomless carriers had anti-delta. It seems of particular interest that all 10 cases where delta antigen could be demonstrated in the first serum sample presented with acute, often fulminant hepatic disease and 9 had anti-HBc-IgM antibodies. Where a second sample could be tested (5 cases), seroconversion to anti-delta was always demonstrated. Delta superinfection could be shown in 2 cases where anti-delta antibodies appeared more than a year after HBsAg positivity was first detected.
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PMID:[Delta hepatitis in Switzerland. Determination of delta antigens and delta antibodies in 397 HBsAg-positive patients (1978-1984)]. 647 32

Chronic delta infection occurs in Greece in about 10 to 15% of HBsAg+ subjects, being largely unrelated to parenteral transmission and/or to drug addiction. The observed cases exhibited histological changes ranging from chronic persistent hepatitis to chronic active hepatitis, cirrhosis, and even hepatocellular carcinoma on cirrhosis. The male/female ratio of patients with delta Ag + CLD was 3.8:1 and their mean age 40 years. They were younger compared to delta Ag-/HBsAg+ CLD and they presented with a wide spectrum of symptoms and signs. About 25% of the patients were oligosymptomatic or asymptomatic and about 40% manifested their disease as an episode of acute hepatitis with protracted or relapsing course followed by chronicity. Biochemical changes appeared to be more severe than in delta Ag-/HBsAg + CLD. The natural history was frequently characterised by a progressive course, terminating, in about 15 years, to death from cirrhosis and liver failure, although remissions occasionally occurred. HCC also developed but probably less frequently than in HBsAg positive, delta Ag negative CLD. Whether the natural course of delta Ag+ CLD can be modified by any form of treatment remains to be proved.
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PMID:Delta antigen positive chronic liver disease in Greece: clinical aspects and natural course. 666 75

85 liver samples were stained with H & E and orcein. Of these 40 were from medicolegal autopsies, 30 from preserved specimens of medical college museums and 15 wedge biopsies. Three of the five cirrhotic museum specimens showed HBsAg by orcein. The remaining cases including three cirrhosis and two HCC were negative for HBsAg. HBsAg was found to be more frequently associated with cirrhosis. The autopsy samples were histologically normal and HBsAg was not seen. Old museum specimens did not loose their orcein positivity despite preservation in formalin for a long time.
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PMID:Frequency of orcein positive HBsAg in liver specimens obtained from medical college museums, medicolegal autopsies and wedge biopsies. 734 3

Clinical and experimental data show that beta-IFN enhances the effect of tamoxifen on advanced breast cancer. There is a similarity between breast and liver as far as the proliferating effect on normal and neoplastic tissue of estrogen and progestin receptors is concerned. The authors tested this pharmacological association in unresectable liver neoplasms. They considered 76 (not randomized) patients affected with HCC; 38 were treated by trans-arterial chemoembolization (TACE) and 38 to beta-INF and tamoxifen (the 2 groups were comparable according to age, sex, Child-Pugh score, Okuda and TNM stages, cirrhosis etiology). The treatment response (positive when a tumor diameter decreased or stabilization was observed) was similar in the two groups; in the TACE group, the presence of a peritumoral capsula had a significant influence on survival (p < 0.02); on the other hand, in the patients treated with beta-INF and tamoxifen important factors for a better prognosis were the TNM stage (I and II, p < 0.02) and a symptom-free condition (p < 0.04). The authors believe the beta-INF and tamoxifen treatment could represent an effective alternative in the management of unresectable HCC. A better knowledge of the presence and meaning of estrogen and progestin receptors in the neoplastic tissue may allow a better selection of patients.
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PMID:[The palliative treatment of hepatocarcinoma: chemoembolization vs. the combination of tamoxifen plus beta-interferon]. 751 97

We designed a multicenter cross-sectional study to evaluate the role of alcohol abuse, the hepatitis viruses and other pathogenic factors in cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. A total of 1,829 consecutive cirrhosis patients, with or without HCC, was enrolled over 6 mo in 21 centers throughout Italy. The etiological categories and diagnostic criteria were preestablished. The median age of the patients was 59 yr (range, 13 to 85 yr); 63.6% of the patients were graded as Child class A, 23.4% as Child class B and 13% as Child class C. Hepatitis C virus antibodies were found in 72.1% of cases (47.7% alone, 21.2% with alcohol abuse, 3.2% with hepatitis B virus); HBsAg was present in 13.8% (4.2% alone, 3.2% with hepatitis D virus, 3.2% with hepatitis C virus, 3% with alcohol abuse), alcohol abuse with no concomitant viral infection was recorded in 8.7%, primary biliary cirrhosis was found in 1.8%, other causes were found in 1.4% and cryptogenic cirrhosis was only present in 5.3%. Hepatocellular carcinoma was detected in 11.9% of patients (217 cases). The presence of hepatocellular carcinoma was more frequent in males than females (14.7% vs. 7.3%; p < 0.001) and increased with worsening Child class (8.3% in Child class A, 16.9% in Child class B, 19.9% in Child class C, p < 0.001). The highest prevalences of hepatocellular carcinoma were observed in hepatitis B virus infection, with or without alcohol abuse (20% and 16%, respectively) and in hepatitis C virus cirrhosis, with or without alcohol abuse (16% and 10.3%, p < 0.005).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Pathogenic factors in cirrhosis with and without hepatocellular carcinoma: a multicenter Italian study. 752 73

The blood coagulation and fibrinolysis of 33 patients with compensated liver cirrhosis and 31 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma were examined using several markers, namely thrombin-antithrombin III complex (TAT), plasmin-alpha 2 plasmin inhibitor complex (PIC), antithrombin-III (AT-III) and prothrombin time, and the relationship between these markers, endotoxemia, and TNF-alpha was examined. These patients had no complications due to hepatic failure, such as infections, encephalopathy, ascites, G-I bleeding and clinical DIC. PIC was not elevated, but TAT tended to be elevated in LC and significantly elevated in HCC. AT-III was decreased in LC and HCC, and the blood endotoxin was partly positive in LC and HCC, but was not correlated with AT-III or PT. The TAT level in the blood-endotoxin-positive patients measured by endospecy methods was higher than that in the negative patients, and was significantly correlated with the blood endotoxin level in the LC and HCC patients (r = 0.57, r = 0.88, p < 0.01). No relationship was observed between TNF-alpha and blood endotoxin. In conclusion, (1) blood coagulability was activated already in compensated LC and HCC, but was not connected with fibrinolysis, (2) the activation of coagulability was closely related with endotoxemia, and (3) TNF-alpha was not correlated with blood endotoxin or TAT.
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PMID:[Blood coagulation and fibrinolysis in relation to endotoxemia in liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma]. 756 21

In the present study, repeated hepatic dearterialization combined with intra-arterial infusion chemotherapy was performed in patients with unresectable tumors of the liver. Of 36 patients, 16 had primary liver tumors (13 hepatocellular carcinomas and 3 cholangiocellular carcinomas), while 20 had metastatic tumors (7 gastric carcinomas, 10 colon carcinomas, 2 pancreatic carcinomas, and 1 gastric carcinoid). A significantly better survival outcome was found in those with intra-arterial infusion chemotherapy and those without cirrhosis. In the HCC cases, those with the therapy tended to show a better survival as compared with the natural history. Remarkable tumor regression was found in four (67%) of six patients with metastases of gastric cancer.
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PMID:[Efficacy of repeated hepatic dearterialization combined with intra-arterial infusion chemotherapy for unresectable tumors of the liver]. 757 66

Sufficient evidence has accumulated that chronic infection with HCV substantially increases the risk of HCC, particularly in the presence of cirrhosis. HCV appears to represent a major underlying cause of HCC in southern Europe and Japan, regions where HCC incidence is intermediate, whereas its impact is smaller in sub-Saharan Africa and China, where HBV-related HCC predominates, and in the developed western world, where the majority of cases of HCC are associated with cirrhosis of unknown etiology.
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PMID:Hepatitis C and hepatocellular carcinoma. 759 45

Chronic viral hepatitis is prevalent worldwide in the pediatric population and can be associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Acquisition of disease in early childhood may predispose children to long-term complications, including cirrhosis and HCC. Efforts should be made to recognize, control, and prevent further spread of these infections, especially in areas where hepatitis is endemic. Alpha interferon therapy hastens disease remission in a proportion of patients with chronic hepatitis B. Further studies are needed to define the role of interferon in chronic HDV and HCV infection in children.
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PMID:Management of chronic viral hepatitis in children. 763 78

Twenty-five cases of small hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC; diameter < or = 30 mm) were evaluated for overall morphologic features and growth patterns. The tumors often showed a well-differentiated, normotrabecular histologic pattern and insidious interstitial invasion, which resembled benign hepatocytes scattered in connective tissues. As the tumor grew, a less-differentiated tumor area became predominant. Portal tracts included in small HCC nodules were quantitatively assessed, revealing that they progressively reduced in number with tumor growth. The tumor margin was often reported to be unclear. The present results indicate that the histologic grade of tumor differentiation, capsular formation, existence of liver cirrhosis and patterns of interstitial invasion are important factors for determining the nature of the margin. The score of argyrophilic nuclear organizer regions (AgNOR) was examined in 5 cases showing typical interstitial invasion with the insidious type. In each case, the AgNOR score of the invading tumor cells was lower than that of tumor cells within the HCC nodules, but higher than benign hepatocytes in cirrhotic parenchyma. It clarified that the growth activity of well-differentiated HCC was rather suppressed upon their interstitial invasion.
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PMID:Growth patterns and interstitial invasion of small hepatocellular carcinoma. 764 31


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