Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033774 (pruritus)
14,546 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Hydroxyzine, a potent H1-receptor antagonist often used for relief of pruritus in patients with hepatic dysfunction, was studied in eight patients, mean age 53.4 +/- SD 11.2 years, with primary biliary cirrhosis. The patients ingested a single dose of hydroxyzine, 0.7 mg/kg (mean dose 43.9 +/- 6.6 mg). Before the dose, then hourly for 6 hours, every 2 hours from 6-12 hours, at 24 hours, and every 24 hours for 6 days, serum hydroxyzine and cetirizine were measured and an intradermal injection of 0.01 mL of a 0.1 mg/mL solution of histamine phosphate was performed. Wheals and flares were traced at 10 minutes and the areas were calculated. Mean peak hydroxyzine levels of 116.5 +/- 60.6 ng/mL occurred at 2.3 +/- 0.7 hours and mean peak cetirizine levels of 500.4 +/- 302.0 ng/mL occurred at 4.8 +/- 2.8 hours. The mean serum elimination half-life of hydroxyzine was 36.6 +/- 13.1 hours, and the mean serum elimination half-life of cetirizine was 25.0 +/- 8.2 hours. The mean hydroxyzine clearance rate was 8.65 +/- 7.46 mL/min/kg, and the mean volume of distribution was 22.7 +/- 13.3 L/kg. The mean wheal area was suppressed (P less than 0.01) from 1 to 120 hours, with maximal suppression from 2 to 48 hours. The mean flare area was suppressed from 1 to 144 hours, with maximal suppression from 3 to 24 hours (P less than 0.01). All patients became sleepy from 0.5 to 6 hours. Blurred vision, dizziness and dry mouth each occurred in two patients. Hydroxyzine elimination is impaired in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of hydroxyzine in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis. 257 11

Clinical and experimental investigations have suggested that ursodeoxycholic acid (ursodiol) may have cytoprotective or choleretic action and therefore be beneficial in patients with intrahepatic cholestasis or chronic liver disease. In an open-label study, we treated 45 patients with chronic hepatitis with 300 mg of ursodiol three times daily for six months. At four months, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma-GTP) and leucine aminopeptidase levels had decreased. SGOT and SGPT levels also decreased significantly. Evaluation of histologic changes has not yet been completed. No significant differences in improvement of liver function tests were found in a comparison with 19 historical controls. We also studied eight patients with primary biliary cirrhosis, treated for more than one and a half years with 600 mg of ursodiol per day. At one month, itching diminished in five patients who had pruritus. ALPase and gamma-GTP levels decreased significantly, and GOT and GPT levels were also reduced. IgM levels did not change, but the titer of antimitochondrial body decreased by half in two patients. Levels of glycoursodeoxycholic acid increased, and in three patients follow-up liver biopsy showed marked improvement. These preliminary results suggest that ursodiol is safe and effective for the treatment of chronic hepatitis and primary biliary cirrhosis, but a large-scale, controlled trial is needed.
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PMID:Effect of ursodeoxycholic acid in chronic hepatitis and primary biliary cirrhosis. 257 57

Autoimmune CAH is important to recognize, since it is highly responsive to treatment which undoubtedly prolongs life. Autoimmune CAH can rarely be cured; complete withdrawal of treatment leads to relapse in over 80% of patients. Prednisolone and azathioprine are the major drugs of choice, the former inducing remission while the latter maintains remission, either alone or in combination with prednisolone. Since both drugs are associated with substantial side-effects which tend to be dose-related, the object of treatment must be to induce and maintain remission with the minimum risk of relapse together with an acceptably low incidence of complications. Although PBC shares many features in common with autoimmune CAH, treatment of the underlying disease is generally unsuccessful. To date no drug has been shown to induce remission or to prolong survival. The main aim of treatment should be directed towards the complications of PBC, of which pruritus and osteoporosis are the two major complaints. Cholestyramine and antihistamines are the drugs of choice, but when these fail a variety of other therapies are also available, although many have only been shown to be effective on an anecdotal basis. No treatment has yet been shown to reverse the bone demineralization which occurs in PBC, but early calcium supplementation is recommended in this disorder. Osteomalacia is uncommon and can be prevented by prophylactic calcium and vitamin D supplementation in jaundiced patients. Liver transplantation is effective in treating PBC, and when successful leads to complete restoration of health with the prospects of increasingly long survival. Recurrence of PBC does not appear to be a significant problem.
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PMID:Autoimmune chronic active hepatitis and primary biliary cirrhosis. 265 50

A large number of drugs may be associated with impaired bile flow. Drug-associated cholestasis presents like other forms of cholestasis with pale stools, dark urine, pruritus and jaundice. Abdominal pain may be present in some instances and can be so severe as to lead to a false diagnosis of acute cholecystitis. Biochemically, drug-associated cholestasis resembles other forms of cholestasis although the presence of eosinophilia may suggest drug involvement. Many types of drug-induced cholestasis run a benign course with resolution of signs and symptoms within 3 months but occasionally the jaundice can take a year or more to resolve. Progression to cirrhosis is uncommon. Some patients may develop a syndrome resembling primary biliary cirrhosis. The mechanisms of drug-associated cholestasis are uncertain but may arise from alteration of bile formation within the hepatocyte or bile excretion at the level of the canaliculus or the extrahepatic ducts. Histological examination of the liver may be helpful in classifying the types of jaundice but the diagnosis of drug-induced cholestasis is usually one of temporal association and exclusion of other causes.
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PMID:Drug-induced jaundice. 265 64

Primary biliary cirrhosis is a chronic liver disease of unknown etiology characterized by slowly progressive intrahepatic cholestasis due to an inflammatory destruction of small intrahepatic bile ducts. The clinical course of PBC is variable ranging from a few years in rapidly progressive cases to a normal life-expectancy in a proportion of asymptomatic cases. The typical patient is a middle-aged woman who may present with pruritus, increasing pigmentation of the skin, and eventually jaundice. The level of serum alkaline phosphatase is almost invariably elevated, serum mitochondrial antibodies are present in more than 90 per cent, and an elevated serum IgM is usually present. PBC is associated with many immunologic abnormalities and appears to be a classic autoimmune disease. Some of the immune defects may be epiphenomena; others such as a marked defect in suppressor T cell function seem to be related to the pathogenesis of the disease. All drug therapy that is aimed at slowing the disease process is experimental. A place for immunosuppressive drugs in the management of PBC would be anticipated. However, no drug has to date been definitively shown to have a beneficial effect on the disease. Currently, the main treatments used are aimed at preventing or correcting the complications of intractable cholestasis. Patients with PBC and evidence of hepatic decompensation and/or poor quality of life make good candidates for liver transplantation. The current aim of therapy is to find an effective regime of immunosuppression that will make hepatic transplantation redundant for this disease.
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PMID:Primary biliary cirrhosis. 265 67

Twenty three patients with primary biliary cirrhosis surviving for greater than 1 yr after liver transplantation were studied. All reported marked symptomatic improvement, and had significant falls in serum bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase (p less than 0.0001), immunoglobulin M, and antimitochondrial antibody levels (p less than 0.005). Beyond 1 yr, liver biopsies showed features compatible with disease recurrence in 9 of 10 patients, and a further 4 patients developed pruritus or associated abnormalities. Immunoglobulin M levels were raised in 80%, with elevated antimitochondrial antibody titers in all those tested. Cyclosporine treatment in some patients initially given prednisone and azathioprine was followed by regression of histologic abnormalities. Of 102 patients with nonprimary biliary cirrhosis followed similarly, 50 underwent biopsy, and although 12 showed features of bile duct damage, all had additional histologic and clinical changes supporting an alternative diagnosis. These findings are consistent with previous reports that primary biliary cirrhosis can recur after transplantation, possibly modified by the use of cyclosporine.
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PMID:Evidence for disease recurrence after liver transplantation for primary biliary cirrhosis. Clinical and histologic follow-up studies. 266 53

In order to predict prognosis and clinical course of BPC, theory quantification was applied and the discriminated rate was calculated concerning the cases of PBC national survey in Japan. We examined the prediction of three and five year's survival about all cases, the prediction of appearance of symptoms about asymptomatic PBC and that of jaundice about asymptomatic PBC and symptomatic PBC alone with pruritus. The useful items for the prediction of prognosis were serum bilirubin, albumin and the presence of esophageal varices at first medical examination. Fairly good discriminated rate was obtained on the prediction of three and five year's survival. However poor results were obtained concerning the prediction of appearance of symptoms. In conclusion we can predict the prognosis of PBC based on clinical features.
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PMID:[Clinical course and prognosis of primary biliary cirrhosis--multivariant analysis on cases of national survey]. 275 40

We have compared the effect of ursodeoxycholic acid with placebo on the clinical state, blood liver chemistries and serum and urinary bile acids in four patients with primary biliary cirrhosis. All parameters were evaluated monthly, and bile acid composition was measured by capillary gas-liquid chromatography. At the time of admission, all patients showed intense pruritus, and their serum alkaline phosphatase, AST and ALT levels were elevated 4.3, 2.7 and 2.3 times over control values. Serum bile acids were elevated almost 38-fold with 2.5 times more cholic acid than chenodeoxycholic acid. Urinary bile acid output was elevated 28 times the control values, and 36% were 1 beta-hydroxycholic acid, 1 beta-hydroxydeoxycholic acid and hyocholic acid (3 alpha,6 alpha, 7 alpha-trihydroxy-5 beta-cholanoic acid). Three months of placebo administration did not significantly affect the clinical or biochemical presentations, and the serum and urinary bile acid composition did not change. In contrast, ursodeoxycholic acid feeding (12 to 15 mg per kg per day) for 6 months abolished pruritus in two and lessened itching in two subjects and reduced serum alkaline phosphatase, AST and ALT levels by 21, 35 and 47%, respectively. The mean values for the total serum bile acid concentrations in these patients declined 26% from the pretreatment value, but the proportion of ursodeoxycholic acid increased from 3 to 40% of the total bile acids; thus, total fasting serum endogenous bile acid levels decreased almost 50%. Similar changes were noted in the urinary bile acids, in which ursodeoxycholic acid became the major bile acid, and approximately 18% were hydroxylated at C-1, C-6 and C-21.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effect of ursodeoxycholic acid on bile acid metabolism in primary biliary cirrhosis. 277 2

A randomized, double-blind, 1-year pilot study of prednisolone treatment for primary biliary cirrhosis was undertaken. Nineteen patients received 30 mg prednisolone per day initially, with a maintenance dose of 10 mg per day. Seventeen patients received placebo. The groups were matched for age, menopausal status, hepatic histological stage and bilirubin. Treatment was well tolerated without dropouts. Two patients receiving prednisolone developed diabetes, one a duodenal ulcer and one depression. One patient receiving placebo died for liver failure after 3 months. Cholestatic symptoms (itch and fatigue) improved on prednisolone. There was significant (prednisolone vs. placebo) improvement in transaminase (p = 0.0214), alkaline phosphatase (p = 0.0032), procollagen III peptide (p = 0.0103), immunoglobulin G (p = 0.0012) and liver histology (p = 0.016); these changes were greatest among noncirrhotic patients. No patient developed skeletal symptoms. Fifty-seven per cent had abnormal triolein breath tests prior to treatment, and 65% had abnormally low calcium absorption tests. Calcium absorption increased significantly in the treated group vs. placebo at 2 weeks (p less than 0.02), but not at 1 year. Femoral photon absorptiometry fell in the prednisolone group after 1 year (-3.5% vs. placebo +0.5%, p less than 0.05), as did trabecular bone volume (-6% vs. -2.8%, p less than 0.005) and resorption surface (-11% vs. +2%, p less than 0.02) on serial bone biopsy. Prednisolone seems to exert a favorable hepatic effect in primary biliary cirrhosis but at the expense of increased bone loss to approximately twice the expected rate. Prednisolone treatment merits further assessment in primary biliary cirrhosis over a longer period, with attention to selection of patients most likely to benefit and continuing observation of bone mass to better establish the "cost/benefit" ratio.
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PMID:A pilot, double-blind, controlled 1-year trial of prednisolone treatment in primary biliary cirrhosis: hepatic improvement but greater bone loss. 277 3

The effects of ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA, 13-15 mg/kg body weight daily) were prospectively evaluated in fifteen patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC). The mean concentration of UDCA in serum expressed as the percentage of total bile acids rose from 0% at baseline to 58% (SEM 9%) after 2 years' treatment, whereas total serum bile acid levels did not change significantly. The proportion of patients with pruritus necessitating the use of cholestyramine was significantly lower at 2 years than at baseline. Standard liver function tests improved in all the patients. At 2 years the average activities of gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase, alkaline phosphatases, and alanine aminotransferase and bilirubin levels were reduced (respectively 78%, 65%, 68%, and 36% of pretreatment values). In three patients who agreed to interrupt the ingestion of UDCA for 3 months after 2 years' treatment there was clear deterioration in liver function tests, which again improved after reinstitution of UDCA. These results suggest that long-term UDCA might be a safe and effective treatment for PBC, but a randomised, controlled, double-blind trial is urgently needed.
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PMID:Is ursodeoxycholic acid an effective treatment for primary biliary cirrhosis? 288 36


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