Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0345904 (liver cancer)
15,188 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Serum ferritin concentrations were found to be raised, often considerably, in 58 of 76 black patients with primary liver cancer (PLC). No correlation could be demonstrated between the serum ferritin concentration and several other measurements, including the following: hepatic iron stores measured chemically, the size of the tumour, serum transaminase values, and the presence or absence of cirrhosis in the non-tumorous liver. There was, however, a negative correlation between serum ferritin and alpha-foetoprotein concentrations. Ferritin was purified from PLC tissue obtained from three patients at necropsy and the distribution of isoferritins was determined by isoelectric focusing. Acidic isoferritins similar to those previously found in PLC tissue were obtained. Their acidic nature was confirmed chromatographically using DEAE cellulose. Because the serum ferritin in patients with PLC probably consists of a mixture of normal and acidic isoferritins, it is likely that the serum assay used in the present study underestimated the actual concentrations present. With the development of an assay which utlises a specific antibody against acidic PLC isoferritins, serum ferritin may prove to be a second marker for PLC.
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PMID:Serum and tumour ferritins in primary liver cancer. 7 42

The beneficial effects of combined estrogen-progestin-containing oral contraceptives (OCs) include prevention of pregnancy (less than 1 failure out of 100 regular users); the prevention of ectopic pregnancy; the reduction of preeclampsia (2.4 times lower risk compared with barrier methods); and reduction of pelvic inflammation to about one-half. The effects on menstruation include the reduction of sideropenic anemia (by lowering the incidence and duration of menstruation, OCs reduce the loss of iron to 50% or to as much as 33%); dysmenorrhea by 40% (symptoms receded in 90% of users); and premenstrual syndrome by 30%. OCs exert a favorable effect on menstrual epilepsy; reduce sports-related accidents in the premenstrual and menstrual periods; and reduce intermenstrual bleeding. The protection from cancer includes the lowering of endometrial cancer risk (every 2 years of use reduces the risk by 38%, 12 years of use by 70%, and the beneficial effects last 3-15 years); reduction of the risk of the ovarian cancer (already 3-6 months of use reduces the risk by 30%, and more than 5 years by 50% in women under 50 years of age with a longterm effect of 10 years or more, which drops sharply in women over 60 who are mostly at risk). Among other beneficial effects, they reduce benign mastopathy by 50-75%; reduce the risk of follicular ovarian cysts to 50% and the risk of corpus luteal ovarian cysts to 1/5; and they lessen bone loss which favorably affects osteoporosis. Low-dose OCs minimize the well-known risks of thrombotic and cerebrovascular accidents, myocardial infarction, hypertension, altered carbohydrate metabolism, gallbladder diseases, and liver cancer. A new OC with 30 mcg of ethinyl estradiol was tested with daily doses of 150 mcg of desogestrel. The high density lipoprotein (HDL) either increased or did not change with desogestrel: the HDL2 subfraction that protects from atherosclerosis did not change, and probably the HDL3 raised the HDL level.
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PMID:[Favorable effects of oral estrogen-progestin contraception]. 181 41

A new contrast agent for magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, directed to asialoglycoprotein (ASG) receptors on hepatocytes, was used for detection of liver cancer in rats. Ultrasmall superparamagnetic (mean size, 12 nm) particles of iron oxide (USPIOs) were targeted to ASG receptors by coating particles with arabinogalactan (AG). Liver T2 relaxation times decreased more effectively after a single intravenous administration of AG-USPIO than after an equal dose of a conventional superparamagnetic liver MR contrast agent (AMI-25; mean size, 72 nm). Receptor affinity studies demonstrated that receptor-mediated attachment and subsequent cellular endocytosis do not occur in primary malignant (hepatocellular carcinoma) or metastatic (adenocarcinoma) tumors, because the surface ASG receptors are lost during malignant dedifferentiation. In vitro relaxation and in vivo MR imaging experiments of liver tumors show that targeting USPIO to hepatocytes rather than to the mononuclear phagocytic system allows a considerable dose reduction, increases tumor-liver contrast, and potentially allows distinction of ASG-positive (benign hepatocellular) and ASG-negative (malignant hepatocellular) tumors.
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PMID:Receptor imaging: application to MR imaging of liver cancer. 224 78

This project made use of Chongming Island, a high prevalence area for liver cancer, with an uneven geographical distribution, to study the relation between trace elements and high liver cancer incidence. A comparative study of Se, Mn, Fe, Sr, Pb, Zn, Cu and Ca contents of scalp hair of normal persons living in areas with different incidences of liver cancer, and a case-control investigation matched with sex and age were made. The selenium level is relatively low compared with other locations in China, which might indicate Se deficiency on the island. Iron and Mn show an obvious difference, indicating that the availability of these elements was less in the high cancer incidence part of the island than in the low incidence part. The hair iron content of patients with liver cancer is clearly lower than that of normal controls. Selenium, Mn and Fe should be taken into consideration in liver cancer prevention research.
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PMID:Study on the relation of Se, Mn, Fe, Sr, Pb, Zn, Cu, and Ca to liver cancer mortality from analysis of scalp hair. 232 Sep 97

The early stages of dimethylnitrosamine (CAS: 62-75-9)-induced liver cancer and the effect of administration of phenobarbital (CAS: 50-06-6) after dimethylnitrosamine were studied in Syrian golden hamsters. A single ip injection of 6 mg dimethylnitrosamine/kg (body wt) induced hepatocellular altered foci by 6 months. Most foci were composed mainly of large clear glycogen-containing cells, while smaller numbers were formed by cells with abnormally acidophilic or basophilic cytoplasms. Biliary cysts, but not biliary neoplasms, also occurred. A few neoplastic (hyperplastic) nodules and hepatocellular carcinomas developed by 12 months. gamma-Glutamyltranspeptidase activity was not present in any of the hepatocellular lesions, but foci of all types, neoplastic nodules, and carcinomas were characterized by a lack of iron accumulation. Phenobarbital at 0.05% in the diet for up to 12 months did not increase the number of lesions of any type, indicating a lack of promoting effect under these conditions.
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PMID:Pathogenesis of dimethylnitrosamine-induced hepatocellular cancer in hamster liver and lack of enhancement by phenobarbital. 241 49

The effects of magnetic resonance (MR) pulse sequences and timing parameters on tumor-liver contrast were studied in an animal model of metastatic liver cancer. Six spin-echo (SE), three inversion-recovery (IR), and four gradient-echo (GRE) sequences were evaluated at 0.6 T before and after injection of super-paramagnetic iron oxide. GRE techniques, irrespective of echo time and flip angle, showed the greatest change in signal intensity (enhancement) of the liver after administration of iron oxide. Single-acquisition GRE sequences (16 seconds) matched the contrast-to-noise ratio (C/N) performance of the most effective 6.4-minute SE sequences. Multiexcitation GRE sequences showed tumor-liver C/Ns per unit time that were significantly (P less than .05) higher than those achieved with SE and IR sequences. GRE sequences, which recruit intravoxel dephasing as an additional source of transverse relaxation enhancement (T2*), show a higher C/N per unit time and in this respect seem superior to SE and IR sequences for MR imaging with superparamagnetic iron oxide.
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PMID:Superparamagnetic iron oxide-enhanced MR imaging: pulse sequence optimization for detection of liver cancer. 274 20

Cardiac involvement in haemochromatosis includes development of congestive heart failure and/or cardiac arrhythmias. To elucidate the importance of this disorder among patients with severe cardiac bradyarrhythmias necessitating treatment with a permanent pacemaker, such patients were screened for evidence of iron overload. Serum ferritin was determined in 232 men treated with a permanent pacemaker. In six patients (2.6%) the serum ferritin values were twice the upper normal limit. In three of these, causes other than iron overload were found (liver cancer, myeloma and amiodarone treatment), while in three (1.3%) iron overload was suspected. All the latter three had atrioventricular block of second to third degree. In these patients percutaneous liver biopsy was performed. The specimens were examined by light and electron microscopy and the iron content was determined by atomic absorption spectrophotometry. The results of these investigations showed iron overload in the liver. The prevalence of iron overload (2.0%) among this male pacemaker-treated population with AV block II-III is significantly higher than the rates previously found in urban populations in Sweden. The present data indicate that screening for haemochromatosis is of importance among males with second and third degree atrioventricular-block of unknown etiology.
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PMID:Prevalence of a haemochromatosis among men with clinically significant bradyarrhythmias. 139 45

Surgically resected specimens, consisting of tumor and adjacent non-neoplastic liver tissue, were obtained from 40 patients with primary liver cancer at Zhong Shan Hospital, Shanghai Medical University, the People's Republic of China, between March 1983 and July 1984. All were hepatocellular carcinomas (HCC), one being admixed with cholangiocarcinoma. The relationship of hepatitis B virus (HBV) markers with iron and ferritin was evaluated in liver tissues from patients with primary liver cancers. The serum HBsAg (Hepatitis B surface antigen) positive rate was 80.0% (32/40). Cirrhosis was observed in 97.5% (39/40). HBsAg was identified in 82.5% (33/40) of uninvolved liver, and 35.0% (14/40) of HCC tissues (P less than 0.001). HBcAg (hepatitis B core antigen) was detected in 25.0% (10/40) of liver, and 7.5% (3/40) of HCC tissues (P less than 0.05). Stainable iron was found in 65.0% (26/40) of unaffected livers, and 10.0% (4/40) of HCC tissues (P less than 0.001). Ferritin was demonstrated in 75% (30/40) of non-neoplastic liver, and 40% (16/40) of HCC tissues (P less than 0.001). Twenty-two of 33 HCC patients (66.7%) with HBsAg positive cells in their livers also showed stainable iron. Of 16 patients positive for ferritin in HCC cells, iron was found in only two. Iron was found in nine of ten patients with HBcAg in non-neoplastic hepatocytes (P = 0.056); a finding compatible with the hypothesis that iron accumulates in cells replicating HBV. The other results indicate that: immunohistologic ferritin in HCC is not due to increased stainable iron; tumor cells may produce ferritin; polyclonal antibodies to human liver ferritin react better with non-neoplastic hepatocytes than with HCC cells; the high prevalence of HBsAg and cirrhosis in HCC suggests that HBV plays a major etiologic role in hepatocarcinogenesis in China; and one case of HCC is attributed to Schistosoma japonicum infestation via cirrhosis.
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PMID:Iron, ferritin, hepatitis B surface and core antigens in the livers of Chinese patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. 302 1

There is increasing evidence that both iron overload and iron deficiency are associated with significant abnormalities of immune function. In diseases associated with iron overload there is increased susceptibility to both infection and neoplasia. The precise mechanisms are still being unravelled but iron overload has been shown to impair antigen-specific immune responses and to reduce the number of functional helper precursor cells. Similarly, iron in vitro in concentrations reported to be present in the serum of patients with iron overload impairs the generation of cytotoxic T-cells, enhances suppressor T-cell activity and reduces the proliferative capacity of helper T-cells. The predominant tumor seen in iron overload is primary hepatocellular carcinoma; however other aetiological factors appear to be involved in addition to iron overload, especially hepatic cirrhosis. Nevertheless, primary liver cancer occurs much more frequently in hemochromatosis than in other forms of cirrhosis. Iron deficiency is associated with an altered response to infection but the relationship is again a complex one. The cellular mechanisms involved have yet to be clearly defined, although impaired T and B cell function have been demonstrated.
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PMID:Iron status and cellular immune competence. 328 53

Survival and causes of death were analyzed among 163 patients with hemochromatosis diagnosed between 1959 and 1983. Mean followup was 10.5 +/- 5.6 years (+/- SD). Cumulative survival was 76% at 10 years and 49% at 20 years. Life expectancy was reduced in patients who presented with cirrhosis or diabetes compared to patients who presented without these complications at the time of diagnosis. Patients who could be depleted of iron during the first 18 months of venesection therapy had a markedly better prognosis compared to those patients who could not be depleted during this time period, probably due to greater amounts of excessive iron. Prognosis was not influenced by sex. Patients without cirrhosis or diabetes had a life expectancy that was virtually identical to that of an age-matched normal population. Analysis of the causes of death in 53 patients showed that liver cancer (n = 16) was 219 times more frequent, cardiomyopathy (n = 3) was 306 times more frequent, liver cirrhosis (n = 10) was 13 times more frequent, and diabetes mellitus (n = 3) was seven times more frequent compared to death rates expected for an age-matched normal population. The risk of death from other causes, including extrahepatic cancer (n = 7), did not differ from rates expected. Thus, patients with hemochromatosis diagnosed in a precirrhotic stage and treated by venesection have a normal life expectancy. Cirrhotic patients had a shortened life expectancy and a high risk of death from liver cancer even when complete iron depletion has been achieved.
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PMID:Survival and causes of death in hemochromatosis. Observations in 163 patients. 338 43


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