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Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (
ferritin
)
17,525
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Dialysis Outcomes and Practice Pattern Study (DOPPS) is an international observational study of treatment conditions and medical outcomes in hemodialysis patients. Prospective sampling has yielded long-term observational data from randomly selected groups of patients receiving treatment at representative, randomly selected hemodialysis units in each country. The data shown were collected at 20 hemodialysis units/centers in Spain. The data pertaining to Spain--Sp--refers to 575 patients and their comparison with those of the Euro-DOPPS countries--Eu--(Germany, France, United Kingdom, Italy and Spain), which encompass 3,038 patients, represent the formal goal of this paper. Diabetes mellitus, at 21.5% in Eu and 21.7% in Sp, was the most common cause of renal insufficiency in dialysis and coronariopathy, as a concomitant disease, was present in 67.8% in Eu as opposed to 75.8% in Sp. Differences were observed in the incident of hypertension (73.4% in Eu vs 77.4% in Sp),
hepatitis C
(11.6% vs 19.5%), depression (12.7 vs 16.2%) and left ventricular hypertrophy (54.9% vs 62.3%). The patterns of vascular access were similar (79% vs 81% AV fistulas in Eu and Sp, and 10% synthetic grafts for both) and the mean applied dose of dialysis--Kt/V--smaller (1.19) in Sp than in Eu (1.24); likewise the duration of the dialysis (in minutes) was shorter (234 in Eu vs 217 in Sp) and the % of synthetic membranes used was smaller (60% in Eu vs 52% in Sp). There were no differences between the groups in the figures for urea, creatinine, albumin, nPCR, calcium, phosphate or PTH. There were also no differences in the mean values of Hb (10.7 for Eu vs 10.8 for Sp), given that the values of
ferritin
were noticeably lower in Sp (288 vs 355) and the dose of EPO/kg/week was higher to in Sp (115 vs 102); s.c. route was used in similar proportions (69% in Eu vs 67% in Sp). The level of medical care, understood as contact with the physician at all or almost all treatments, was noticeably better in Sp (90%) that in Eu (66%), whereas the number of patients per hour of specialized personnel and % of specialized staff, were smaller. Mortality (death/100 patients-years) was one point lower in Sp than in Eu (15.4 vs 16.3). These data suggest that an increment in dialysis time and in the percentage of synthetic membranes used, as well as in the supply of intravenous iron, would be justified.
...
PMID:[Results of the international hemodialysis study DOPPS in Spain and Europe]. 1465 70
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) frequently complicates hepatic cirrhosis secondary to viral infection or iron overload. Therefore, patients affected by thalassaemia syndromes have a theoretically high risk of developing the tumour. We collected data on patients attending Italian centres for the treatment of thalassaemia. Twenty-two cases of HCC were identified; 15 were male. At diagnosis, the mean age was 45 +/- 11 years and the mean serum
ferritin
was 1764 +/- 1448 microg/l. Eighty-six percent had been infected by
hepatitis C
virus. Nineteen of 22 cases were diagnosed after 1993, suggesting that this problem is becoming more frequent with the aging population of thalassaemia patients.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma in the thalassaemia syndromes. 1467 16
Hepatitis C
virus (HCV) infection is a common cause of liver disease in thalassemia major patients in Western, especially Mediterranean, countries. Its significance in thalassemic patients from Southeast Asia has not been critically evaluated. In this report, we describe our study of the prevalence of HCV infection among Thai patients with thalassemia. The relationships of the infection to blood transfusion and the infection's effects on liver function have also been determined. Of the 104 patients studied, 21 (20.2%) tested positively by enzyme immunoassay for anti-HCV antibody, whereas only 2 patients (2%) had the hepatitis B surface antigen. There was no significant relationship between the presence of anti-HCV antibodies and the number and frequency of blood transfusions. In fact, 2 patients (10%) who tested positive for anti-HCV antibodies had never received transfusions. Patients with anti-HCV antibodies had significantly abnormal liver functions, such as higher levels of serum aspartate aminotransferase (SGOT) and alanine aminotransferase (SGPT) and lower levels of serum albumin, compared with patients without anti-HCV antibodies (P = .021, .017, and .004, respectively). However, there were also significant correlations between iron status as indicated by transferrin saturation or serum
ferritin
levels and SGOT, SGPT, and gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT) levels. Moreover, abnormal liver function as represented by elevated levels of SGOT, SGPT, GGT, and serum alkaline phosphatase was observed more frequently in patients with iron overload than in patients with a lower degree of iron burden. The presence of HCV did not alter the effects of iron overload on liver function. The findings suggest that both HCV and iron overload are the main causes of abnormal liver function in Thai patients with thalassemia. The treatment of both problems, if coexisting in patients with thalassemia, is required to prevent progression to chronic liver disease.
...
PMID:Prevalence and clinical significance of hepatitis C virus infection in Thai patients with thalassemia. 1468 98
Hepatitis C
virus (HCV) infection is common in patients with end-stage renal disease. The severity of liver damage, including fibrosis, in these cases varies widely. Although many investigators have searched for noninvasive alternatives to liver biopsy for evaluating the extent of liver fibrosis, no useful noninvasive predictors have been found. Currently, liver biopsy is essential to assess the degree of fibrosis. The aim of this retrospective study was to investigate a range of clinical and laboratory parameters in HCV-infected hemodialysis (HD) patients and identify possible predictors of fibrosis. Ninety-five consecutive HD patients with HCV infection underwent liver biopsy. Each specimen was evaluated for fibrosis stage. Correlations were sought between the degree of fibrosis and the age, HD duration, time since first possible HCV exposure, body mass index, HCV RNA titer, serum
ferritin
level, and serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) level. The analysis revealed no significant correlations between fibrosis stage and the parameters investigated (mean age: r =.017, P =.89; mean HD duration: r =.066, P =.576; body mass index r =.231, P =.152; HCV RNA titer: r =.015, P =.091; serum
ferritin
: r =.134, P =.32; serum ALT r =.108, P =.927). Links with serum ALT were reevaluated with upper normal levels arbitrarily set at 30 IU/L and 20 IU/L, but these analyses also revealed no correlations between fibrosis stage and ALT level (P =.98 and P =.449, respectively). Therefore liver biopsy is still essential for accurate assessment of liver pathology in HD patients with HCV.
...
PMID:Investigation of possible clinical and laboratory predictors of liver fibrosis in hemodialysis patients infected with hepatitis C virus. 1501 98
A 54-year-old man of Persian origin presented to our department with a 1-year history of ulcers on the right leg that had been unresponsive to numerous topical treatments, accompanied by lymphedema of the right leg. Medical history included hypergonadotropic hypogonadism, which had not been further investigated. He was treated for 20 years with testosterone IM once monthly, which he stopped a year before the current hospitalization for unclear reasons. The patient reported no congenital lymphedema. Physical examination revealed two deep skin ulcers (Figure 1) on the right leg measuring 10 cm in diameter with raised irregular inflammatory borders and a boggy, necrotic base discharging a purulent hemorrhagic exudate. Bilateral leg pitting edema and right lymphangitis with lymphadenitis were noted. He had low head hair implantment, sparse hair on the body and head, hyperpigmentation on both legs, onychodystrophia of the toenails (mainly the large toe and less prominent on the other toes), which was atrophic lichen-planus-like in appearance and needed no trimming (Figure 2), normal hand nails, oral thrush, and angular cheilitis. Other physical findings were gynecomastia, pectus excavatum, small and firm testicles, long extremities, asymmetrical goiter, systolic murmur 2/6 in left sternal border, and slow and inappropriate behavior. The patient's temperature on admission was 39 degrees C. Blood cultures were negative for bacterial growth. Results of laboratory investigations included hemoglobin (11.2 g/dL), hematocrit (26.8%), normal mean corpuscular volume and mean corpuscular hemoglobin volume, and red blood cell distribution width (16%). Blood smear showed spherocytes, slight hypochromia, anisocytosis, macrocytosis, and microcytosis. Blood chemistry values were taken for iron (4 micro g/dL [normal range 40-150 micro g/dL]), transferrin (193 mg/dL [normal range 220-400 mg/dL]),
ferritin
(1128 ng/mL [normal range 14-160 ng/mL]), transferrin saturation (1.5% [normal range 20%-55%]), serum folate (within normal limits), and vitamin B12 (within normal limits). Direct Coombs' test equaled positive 2 + IgG. All these values indicated anemia of chronic diseases combined with hemolytic anemia. Further blood work-up tested antinuclear antibody (positive <1:80 homogeneous pattern), rheumatoid factors (143 IU/mL [positive >8.5 IU/mL]), C-reactive protein (286 mg/L [normal range 0-5 mg/L]), anticardiolipin IgM antibody (9.0 monophosphoryl lipid U/mL [normal range 0-7.00 MPL U/mL]) and antithrombin III activity (135% [normal range 74%-114%]). Results of other blood tests were within normal limits or negative, including lupus anticoagulant, beta2 glycoprotein, anticardiolipin IgG Ab, anti-ss DNA Ab, C3, C4, anti-RO, anti-LA, anti-SC-70, anti-SM Ab, P-ANCA, C-ANCA, TSH, FT4, anti-T microsomal, antithyroglobulin, protein C activity, protein S free, cryoglobulins, serum immunoelectrophoresis, VDRL,
hepatitis C
antibodies, hepatitis B antigen, and human immunodeficiency virus. Endocrinological work-up examined luteinizing hormone (22.9 mIU/mL [normal range for adult men 0.8-6 mIU/mL]), follicle stimulating hormone (49.7 mIU/mL [normal range for adult men 1-11 mIU/mL]), testosterone (0.24 ng/mL [normal range for adult men 2.5-8.0 ng/mL]), bioavailable testosterone (0.02 ng/mL [normal range for adult men >0.6 ng/mL]), and percent bioavailable test (8.1% [normal value >20%]). These results indicate hypergonadotropic hypogonadism. Plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 was 6 U (normal value 5-20 U/mL). Karyotyping performed by G-banding technique revealed a 47 XXY karyotype, which is diagnostic of Klinefelter's syndrome. Doppler ultrasound of the leg ulcers disclosed partial thrombus in the distal right femoral vein. X-rays and bone scan displayed osteomyelitis along the right tibia. Histological examination of a 4-mm punch biopsy from the ulcer border revealed hyperkeratosis, acanthosis, hypergranulosis, and mixed inflammatory infiltrate containing eosinophils compatible with chronic ulcer. Multiple vessels were seen, compatible with a healing process. Direct immunofluorescence of the biopsy revealed granular IgM in the dermo-epidermal junction. Indirect immunofluorescence was negative. Thyroid function tests showed normal thyroid stimulating hormone and free throxine4. Multinodular goiter was seen on thyroid scan and ultrasound. Thyroid fine needle aspiration was compatible with multinodular goiter (normal follicular cells, free colloid, macrophages with pigment). IV treatment with amoxicillin-clavulanic acid 1 g t.i.d. was administered for 2 weeks, with a decrease in temperature and normalization of the leukocyte level. Oral antibiotic treatment with amoxicillin-clavulanic acid was continued for 10 more days, followed by 25 days of ciprofloxacin for the osteomyelitis. Local treatment included saline soakings followed by application of Promogran (Johnson & Johnson, New Brunswick, NJ) and Kaltostat (ConvaTec Ltd., a Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, New York, NY) with slight improvement. At the same time, the patient was treated with warfarin sodium due to deep vein thrombosis under international normalized ratio 2-3. The patient was treated with IM testosterone once monthly for 1 year, which resulted in a reduction in the diameter and depth of the leg ulcers (Figure 3). Blood tests were not performed for follow-up of the immune state.
...
PMID:Klinefelter's syndrome presenting with leg ulcers. 1536 65
We report on four cases displaying the wide range of aetiological risk factors (presence or absence of family history of dyslipidaemia and cryptogenic cirrhosis, from subnormal body mass index through morbid obesity, from absent through hepatotoxic alcohol consumption), laboratory test results (from subnormal through elevated uric acid and
ferritin
values), ultrasonographic changes (from normal findings through 'bright liver' with or without attenuation of ultrasound beam and absence/presence of focal lesions), and histological severity of steatohepatitis (fibrosis appearing to be inversely related to the amount of liver fat but zone 3 accentuation of lesions and ballooning being observed in all cases). Cases illustrate the concepts of overlapping aetiologies of steatohepatitis (
hepatitis C
, diabetes and lipodystrophy); the relationships between cryptogenic cirrhosis, familial cirrhosis, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and hepatocellular carcinoma; familial hypobetalipoproteinaemia as an aetiology of steatohepatitis; and alcoholic liver disease in the obese. These issues, which are worthy of future investigation, are reviewed.
...
PMID:The wide spectrum of steatohepatitis: a report of four cases and a review of the literature. 1537 30
Although cardiac complications remain the main causes of death in thalassemic patients, right heart dysfunction has been little studied and the mechanism is still unclear. Echocardiography was performed in 39 patients with beta-thalassemia major and 35 aged-matched controls. The gender, age, heart rate, blood pressure, left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), acceleration time (AcT) of right ventricular outflow and right ventricular ejection time (RVET), AcT/RVET, and the presence of tricuspid regurgitation (TR) were compared between the two groups. We also compared the gender, age, age at first blood transfusion, serum
ferritin
level, alanine aminotransferase (ALT), the presence of antibodies to
hepatitis C
virus, liver fibrosis, splenectomy, platelet counts, diabetes mellitus, arrhythmia, cardiomegaly, LVEF, AcT, RVET, AcT/RVET, and signal intensity ratio (SIR) of myocardial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) between thalassemic patients with and without TR. The incidence of TR in thalassemic patients was significantly higher than that in the control group (30.8 vs 11.4%, p=0.03). The incidences of splenectomy (p=0.03), platelet counts (p=0.01), and SIR of myocardial MRI (p=0.03) in thalassemic patients with TR were significantly higher than in those without TR. The AcT was shorter and the AcT/RVET ratio was smaller, suggesting higher pulmonary pressure in the thalassemic patients with TR. Occurrence of TR in patients with beta-thalassemia major may be a consequence of cardiac iron deposit, thrombocytosis, splenectomy, or pulmonary hypertension.
...
PMID:Tricuspid regurgitation in patients with beta-thalassemia major. 1544 31
Hepatitis C
virus (HCV) is the main cause of hepatocellular carcinoma in industrialized countries. HCV-HIV-1 co-infection occurs frequently among users of illicit intravenous drugs, thereby increasing the severity of HIV disease and the evolution of chronic active hepatitis towards cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. The present work shows that THP-1 monocytoid cells are susceptible to HCV infection, of strain 1b, and that this strain can induce cellular modifications in this cell line. Infection of HCV was demonstrated by positivity for the E2 antigen within THP-1 cells and by indirect immunofluorescence; moreover, HCV-RNA was detected in supernatants of THP-1 cells from day 7 post-inoculation. Cell shape and membrane surface antigens varied upon viral infection, which is also capable of inducing oxygen radicals. In particular we underline the relevant intracellular accumulation of
ferritin
that paralleled an increase of cell surface expression of the transferrin receptor. Evaluation of cellular events upon HCV infection in THP-1 cells may represent a useful tool with which to identify alteration in monocytes metabolism and to study therapeutic approaches for such alterations.
...
PMID:Effect of HCV infection on THP-1 monocytoid cells. 1551 25
Twelve thalassaemia major patients have been given deferiprone 75 mg/kg body weight daily as iron chelation therapy for 5 years. Their ages ranged from 18 to 34 years (mean 24.2) at the end of the study. Two patients were
hepatitis C
virus (HCV) mRNA positive and a further 5 were positive for HCV antibody. The mean serum
ferritin
level fell significantly from 4,302 +/- 2,245 microg/l SD at baseline to 3,032 +/- 1,155 microg/l at 2 years (p = 0.037) and 2,229 +/- 1,070 microg/l (p = 0.007) at 5 years. At the end of the study, liver iron ranged from 3.59 to 23.7 mg/g dry weight (mean 11.9 +/- 5.4), 3 patients having levels >15 mg/g. There was no significant change in serum AST levels, but ALT levels fell significantly at 2 years (p = 0.019) and 5 years (p = 0.001). Liver biopsy at the end of the study showed no evidence of hepatic fibrosis caused by deferiprone. Cardiac studies showed no overall change in left ventricular ejection fraction but a significant improvement in isovolumic relaxation time (p = 0.045). We conclude that in this albeit small group of thalassaemia major patients, deferiprone was a safe long-term method of iron chelation. In a minority, higher doses of deferiprone or a combination with desferrioxamine would be needed to lower liver iron below 15 mg/g.
...
PMID:Five-year trial of deferiprone chelation therapy in thalassaemia major patients. 1556 27
The role of hepatocyte steatosis in interferon (IFN) resistance is still unclear, especially in patients infected with
hepatitis C
virus (HCV) genotype 2a. The present study was conducted in 364 consecutive non-cirrhotic naive patients infected with genotype 2a, who were evaluated for the severity of steatosis and response to IFN monotherapy after a 24-week median duration of therapy. The patients were examined for factors associated with steatosis and treatment efficacy according to the grade of steatosis. Early viral kinetics was also evaluated in 64 patients for predictors of response to therapy. Nine IFN-resistant patients were assessed for the relationship between amino acid sequence of HCV core region/NS5A and severity of steatosis. Multivariate analysis identified two independent factors associated with steatosis; serum
ferritin
> or =200 microg/l and body mass index > or =25.0 kg/m(2). The sustained virological response rate in patients with high-grade steatosis was significantly lower than in the low-grade group. Study of early viral kinetics showed a significantly lower cumulative HCV-RNA negative rate for the high-grade than low-grade steatosis group. Sequence analysis of HCV core region/NS5A in IFN-resistant patients with or without steatosis failed to identify steatosis-specific amino acid substitutions associated with resistance. This study of HCV genotype 2a suggested that steatosis is associated with excess iron storage, and that it is an important predictor of efficacy of IFN monotherapy. Further large-scale studies are warranted to examine the role of amino acid substitutions on IFN resistance specific for steatosis.
...
PMID:Hepatocyte steatosis is an important predictor of response to interferon (IFN) monotherapy in Japanese patients infected with HCV genotype 2a: Virological features of IFN-resistant cases with hepatocyte steatosis. 1571 92
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