Schistosomiasis, in contrast to alcoholic liver disease, leads to presinusoidal hepatic fibrosis, which determines the prognosis of the disease. Because conventional liver function tests and liver biopsy specimens provide little information about the dynamics of the fibrotic process, we measured the serum concentrations of procollagen type III N-propeptide and procollagen type I C-propeptide, believed to mainly reflect collagen synthesis, and procollagen type IV C-propeptide and collagen type VI, two presumptive markers of collagen degradation. Determinations were performed in 15 healthy control subjects, 69 patients with various stages of infection with Schistosoma mansoni/Schistosoma haematobium (28 with an early active infection and no organ involvement, 27 with hepatosplenic involvement and 14 with complications of portal hypertension) and 16 patients with alcoholic cirrhosis. In addition, liver biopsy specimens were obtained from 30 schistosomal patients (18 with hepatosplenic involvement and 12 with complications of portal hypertension for histopathological grading and collagen histochemistry. Procollagen type III N-propeptide was significantly elevated in the three patient groups with schistosomiasis when compared with controls (p less than 0.01). Also, patients with higher histological grading showed significantly higher procollagen type III N-propeptide values (p less than 0.05). In alcoholic patients, procollagen type III N-propeptide was even higher and increased parallel to the severity of the disease, determined by using a combined clinical and laboratory index. Procollagen type I C-propeptide was only elevated in early infection (p less than 0.05) and steadily decreased with disease progression.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
There is a severe decrease of CD4+ lymphocytes of unknown origin in a patient with circumscribed intestinal protein loss after Fontan operation. Passive leakage of lymph fluid due to abnormal systemic venous pressure is not a sufficient explanation of the almost selective loss of CD4+ lymphocytes. Primary or secondary activation of the immune system may influence structural integrity and permeability of the intestinal wall and may play a triggering role in protein-losing enteropathy after the Fontan procedure.
Background Porphyria cutanea tarda (PCT) is regularly associated with changes in liver tissue. On the other hand, systematic investigations are lacking on whether there is a correlation between the severity of liver damage and chloroquine treatment.Patients and methods During a 20-year period, liver biopsies were obtained in 89 patients with PCT confirmed by biochemical analysis of urine and feces and low-dose chloroquine therapy. Seventeen patients with alcohol-induced liver disease were excluded. In 8 of 63 patients, only a single biopsy was available. Classification of liver damage was performed according to the Riedel score. Electron microscopy was available from 24 patients. In a second group of patients, the HFE status was investigated and Berlin blue stains of liver biopsies were performed.
ResultsThere was no correlation between the duration of cutaneous symptoms and liver pathology. After 12 months chloroquine treatment, 45 patients (81%) disclosed an improvement of liver pathology, nine (16%) had no change, and a worsening was observed in one patient (3%). All patients achieved a complete clinical and biochemical remission. In 13 of 16 patients with a relapse, there was again a deterioration of liver damage. Patients with HFE mutations had a significant higher risk (P < 0.05) for hepatic siderosis. Conclusions The severity of liver damage was not correlated with the disease duration.Chloroquine treatment resulted in PCT remission (clinical and biochemical) and in 81% to an improvement of liver morphology.
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