Search results for "Cholangitis"
showing 10 items of 61 documents
Extended analysis of a genome-wide association study in primary sclerosing cholangitis detects multiple novel risk loci
2012
Background & Aims: A limited number of genetic risk factors have been reported in primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC). To discover further genetic susceptibility factors for PSC, we followed up on,a second tier of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from a genome-wide association study (GWAS). Methods: We analyzed 45 SNPs in 1221 PSC cases and 3508 controls. The association results from the replication analysis and the original GWAS (715 PSC cases and 2962 controls) were combined in a meta-analysis comprising 1936 PSC cases and 6470 controls. We performed an analysis of bile microbial community composition in 39 PSC patients by 16S rRNA sequencing. Results: Seventeen SNPs representing 1…
Bile duct epithelia as target cells in primary biliary cirrhosis and primary sclerosing cholangitis.
1997
Primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) and primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) are chronic autoimmune-mediated diseases of the biliary tree, resulting in a loss of bile ducts. There are morphological features that clearly distinguish them from each other: in PBC, there is overt destruction of the bile ducts with disruption of the basement membrane; in PSC there is abundant periductular fibrosis with shrinkage and subsequent loss of the bile ducts. In order to see if the disparate histopathology is paralleled by different immunohistology we looked at a panel of epitopes on bile duct epithelia especially to see if biliary epithelial cells may present as targets for cell mediated immune response. In…
A novel rat model of chronic fibrosing cholangitis induced by local administration of a hapten reagent into the dilated bile duct is associated with …
2000
Abstract Background/Aim: The cholangiopathies represent hepatobiliary diseases in which bile-duct epithelial cells are targets for destructive processes, including immune-mediated damage. We describe a novel rat model of chronic fibrosing cholangitis induced by administration of the hapten reagent 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid (TNBS) into the dilated bile duct. Methods: The common bile duct was dilated due to a mild stenosis in 8-week-old female Lewis rats. TNBS (50 mg/kg) was injected during a second laparotomy. Results: TNBS-treatment reproducibly resulted in chronic fibrosing cholangitis. In retrograde cholangiography the bile ducts showed irregularities, beading and strictures. Alk…
Regulation of organic anion transporters in a new rat model of acute and chronic cholangitis resembling human primary sclerosing cholangitis
2002
Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is a cholestatic liver disease of unknown etiology. Although the primary defect affects cholangiocytes, cholestatic injury of hepatocytes may promote further liver damage. Since down-regulation of hepatocellular organic anion transporters is implicated in the molecular pathogenesis of cholestasis, expression of these transporters was determined in a novel rat model, which closely resembles human PSC.Hepatic protein and mRNA expression of basolateral (Ntcp, Oatp1, 2 and 4) and canalicular (Mrp2, Bsep) organic anion transporters were analyzed 1, 4 and 12 weeks after induction of experimental PSC by 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid (TNBS).Specific down-re…
IgG4 Related Syndrome: Another Multiorgan Disease in the Interest Field of Internal Medicine.
2016
BACKGROUND: IgG4-related disease is a rare, clinical and pathologic disease entity of unknown etiology. Its main features are increased serum concentrations of IgG4 > 1,35 g/l, lymphocyte and IgG4+plasma-cell infiltration within tissues, fibrosis or sclerosis. The classical presentation of IgG4-RSD is pancreatitis which is combined with the involvement of biliary ducts in 74 percent of patients. Extrapancreatic manifestations include: abdominal or mediastinal lymphadenopathy; the involvement of salivary glands and lacrimal glands, kidneys, lung, retroperitoneum. Since IgG4-related disease is a multiorgan lymphoproliferative syndrome, it requires a careful differential diagnosis from othe…
Five cases of de novo inflammatory bowel disease after orthotopic liver transplantation.
2006
Immunosuppression is currently the treatment of choice for severe inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Thus, it was anticipated that the course of preexisting IBD should improve after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). Despite sufficient allograft immunosuppressive therapy, however, exacerbation of IBD or the development of de novo IBD after OLT were described in some cases, primarily in patients transplanted for end-stage primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC). In addition, the development of de novo IBD in patients undergoing OLT for indications other than PSC was described. Evaluating our collective of 314 liver transplanted patients we found five patients transplanted for various indica…
Effect of different doses of ursodeoxycholic acid in chronic liver disease
1989
Recent clinical studies have indicated that ursodeoxycholic acid (ursodiol), administered at dosages ranging between 10 and 15 mg/kg/day, improves liver function indices in both cholestatic and inflammatory chronic liver diseases. These dosages would be considered high for the use of ursodiol in gallstone dissolution therapy. To investigate the dose-response relationship to ursodiol administration, we planned a few studies in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), and chronic hepatitis (CH). Patients with PBC were subdivided into two groups on the basis of their serum bilirubin values, with 2 mg/dl as the dividing line. Ursodiol was given at dos…
Mutational Characterization of the Bile Acid Receptor TGR5 in Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis
2010
Background: TGR5, the G protein-coupled bile acid receptor 1 (GPBAR1), has been linked to inflammatory pathways as well as bile homeostasis, and could therefore be involved in primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) a chronic inflammatory bile duct disease. We aimed to extensively investigate TGR5 sequence variation in PSC, as well as functionally characterize detected variants.Methodology/Principal Findings: Complete resequencing of TGR5 was performed in 267 PSC patients and 274 healthy controls. Six nonsynonymous mutations were identified in addition to 16 other novel single-nucleotide polymorphisms. To investigate the impact from the nonsynonymous variants on TGR5, we created a receptor mod…
Risk factors of de novo malignancies after liver transplantation: a French national study on 11004 adult patients.
2021
International audience; Background: After liver transplantation (LT),de novo malignancies are one of the leading causes of late mortality. The aim of the present retrospective study was to identify the risk factors of de novo malignancies in a large cohort of LT recipients in France, using Fine and Gray competing risks regression analysis.Methods: The study population consisted in 11004 adults transplanted between 2000 and 2013, who had no history of pre-transplant malignancy, except primary liver tumor. A Cox model adapted to the identification of prognostic factors (competitive risks) was used.Results: From the entire cohort, one (or more)de novo malignancy was reported in 1480 L T recipi…