chronic alcoholic
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

617
(FIVE YEARS 83)

H-INDEX

44
(FIVE YEARS 2)

2021 ◽  
Vol 100 (12) ◽  
pp. 1495-1501
Author(s):  
Yaroslav A. Leshchenko ◽  
Aleksandr A. Lisovtsov

Introduction. The concepts of the epidemiological transition and types of population health are applied to analyzing and evaluating the sanitary and epidemiological status of the population. Materials and methods. For many years of mortality, the dynamics of the male population of the Irkutsk region standardized indicators were used (European age standard). For identifying trends of changing mortality rates, an analytical alignment of the time series was used. It was a linear model by EXCEL’s standard tools (Microsoft Office 2007). The significance of the trend equation was calculated using F-test in IBM SPSS Statistics 23 (p < 0,05). Results. It has been established that the formation of various types of pathology and caused by this pathology mortality occurred under the influence of factors of different nature in the process of changes in social, environmental, epidemiological situations in the region. In the 1990 th and the first half of the 2000 th, high mortality rates in the class of diseases of the circulatory system and the class of external causes of morbidity and mortality were determined mainly by psychosocial disadvantage factors. By the class of Diseases of the respiratory system, there was noted a steady decrease in mortality rate from chronic diseases of the lower respiratory tract and pneumonia. It was probably due to an increase in the level and quality of medical care. A steady tendency to increase intensive and extensive mortality rates by class of Certain infectious and parasitic diseases was seen. That was caused by negative changes in infectious and epidemic processes under the influence of man-made pollution was noted. During 2005 - 2015 the digestive system’s share of the class of Diseases in the mortality structure increased. That is due to the prevalence of alcoholic liver disease, chronic alcoholic pancreatitis, complications of the ulcer of the stomach and duodenum. Conclusion. The combination of the identified patterns of the formation of intensive and extensive mortality rates determined by exogenous and endogenous factors made it possible to characterize the situation in the Irkutsk region as a relative sanitary and epidemiological disadvantage of the population.


Author(s):  
Ranjit S. Ambad ◽  
Suryakant Nagtilak ◽  
Gangaram Bhadarge ◽  
Meghali Kaple

Introduction: Excessive alcohol consumption is a global healthcare problem with enormous social, economic, and clinical consequences, accounting for 3.3 million deaths in 2012. Glutathione (GSH) is tri-peptide thiol with chemical name γ glutamyl-cysteinyl-glycine the properties of glutathione are conferred to it by highly reactive thiol present in one of its constituent amino acids- cysteine, hence they referred as GSH. Xenobiotics form thioether (-S) linkage with GSH. The reaction is catalysed by enzyme known as glutathione S Transferases (GSTs). The cytoplasmic GSTs are important in the xenobiotic metabolism and are present in higher concentration in liver. Materials and Methods: The present study was conducted in the Dept. of Biochemistry in collaboration with Dept. of General Medicine at Datta Meghe Medical College, Nagpur. In present study includes 40 diagnosed alcoholic liver disease patients and 40 non-alcoholic healthy subjects as control group who are permanent nt of study area. Results: The level of GST was raised in chronic alcoholic patients i.e. study group (43.25±15.94) as compare to control group (1.57±0.55). At the other hand the level of total thiol were decreased in study group (3.12±0.55) as compare to control group. Conclusions: The strong negative association between glutathione-s-transferase (GST) and total thiol (T-SH) levels suggested that as the concentration of total thiol (T-SH) decreased, glutathione-s-transferase activity increased (GST). This may be attributed to an increase in alcohol-induced oxidative stress and increased T-SH utilization from thiols.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clara Perrin ◽  
Vinciane Rebours ◽  
Nicolas Trainel ◽  
Cosmin Sebastian Voican ◽  
Gabriel Perlemuter ◽  
...  

Introduction: Patients with alcoholic hepatitis have an increase in cytolysin-producing Enterococcus faecalis that correlates with disease severity and mortality. Aim: To determine whether patients with chronic alcoholic pancreatitis have an elevated abundance of cytolysin-producing E. faecalis. Methods: Quantification by qPCR of cytolysin-producing E. faecalis in controls and patients with alcoholic hepatitis or pancreatitis. Results: Patients with alcoholic pancreatitis had a higher proportion of intestinal cytolysin-positive E. faecalis than healthy controls and patients with alcoholic hepatitis. Conclusion: Cytolytic E. faecalis may also be involved in this other alcohol-related complication and benefit from targeted microbiota editing strategies.


Caryologia ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Areshidze ◽  
Yuri Kirillov ◽  
Lyudmila Makartseva ◽  
Maria Kozlova ◽  
Igor Chernov ◽  
...  

The features of the diurnal dynamics of the area of rat hepatocyte nuclei and their ploidy were studied under conditions of a standart (fixed) light regime and constant illumination, as well as under chronic exposure to alcohol in the mentioned light regimes. It has been shown that exposure to alcohol and exposure to constant illumination separately lead to a change in the amplitude-phase characteristics of the circadian rhythm of the nucleus area, while the combined effect of these factors leads to a complete destruction of the rhythm, which indicates a violation of adaptation processes. An increase in the average ploidy of hepatocyte nuclei in chronic alcohol intoxication is also shown, while in animals kept under constant illumination without drinking alcohol, the values of this parameter decrease, which indicates a successful course of the adaptation process. The conducted research indicates that the results of karyometric and ploidometric analysis characterize the degree of influence of alcohol intoxication and changes in the light regime on the liver of rats, reflecting the rate of efficiency of adaptation to these factors.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Liang Ming ◽  
Bule Qi ◽  
Shiqi Hao ◽  
Rimutu Ji

AbstractCamel milk (CM) is considered to protect the liver in the practice of traditional medicine in nomadic areas. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the effects of CM on the hepatic biochemical and multiple omics alterations induced by chronic alcoholic liver disease (ALD). An intragastric gavage mice Lieber DeCarli + Gao binge model (NIAAA model) was employed to investigate the inflammatory mechanism of camel milk on the liver tissue of mice. A gut microbiota of the feces of mice and transcriptomic and proteomic analyses of the liver of mice were performed. Analysis of serum and liver biochemical indexes revealed that camel milk not only prevents alcohol-induced colonic dysfunction and lipid accumulation, but also regulates oxidative stress and inflammatory cytokine production to protect against chronic ALD in mouse. The gut microbial community of mice treated with camel milk was more similar to the untreated control group than to the model group, indicating that the intake of camel milk pre- and post-alcohol gavage effectively prevents and alleviates the intestinal microbial disorder caused by chronic alcoholism in mice. Furthermore, the results of the transcriptomic and proteomic analyses of the liver tissue showed that camel milk can improve alcoholic liver injury in mice by regulating inflammatory factors and immune system disruptions. This study provides insights into the molecular mechanism by which camel milk can be developed as a potential functional food with no side effects and against liver injury.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongkun Lin ◽  
Xiaoping Guo ◽  
Jingjing Liu ◽  
Peiyi Liu ◽  
Guibin Mei ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Chronic alcohol consumption induces lipophagy retard which contributes the pathogenesis of liver steatosis. Lipophagy-related Rab7 responsible for the fusion between autophagosomes and lysosomes has been presumed as a crucial regulator on the progression of alcohol liver disease (ALD) despite elusive mechanisms. More importantly, whether hepatoprotective quercetin targets Rab7-associated lipophagy disorder or not, still remains uncertain. Results: ALD mice were induced by chronic-plus-single-binge ethanol feeding that manifested by hampering autophagosomes formation with lipid droplets (LDs) and fuse with lysosomes compared with the normal control, which was normalized partially by quercetin. GST-RILP pulldown assay of Rab7 indicated an improved GTP-Rab7 as quercetin treatment for ethanol-feeding mice. Lipophagy was blocked when HepG2 cells were transfected with siRNA-Rab7, which was reversed through co-transfection of Rab7Wt plasmid. Rab7-specific inhibitor CID1067700 aggravated ethanol-induced steatosis and autophagic flux disruption visualized by immunofluorescence co-localization analysis and mCherry-GFP-LC3 transfection. HepG2 cells overexpressing Rab7Wt show a stronger alleviation on alcohol-induced lipophagy dysfunction than Rab7Q67L. Furthermore, TBC1D5 responsible for Rab7 inactivation was downregulated after alcohol administration, but regained by quercetin. Rab7 circulation retarded by ethanol and corrected by quercetin was further revealed by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP). Conclusions: Chronic alcoholic not only inactivates Rab7 but also retards TBC1D5-mediated Rab7 turnover, synergistically obstructing lipophagy flux and promoting ethanol-induced steatosis. Quercetin attenuates adipohepatic degeneration by normalizing ethanol-imposed Rab7 disorders and subsequent lipophagy disturbance, highlighting a novel mechanism and promising prospect of quercetin-like phytochemicals against the crucial first hit from the alcohol.


2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 23-30
Author(s):  
N. S. Shcheglova ◽  
E. O. Zinovyeva ◽  
B. S. Shenkman

In Russia, there is a high level of alcohol consumption among women in doses that represent a high risk of developing alcoholic diseases, manifested, in particular, by damage to skeletal muscles.The purpose of the study. Analysis of clinical, biochemical, neurophysiological, as well as morphometric and immunohistochemical features of alcoholic skeletal muscle damage in women with chronic alcohol intoxication.Material and methods. A clinical and laboratory examination of 30 women aged 20 to 60 years with chronic alcohol intoxication was performed, which included the determination of creatine phosphokinase (CPK) and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) in blood plasma, stimulation and needle electromyography (EMG), as well as morphological and immunohistochemical examination of biopsies of the quadriceps femoris.Results. Myopathic syndrome in the form of proximal para-or tetraparesis was observed in 73.3% of the examined women in combination with a decrease in IGF-1 at normal values of CPK in blood plasma. The EMG results indicated the absence of changes in the parameters of the potentials of motor units, characteristic of primary muscular lesions, and of conduction disturbances along the femoral nerve. Morphometric and immunohistochemical studies of skeletal muscle biopsies showed a decrease in the cross-sectional area of muscle fibers of types I and II without signs of muscle tissue necrosis.Conclusion. Chronic alcoholic myopathy is a common manifestation of alcoholic disease in women with long-term alcohol intoxication. The severity of the atrophic process in the skeletal muscle is comparable to the degree of proximal paresis. Violations of systemic protein synthesis and acceleration of apoptosis are considered as pathogenetic mechanisms of the atrophic process in the muscles in chronic alcoholic myopathy in women.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (28) ◽  
pp. 2562-2566
Author(s):  
Jayalatha Nethagani ◽  
Priyanka Govula ◽  
Revathi Chandu ◽  
Pravin Raj T

A 36-year-old non-smoker, chronic alcoholic female presented with recurrent episodes of epigastric pain and vomiting in the last 10 days. H/o similar episodes of pain 3 times, with last episode was noted 2 months back. She also had history of vomiting (3 episodes). Jaundice/melena/steatorrheas was not observed. Subsequently, contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CECT) of the patient was done and it showed well defined multiple cystic lesions with peripheral wall enhancement involving head and body of pancreas, largest measuring 24 X 22 X 22 mm in the head of the pancreas, the lesion was seen abutting antro-pyloric region anteriorly. Main pancreatic is mildly dilated measuring 4 mm in diameter. A well-defined heterogeneously hypodense (necrotic) para duodenal lesion, was noted inferior to uncinate process, m/s 22 X 20 X 20 mm, which is indicative of lymph nodal deposit. On magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP): few cystic lesions were seen scattered in the pancreatic parenchyma, with one of the cysts showing communication with main pancreatic duct (MPD) ab.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document