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Predictive value of whole blood chemiluminescence in patients with alcoholic hepatitis

✍ Scribed by Françoise Lunel; Beatrice Descamps-Latscha; Diane Descamps; Yves Le Charpentier; Patrick Grippon; Dominique Valla; Jean-François Cadranel; Johannes Trum; Pierre Opolon


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1990
Tongue
English
Weight
839 KB
Volume
12
Category
Article
ISSN
0270-9139

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✦ Synopsis


Recent reports suggest that ethanol metabolism leads to reactive oxygen intermediates that may be responsible for the lesions observed in alcoholic hepatitis. This study investigated the production of reactive oxygen intermediates in peripheral blood phagocytes of patients with alcoholic hepatitis and attempts to evaluate its predictive value. Using a luminol-dependent chemiluminescence method, reactive oxygen intermediate production was measured directly within microamounts of whole blood, both in the absence (basal chemiluminescence production) and in the presence of phagocyte-stimulating agents including latex, zymosan, phorbol myristate acetate and N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine. Thirty patients with well-documented and histologically proven alcoholic hepatitis were studied. Pugh's and Child's classification, Orrego's composite clinical and laboratory index and Maddrey's discriminant function were used to assess the prognosis of the liver disease. Patients were followed up monthly for 6 mo. Results were compared with those obtained in 17 patients with nonalcoholic liver disease and in 78 normal control subjects. Basal chemiluminescence production was significantly higher in patients with alcoholic hepatitis than in those with nonalcoholic liver disease and in normal subjects (p < 0.001). Chemiluminescence responses to latex, zymosan and phorbol myristate acetate were significantly lower in alcoholic hepatitis patients than in normal subjects (p < 0.001); however, when compared with nonalcoholic liver disease patients, these responses were significantly decreased only in the presence of zymosan (p < 0.05). Both basal chemiluminescence production (p < 0.001) and zymosan-induced chemiluminescence responses (p < 0.02) were closely related to alcoholic hepatitis prognosis indices (i.e., Pugh's and Child's classiiication, Orrego's composite clinical and laboratory


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Assessing severity of disease in patients with alcoholic hepatitis (AH) is useful for predicting mortality, guiding treatment decisions, and stratifying patients for therapeutic trials. The traditional disease-specific prognostic model used for this purpose is the Maddrey discriminant function (DF).