Release of prostanoids into the portal and hepatic vein in patients with chronic liver disease.
Arterial and hepatovenous concentrations of circulating prostaglandin E2 and prostaglandin F2 alpha, the stable metabolites of prostacyclin and thromboxane A2 were measured in patients with chronic liver disease and compared with those in control patients with coronary artery disease but without hepatic dysfunction. Specific radioimmunoassays were used after extraction on octadecyl C 18-silica gel columns and thin-layer chromatography. While low levels of all cyclooxygenase products were found in hepatic arterial blood in patients with proven cirrhosis (n = 10) and fibrosis (n = 8), significantly higher concentrations were detected in the hepatic vein. A similar concentration profile was observed in controls (n = 4). Thus, there is a marked but comparable release of prostanoids from the normal as well as the diseased liver. Hepatovenous prostaglandin E2 was 11.6-fold, prostaglandin F2 alpha was 7.5-fold, prostacyclin was 12.2.-fold and thromboxane B2 was 3.9-fold above the level in the artery in both groups of patients. The hepatovenous concentrations of all arachinodate metabolites were unrelated to changes of liver morphology, biochemical abnormalities or the presence of ascites. No correlation could be demonstrated between hepatic venous pressure gradient and the concentration of prostanoids in the hepatic vein with the exception of thromboxane B2 (r = 0.55, p less than 0.05). The occurrence of esophageal varices was not associated with a specific pattern of circulating prostanoids in the posthepatic vasculature. Moreover, the portal-venous concentrations of all prostanoids (five patients: two with fibrosis, three with cirrhosis) exceeded the level in the hepatic vein substantially.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)[1]References
- Release of prostanoids into the portal and hepatic vein in patients with chronic liver disease. Wernze, H., Tittor, W., Goerig, M. Hepatology (1986) [Pubmed]
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