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Itch in Liver Disease: Facts and Speculations

Pruritus in hepatobiliary disease is commonly believed to be caused by retention of bile acids with their sequestration in the skin. HOwever, we have recently demonstrated that skin levels of bile acids in patients with cholestasis correlate poorly with pruritus. In this report, we present additiona...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ghent, Cameron N., Bloomer, Joseph R.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1979
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2595714/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/452625
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author Ghent, Cameron N.
Bloomer, Joseph R.
author_facet Ghent, Cameron N.
Bloomer, Joseph R.
author_sort Ghent, Cameron N.
collection PubMed
description Pruritus in hepatobiliary disease is commonly believed to be caused by retention of bile acids with their sequestration in the skin. HOwever, we have recently demonstrated that skin levels of bile acids in patients with cholestasis correlate poorly with pruritus. In this report, we present additional data concerning the relationship of pruritus to bile acid retention: (1) the urinary excretion of sulfated and nonsulfated bile acids was not significantly different in patients with cholestasis who itched compared to those who did not; (2) one patient with itch associated with a liver abscess had normal levels of bile acids in serum, skin, and urine; (3) patients with primary biliary cirrhosis who itched had lower serum bile acid levels than patients with mechanical biliary obstruction who did not itch. These studies support our premise that pruritus in hepatobiliary diseases is not directly related to bile acid retention. They suggest that the type of cholestatic disorder, and not simply the magnitude of the cholestasis, as estimated by the elevation of serum bile acids, is important. We propose that the agent responsible for pruritus is produced in response to cholestasis, possibly through activation of the alternate pathway of bile acid synthesis. Properties of the hypothetical pruritogen are discussed.
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spelling pubmed-25957142008-12-05 Itch in Liver Disease: Facts and Speculations Ghent, Cameron N. Bloomer, Joseph R. Yale J Biol Med Articles Pruritus in hepatobiliary disease is commonly believed to be caused by retention of bile acids with their sequestration in the skin. HOwever, we have recently demonstrated that skin levels of bile acids in patients with cholestasis correlate poorly with pruritus. In this report, we present additional data concerning the relationship of pruritus to bile acid retention: (1) the urinary excretion of sulfated and nonsulfated bile acids was not significantly different in patients with cholestasis who itched compared to those who did not; (2) one patient with itch associated with a liver abscess had normal levels of bile acids in serum, skin, and urine; (3) patients with primary biliary cirrhosis who itched had lower serum bile acid levels than patients with mechanical biliary obstruction who did not itch. These studies support our premise that pruritus in hepatobiliary diseases is not directly related to bile acid retention. They suggest that the type of cholestatic disorder, and not simply the magnitude of the cholestasis, as estimated by the elevation of serum bile acids, is important. We propose that the agent responsible for pruritus is produced in response to cholestasis, possibly through activation of the alternate pathway of bile acid synthesis. Properties of the hypothetical pruritogen are discussed. 1979 /pmc/articles/PMC2595714/ /pubmed/452625 Text en
spellingShingle Articles
Ghent, Cameron N.
Bloomer, Joseph R.
Itch in Liver Disease: Facts and Speculations
title Itch in Liver Disease: Facts and Speculations
title_full Itch in Liver Disease: Facts and Speculations
title_fullStr Itch in Liver Disease: Facts and Speculations
title_full_unstemmed Itch in Liver Disease: Facts and Speculations
title_short Itch in Liver Disease: Facts and Speculations
title_sort itch in liver disease: facts and speculations
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2595714/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/452625
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