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JournalISSN: 0556-6177

Revista de medicina de la Universidad de Navarra 

University of Navarre
About: Revista de medicina de la Universidad de Navarra is an academic journal. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Cancer & Population. It has an ISSN identifier of 0556-6177. Over the lifetime, 556 publications have been published receiving 4110 citations.


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Journal Article
TL;DR: Parcellation of the entorhinal cortex in man is largely parallel to that arrived at in the monkey, which provides a rational basis for the application to clinical problems of anatomical and functional information obtained in experimental work in nonhuman primates.

243 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: The results suggest that PBC is characterized by diminished expression of AE2 in the liver, a cholestatic condition frequently associated with pluriglandular exocrine failure and reduced levels of this transporter protein might be involved in the pathogenesis of Cholestasis in PBC.
Abstract: Chloride‐bicarbonate anion exchanger 2 (AE2) is expressed in a variety of tissues, including the liver and salivary glands, where it may participate in the generation of hydroionic fluxes into secretions. We have previously reported decreased hepatic levels of AE2 messenger RNA in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), a cholestatic condition frequently associated with pluriglandular exocrine failure. Here we investigated the expression of AE2 protein in the liver of PBC patients. Using a monoclonal antibody against an AE2 peptide, immunohistochemistry was performed on liver biopsy specimens from subjects with normal liver (n = 7), patients with PBC (n = 13), and patients with cirrhosis or cholestasis other than PBC (n = 17 and 11, respectively). Immunostaining was graded from 0 to 7, according to its intensity and distribution. AE2 immunoreactivity was observed in normal livers, as previously reported, and in many pathological liver biopsy specimens, being mainly restricted to canaliculi and the luminal membrane of terminal and interlobular bile ducts. Canalicular and ductular scores were significantly reduced in the PBC group compared with each control group (normal liver and cirrhosis or cholestasis other than PBC), whereas no differences in immunoreactivity scores were observed among control groups. When four patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) were analyzed, they also differed from those with PBC. These results suggest that PBC is characterized by diminished expression of AE2 in the liver. Reduced levels of this transporter protein might be involved in the pathogenesis of cholestasis in PBC.

176 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: In this article, the antiphospholipid antibody test was found to be positive more frequently in the group of patients with chronic hepatitis C than in healthy controls (1.9% vs. 0.9%.
Abstract: Antiphospholipid antibodies are a type of autoantibodies that have been implicated in the occurrence of thrombocytopenia and thrombotic events and have been described in autoimmune disorders and diverse viral diseases. In this study anticardiolipin antibodies (immunoglobulin G [IgG] isotype) were determined in serum from 100 patients with chronic hepatitis C and 52 healthy controls. In addition, hepatitis C virus (HCV) markers (anti‐HCV and HCV RNA) were investigated in 73 patients with thrombotic disorders and no clinical evidence of liver disease; of these patients 37 cases tested negatively for anticardiolipin antibodies and 36 positively. Anticardiolipin test was positive more frequently (22%) in the group of patients with chronic hepatitis C than in healthy controls (1.9%; P < .001). Using conditional logistic‐regression analysis we found that in hepatitis C patients the presence of thrombocytopenia, portal hypertension and the existence of prior thrombotic episodes were significantly related to positivity for anticardiolipin antibodies (P < .05 in all cases). In patients with no evidence of liver disease and a history of thrombotic events, hepatitis C markers were absent in all cases who tested negatively for anticardiolipin antibodies (n = 37), but were present in 16.7% of those positive for anticardiolipin (n = 36) (P = .01). In conclusion, anticardiolipin antibodies are frequently found in patients with chronic hepatitis C and in these patients they may be implicated in the occurrence of thrombosis and in the development of thrombocytopenia. Occult HCV infection is present in a significant proportion of patients with thrombotic disorders and positive for anticardiolipin (the antiphospholipid syndrome).

173 citations

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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
2017180
201650
20141
20121
20095
200817