ceruletide has been researched along with Liver-Diseases--Alcoholic* in 2 studies
1 trial(s) available for ceruletide and Liver-Diseases--Alcoholic
Article | Year |
---|---|
Bile acid levels in diagnosing mild liver disease. Fasting and postcholecystokinetic values.
In ten healthy controls and in ten patients with biopsy-proved mild liver disease, we studied fasting and postcholecystokinetic bile acid levels to assess their diagnostic value compared with standard liver tests. Cholecystokinetic bile acid elevation was standardized by evacuating the gallbladder with intramuscular ceruletide diethylamine (cholecystokinin decapeptide) in a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled crossover design. Radioimmunoassay of primary conjugated bile acids was adequately sensitive to separate controls from patients even on the basis of fasting serum bile acid levels. In both controls and patients, the 180-minute postcholecystokinetic bile acid time curve was significantly higher after ceruletide than after placebo. Nevertheless, neither this response nor any of the 30-minute postcholecystokinetic interval bile acid levels separated controls from patients better than the fasting bile acid values, which discriminated better than standard liver tests or the indocyanine green clearance at 20 minutes. Alanine aminotransferase separated the two groups with a sensitivity equal to fasting bile acid levels. Topics: Bile Acids and Salts; Ceruletide; Clinical Trials as Topic; Double-Blind Method; Fasting; Gallbladder; Humans; Kinetics; Liver Diseases, Alcoholic; Liver Function Tests; Male; Radioimmunoassay; Random Allocation | 1986 |
1 other study(ies) available for ceruletide and Liver-Diseases--Alcoholic
Article | Year |
---|---|
Experimental acute alcohol pancreatitis-related liver damage and endotoxemia: synbiotics but not metronidazole have a protective effect.
The aim of this study was to test the effect of gut manipulation by either novel synbiotics or by metronidazole on either endotoxemia or the severity of liver damage in the course of acute pancreatitis from alcohol ingestion.. Sprague-Dawley rats were fed for 1 week through an intragastric tube a liquid diet with either: (i) 1 mL t.i.d. of a mixture of synbiotics (Lactobacillus acidophilus, Lactobacillus helveticus and Bifidobacterium in an enriched medium); (ii) 20 mg/kg t.i.d. metronidazole; or (iii) standard diet. Then, acute pancreatitis was induced by caerulein and when the disease was full-blown, rats were fed an alcohol-rich diet. Synbiotic and metronidazole treatment was given for a further 2 weeks. Transaminase and endotoxemia levels were measured before treatment, after 6 h, after 24 h and 2 weeks later, at the time the rats were killed. Liver samples were obtained for histological analysis.. Synbiotics but not metronidazole improved the acute pancreatitis-induced increase in endotoxemia and transaminase levels. The addition of alcohol worsened these variables to a limited extent in the synbiotic-treated group, while metronidazole had a negative effect on liver damage.. Gut flora pretreatment with synbiotics was able to effectively protect against endotoxin/bacterial translocation, as well as liver damage in the course of acute pancreatitis and concomitant heavy alcohol consumption. The beneficial effect of synbiotics on liver histology seems to be correlated with endotoxemia. Metronidazole did not produce such a beneficial effect; in fact, it further worsened liver damage when alcohol was added to the background of ongoing acute pancreatic inflammation. Topics: Acute Disease; Animals; Bacterial Translocation; Bifidobacterium; Ceruletide; Disease Models, Animal; Endotoxemia; Endotoxins; Ethanol; Gastrointestinal Tract; Lactobacillus acidophilus; Lactobacillus helveticus; Liver Diseases, Alcoholic; Metronidazole; Pancreatitis; Probiotics; Protective Agents; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Transaminases | 2005 |