Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part 1 Assessing and utilizing the diagnostic or prognostic power of biomarkers
- Part 2 Biomarkers of kidney disease and dysfunction
- Part 3 Biomarkers of bone disease and dysfunction
- Part 4 Biomarkers of liver disease and dysfunction
- 15 Biomarkers of hepatic disease
- 16 The immunogenetics of metabolic liver disease
- 17 Toxicogenetic markers of liver dysfunction
- 18 Prognosis and management of patients with acute liver failure
- 19 Biomarkers in artificial and bioartificial liver support
- 20 Prognostic markers in liver disease
- 21 Apoptosis: biomarkers and the key role of mitochondria
- 22 Liver regeneration: mechanisms and markers
- 23 Determinants of responses to viruses and self in liver disease
- 24 IL-6-type cytokines and signalling in inflammation
- Part 5 Biomarkers of gastrointestinal disease and dysfunction
- Part 6 Biomarkers in toxicology
- Part 7 Biomarkers of cardiovascular disease and dysfunction
- Part 8 Biomarkers of neurological disease and dysfunction
- Part 9 Biomarkers in transplantation
- Index
15 - Biomarkers of hepatic disease
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part 1 Assessing and utilizing the diagnostic or prognostic power of biomarkers
- Part 2 Biomarkers of kidney disease and dysfunction
- Part 3 Biomarkers of bone disease and dysfunction
- Part 4 Biomarkers of liver disease and dysfunction
- 15 Biomarkers of hepatic disease
- 16 The immunogenetics of metabolic liver disease
- 17 Toxicogenetic markers of liver dysfunction
- 18 Prognosis and management of patients with acute liver failure
- 19 Biomarkers in artificial and bioartificial liver support
- 20 Prognostic markers in liver disease
- 21 Apoptosis: biomarkers and the key role of mitochondria
- 22 Liver regeneration: mechanisms and markers
- 23 Determinants of responses to viruses and self in liver disease
- 24 IL-6-type cytokines and signalling in inflammation
- Part 5 Biomarkers of gastrointestinal disease and dysfunction
- Part 6 Biomarkers in toxicology
- Part 7 Biomarkers of cardiovascular disease and dysfunction
- Part 8 Biomarkers of neurological disease and dysfunction
- Part 9 Biomarkers in transplantation
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Appropriate biomarkers are needed to detect hepatic disease, to direct diagnostic work-up, to estimate disease severity, to assess prognosis and to evaluate therapy. The available tests can be divided into essential and special static tests and dynamic tests. On the one hand the traditional static tests are only an indirect measure of hepatic function or damage, and these tests involve the measurement of endogenous substances at a single point in time. Dynamic tests, on the other hand, reflect real-time hepatic function. In these tests, the dimension of time is also considered. The clearance of a test substance or the formation rate of a metabolite reflects the actual performance of the liver.
Static tests
The essential static tests for hepatobiliary disease are summarized in Table 15.1. The pattern of these conventional tests indicates which more specialist tests are likely to be valuable. There are several limitations associated with these conventional liver function tests. Test results of liver enzymes and clotting factors can be affected by the substitution of blood components. Falling aminotransferase values are only reassuring when accompanied by a restoration of metabolic function. Aminotransferases, alkaline phosphatase and bilirubin lack organ specificity. The long plasma half-life of cholinesterase does not allow the detection of rapid changes in hepatic function. Most importantly, the conventional tests are only of limited prognostic value.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Biomarkers of DiseaseAn Evidence-Based Approach, pp. 167 - 176Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002
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