Acute liver failure can develop as a consequence of viral hepatitis, drug- or toxin-induced toxicity or rejection after liver transplantation, whereas chronic liver injury can be due to long-term exposure to alcohol, chemicals, chronic viral hepatitis, metabolic or cholestatic disorders. During acute and chronic liver injury, liver cells are exposed to increased levels of cytokines, oxidative stress and bile acids. This may result in cell damage followed by necrotic and apoptotic cell death of hepatocytes and proliferation of stellate cells. Eventually, this may lead to loss of liver function. Effective therapies for acute and chronic liver diseases are not available. Hepatocytes, the parenchymal cells of the liver, are well equipped with p...
Thirty years ago liver pathology defined apoptosis as a novel mode of cell death. Recently, experime...
Liver failure remains a disease with a high mortality and with the exception of transplantation ther...
Chronic liver damage of various origins (e.g. viral hepatitis; chronic intoxication by alcohol, chem...
Acute liver failure can develop as a consequence of viral hepatitis, drug- or toxin-induced toxicity...
Acute liver injury can develop as a consequence of viral hepatitis, drug- or toxin-induced toxicity ...
Acute liver injury can develop as a consequence of viral hepatitis, drug- or toxin-induced toxicity ...
Hepatocyte cell death is a cardinal feature of almost every liver disease. Apoptosis is a mode of ce...
The liver is constantly exposed to a host of injurious stimuli. This results in hepatocellular death...
The role of apoptpsis in the occurrence of massive or submassive liver cell death was investigated....
Cell death is a natural process for the turnover of aged cells, but it can also arise as a result of...
In many liver diseases, hepatocyte damage occurs upon exposure to toxic bile acids, inflammatory cyt...
SummaryHepatocyte cell death during liver injury was classically viewed to occur by either programme...
In the normal liver, the hepatic stellate cell has a quiescent (i.e. non-proliferating) phenotype. I...
In the normal liver, the hepatic stellate cell has a quiescent (i.e. non-proliferating) phenotype. I...
Hepatocyte cell death is a central mechanism involved in liver injury and is present in almost all t...
Thirty years ago liver pathology defined apoptosis as a novel mode of cell death. Recently, experime...
Liver failure remains a disease with a high mortality and with the exception of transplantation ther...
Chronic liver damage of various origins (e.g. viral hepatitis; chronic intoxication by alcohol, chem...
Acute liver failure can develop as a consequence of viral hepatitis, drug- or toxin-induced toxicity...
Acute liver injury can develop as a consequence of viral hepatitis, drug- or toxin-induced toxicity ...
Acute liver injury can develop as a consequence of viral hepatitis, drug- or toxin-induced toxicity ...
Hepatocyte cell death is a cardinal feature of almost every liver disease. Apoptosis is a mode of ce...
The liver is constantly exposed to a host of injurious stimuli. This results in hepatocellular death...
The role of apoptpsis in the occurrence of massive or submassive liver cell death was investigated....
Cell death is a natural process for the turnover of aged cells, but it can also arise as a result of...
In many liver diseases, hepatocyte damage occurs upon exposure to toxic bile acids, inflammatory cyt...
SummaryHepatocyte cell death during liver injury was classically viewed to occur by either programme...
In the normal liver, the hepatic stellate cell has a quiescent (i.e. non-proliferating) phenotype. I...
In the normal liver, the hepatic stellate cell has a quiescent (i.e. non-proliferating) phenotype. I...
Hepatocyte cell death is a central mechanism involved in liver injury and is present in almost all t...
Thirty years ago liver pathology defined apoptosis as a novel mode of cell death. Recently, experime...
Liver failure remains a disease with a high mortality and with the exception of transplantation ther...
Chronic liver damage of various origins (e.g. viral hepatitis; chronic intoxication by alcohol, chem...