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Conversions encephalopathies

Ammonia (NH3) is just one of the toxins implicated in HE. It is a metabolic by-product of protein catabolism and is also generated by bacteria in the GI tract. In a normally functioning liver, hepatocytes take up ammonia and degrade it to form urea, which is then renally excreted. In patients with cirrhosis, the conversion of ammonia to urea is retarded and ammonia accumulates, resulting in encephalopathy. This decrease in urea formation is manifest on laboratory assessment as decreased blood urea nitrogen (BUN), but BUN levels do not correlate with degree of HE. Patients with HE commonly have elevated serum ammonia concentrations, but the levels do not correlate well with the degree of central nervous system impairment.20... [Pg.327]

Lactulose is the foundation of pharmacologic therapy to prevent and treat hepatic encephalopathy. It is a non-digestible synthetic disaccharide laxative that is hydrolyzed in the gut to an osmotically-active compound that draws water into the colon and stimulates defecation. Lactulose also lowers colonic pH, which favors the conversion of ammonia (NH3) to ammonium (NHf).48 Ammonium is ionic and cannot cross back into systemic circulation it is eliminated in the feces. Lactulose is usually initiated at 15 to 30 mL two to three times per day and titrated to a therapeutic goal of two to four soft bowel movements daily.20 49 50... [Pg.334]

Prion diseases resulting in encephalopathy can be transmitted between individuals within species (more rarely between species) [26-28], A conformational variant of the normal cellular protein PrPs (PrPc) (protease-sensitive or cellular) is believed to catalyze [29] or nucleate [30-33] conversion to the pathological form, PrPR (protease-resistant). This highly unusual nongenetic mode of transmission of an infectious agent has been strongly debated [29]. The observation of multiple examples of nucleated catalysis of aberrant polymerization of protein subunits has... [Pg.251]

The dose of ammonium chloride can be calculated on the basis of the chloride deficit using the same method as for HCl, using the conversion of 20 g ammonium chloride providing 374 mEq of H . However, only half of the calculated dose of ammonium chloride should be administered so as to avoid ammonia toxicity. Ammonium chloride is available as a 26.75% solution containing 100 mEq in 20 mL, which should be further diluted prior to administration. A dilute solution may be prepared by adding 100 mEq of ammonium chloride to 500 mL of normal saline and infusing the solution at a rate of no more than 1 mEq/min. Improvement in metabolic stams is usually seen within 24 hours. CNS toxicity, marked by confusion, irritability, seizures, and coma, has been associated with more rapid rates of administration. Ammonium chloride must be administered cautiously to patients with renal or hepatic impairment. In patients with hepatic dysfunction, impaired conversion of ammonia to urea may result in increased ammonia levels and worsened encephalopathy. In patients with renal failure, the increased urea synthesis may exacerbate uremic symptoms. ... [Pg.996]

Lactulose also is used to treat hepatic encephalopathy. Patients with severe liver disease have an impaired capacity to detoxify ammonia coming from the colon, where it is produced by bacterial metabolism of fecal urea. The drop in luminal pH that accompanies hydrolysis to short-chain fatty acids in the colon results in trapping of the ammonia by its conversion to the polar ammonium ion. Combined with the increases in colonic transit, this therapy lowers circulating ammonia levels. The therapeutic goal in this condition is to give sufficient amounts of lactulose (usually 20 to 30 g, 3 to 4 times per day) to produce two to three soft stools a day with a pH of 5 to 5.5. [Pg.378]

Schutta, H.S. and Johnson, L. (1971). Fine structure observations on acute bilirubin encephalopathy in Gunn rats induced by sulfadimethoxine. Lab. Invest. 24 82-96 Siegfied, E.C., Stone, M.S., Madison, K.C. (1992). Ultraviolet light burn a cutaneous complication of visible light phototherapy of neonatal jaundice. Pediatr. Dermatol. 9 (3) 278-282 Tenhunen, R., Marver, H.S., and Schmid, R. (1968). The enzymatic conversion of heme to bilimbin by microsomal heme oxygenase. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 61 748-755... [Pg.331]


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Encephalopathies

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