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This book, the proceedings of Falk Symposium 100, `Gut and the Liver', held in Freiburg, Germany, 29-31 May 1997, comprehensively reviews the physiological and pathophysiological interactions between the intestine and the liver as well as between intestinal and hepatic diseases. Apart from the basic aspects of the intestinal microflora and the immune system of the gut, gastrointestinal permeability and translocation as well as the contribution of the intestine and the intestinal bacteria to the metabolism of bile acids, amino acids and drugs are discussed. In addition, experimental as well as…mehr
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This book, the proceedings of Falk Symposium 100, `Gut and the Liver', held in Freiburg, Germany, 29-31 May 1997, comprehensively reviews the physiological and pathophysiological interactions between the intestine and the liver as well as between intestinal and hepatic diseases. Apart from the basic aspects of the intestinal microflora and the immune system of the gut, gastrointestinal permeability and translocation as well as the contribution of the intestine and the intestinal bacteria to the metabolism of bile acids, amino acids and drugs are discussed. In addition, experimental as well as clinical data demonstrating the significance of gut-derived bacterial toxins for the development of liver diseases and the effect of liver diseases on gastrointestinal functions are discussed. The major aim of this book, therefore, is to highlight the interactions between gut and liver at the molecular level as well as in clinical disease.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Falk Symposium 100
- Verlag: Springer / Springer Netherlands
- Artikelnr. des Verlages: 978-0-7923-8736-7
- 1998.
- Seitenzahl: 448
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. Februar 1998
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 241mm x 160mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 803g
- ISBN-13: 9780792387367
- ISBN-10: 0792387368
- Artikelnr.: 23115156
- Falk Symposium 100
- Verlag: Springer / Springer Netherlands
- Artikelnr. des Verlages: 978-0-7923-8736-7
- 1998.
- Seitenzahl: 448
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. Februar 1998
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 241mm x 160mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 803g
- ISBN-13: 9780792387367
- ISBN-10: 0792387368
- Artikelnr.: 23115156
Preface. Section I: The `Milieu Extérieur' and `Milieu Intérieur' in the
Gut: Confrontation and Cooperation. 1. Intestinal Microbiota: Control and
Overgrowth; A.B. Onderdonk. 2. The Intestinal Immune System; T. Marth, M.
Zeitz. Section II: Gastrointestinal Permeability and Translocation. 3. The
Intestinal Permeability Barrier - What is Measured, What Does It Mean; S.
Gabe, et al. 4. Bacterial Translocation; R.D. Berg. 5. Intestinal
Permeability in Inflammatory Bowel Disease; 6. Intestinal Absorption of
Small Particles; J. Seifert. Section III: Bile Acid, Amino Acid and Drug
Metabolism - It's Not Only the Liver, it May be the Gut. 7. State of the
Art Lecture: Bacterial Enzymes and Bile Acid Metabolism: Peaceful
Coexistence vs. Deadly Warfare; A.F. Hofmann. 8. Gastric First Pass
Metabolism of Alcohol: Interaction with Ammonia and Associated Gastritis;
C.S. Lieber. 9. Ethanol Oxidation and Acetaldehyde Production by Colonic
Microbes; M. Salaspuro, et al. 10. Adaptation of Liver Cell Function to
Enteral Resorption: Role of Cell Liver Hydration; D. Hässinger, et al. 11.
Amino Acid Metabolism in the Gut; M. Plauth, A.E. Roske. 12. Drug
Metabolism in the Intestinal Wall; U. Klotz. The Role of Gut Bacteria in
Drug Metabolism; T.M. Bauer. Section IV: Gut-Derived Bacterial Toxins and
Liver Injury. 14. How Bacterial Toxins Affect the Intestinal Mucosa -
Molecular Mechanism of the Action of Clostridium Difficile Toxins; K.
Aktories. 15. Acute and Chronic Endotoxemia: Effects on Hepatic Neutrophil
Influx and Respiratory Burst; J.A. Spitzer. 16. Experimental Liver Injury:
The Role of Lipopolysaccharides and Cytokines; A. Wendel, et al. 17.
Endotoxin, Kupffer Cells and Alcoholic Liver Injury; R.G. Thurman, et al.
18. Hepatic Injury and Biliary Tract Diseases Associated with Small
Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth; R.B. Sartor, S.N. Lichtman. 19.
Endotoxemia in Chronic Hepatitis and Cirrhosis: Epiphenomenon or of
Pathological Relevance? H. Fukui, et al. 20. Endotoxemia and Disseminated
Intravascular Coagulation in Cirrhosis; F. Violi, et al. 21. The Role of
Gut-Derived Bacterial Toxins (Endotoxin) for the Development of Alcoholic
Liver Disease in Man; Ch. Bode, et al. 22. Endotoxaemia and Cholestasis;
E. Walter. 23. Adverse Effects of Gut-Derived Bacterial Toxins in Liver
Transplantation; W. Lauchart. Section V: Gastrointestinal Dysfunction in
Liver Disease. 24. Altered Gastrointestinal Motility in Chronic Liver
Disease; R.K. Zetterman. 25. Portal Hypertensive Intestinal Vasculopathy;
T.R. Viggiano. 26. Role of Lipopolysaccharide and Inducible Nitric Oxide
Synthase in Gastrointestinal and Hepatic Disease: Actions of Selective
Inhibition of iNOS on Microvascular Integrity in the Gut and Liver; F.
László, et al. 27. Bacterial Overgrowth in the Small Intestine in Chronic
Liver Disease; F. Casafont, et al. Section VI: Spontaneous Bacterial
Peritonitis in Cirrhotics. 28. Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis Incidence,
Diagnosis and Clinical Course; A. Ochs. 29. Treatment and Prophylaxis of
Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis; A. Rimola, et al. Section VII: Liver
Injury in Patients with Diseases of the Gastrointestinal Tract. 30.
Haemochromatosis: A Defect in Gut Transport Leads to Liver Injury; W.
Stremmel, et al. 31. Liver and Biliary Abnormalities in Ulcerative Colitis
and Crohn's Disease; R.H. Wiesner. 32. Liver Abnormalities in Coeliac
Disease; M.B. Jacobsen. 33. Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis: New Therapeutic
Strategies; A. Stiehl, et al. 34. Jejunoileal Bypass: An Unintended Model
of Steatophepatitis (Nash Syndrome) in Man; D.L. Kaminski. Index.
Gut: Confrontation and Cooperation. 1. Intestinal Microbiota: Control and
Overgrowth; A.B. Onderdonk. 2. The Intestinal Immune System; T. Marth, M.
Zeitz. Section II: Gastrointestinal Permeability and Translocation. 3. The
Intestinal Permeability Barrier - What is Measured, What Does It Mean; S.
Gabe, et al. 4. Bacterial Translocation; R.D. Berg. 5. Intestinal
Permeability in Inflammatory Bowel Disease; 6. Intestinal Absorption of
Small Particles; J. Seifert. Section III: Bile Acid, Amino Acid and Drug
Metabolism - It's Not Only the Liver, it May be the Gut. 7. State of the
Art Lecture: Bacterial Enzymes and Bile Acid Metabolism: Peaceful
Coexistence vs. Deadly Warfare; A.F. Hofmann. 8. Gastric First Pass
Metabolism of Alcohol: Interaction with Ammonia and Associated Gastritis;
C.S. Lieber. 9. Ethanol Oxidation and Acetaldehyde Production by Colonic
Microbes; M. Salaspuro, et al. 10. Adaptation of Liver Cell Function to
Enteral Resorption: Role of Cell Liver Hydration; D. Hässinger, et al. 11.
Amino Acid Metabolism in the Gut; M. Plauth, A.E. Roske. 12. Drug
Metabolism in the Intestinal Wall; U. Klotz. The Role of Gut Bacteria in
Drug Metabolism; T.M. Bauer. Section IV: Gut-Derived Bacterial Toxins and
Liver Injury. 14. How Bacterial Toxins Affect the Intestinal Mucosa -
Molecular Mechanism of the Action of Clostridium Difficile Toxins; K.
Aktories. 15. Acute and Chronic Endotoxemia: Effects on Hepatic Neutrophil
Influx and Respiratory Burst; J.A. Spitzer. 16. Experimental Liver Injury:
The Role of Lipopolysaccharides and Cytokines; A. Wendel, et al. 17.
Endotoxin, Kupffer Cells and Alcoholic Liver Injury; R.G. Thurman, et al.
18. Hepatic Injury and Biliary Tract Diseases Associated with Small
Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth; R.B. Sartor, S.N. Lichtman. 19.
Endotoxemia in Chronic Hepatitis and Cirrhosis: Epiphenomenon or of
Pathological Relevance? H. Fukui, et al. 20. Endotoxemia and Disseminated
Intravascular Coagulation in Cirrhosis; F. Violi, et al. 21. The Role of
Gut-Derived Bacterial Toxins (Endotoxin) for the Development of Alcoholic
Liver Disease in Man; Ch. Bode, et al. 22. Endotoxaemia and Cholestasis;
E. Walter. 23. Adverse Effects of Gut-Derived Bacterial Toxins in Liver
Transplantation; W. Lauchart. Section V: Gastrointestinal Dysfunction in
Liver Disease. 24. Altered Gastrointestinal Motility in Chronic Liver
Disease; R.K. Zetterman. 25. Portal Hypertensive Intestinal Vasculopathy;
T.R. Viggiano. 26. Role of Lipopolysaccharide and Inducible Nitric Oxide
Synthase in Gastrointestinal and Hepatic Disease: Actions of Selective
Inhibition of iNOS on Microvascular Integrity in the Gut and Liver; F.
László, et al. 27. Bacterial Overgrowth in the Small Intestine in Chronic
Liver Disease; F. Casafont, et al. Section VI: Spontaneous Bacterial
Peritonitis in Cirrhotics. 28. Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis Incidence,
Diagnosis and Clinical Course; A. Ochs. 29. Treatment and Prophylaxis of
Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis; A. Rimola, et al. Section VII: Liver
Injury in Patients with Diseases of the Gastrointestinal Tract. 30.
Haemochromatosis: A Defect in Gut Transport Leads to Liver Injury; W.
Stremmel, et al. 31. Liver and Biliary Abnormalities in Ulcerative Colitis
and Crohn's Disease; R.H. Wiesner. 32. Liver Abnormalities in Coeliac
Disease; M.B. Jacobsen. 33. Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis: New Therapeutic
Strategies; A. Stiehl, et al. 34. Jejunoileal Bypass: An Unintended Model
of Steatophepatitis (Nash Syndrome) in Man; D.L. Kaminski. Index.
Preface. Section I: The `Milieu Extérieur' and `Milieu Intérieur' in the
Gut: Confrontation and Cooperation. 1. Intestinal Microbiota: Control and
Overgrowth; A.B. Onderdonk. 2. The Intestinal Immune System; T. Marth, M.
Zeitz. Section II: Gastrointestinal Permeability and Translocation. 3. The
Intestinal Permeability Barrier - What is Measured, What Does It Mean; S.
Gabe, et al. 4. Bacterial Translocation; R.D. Berg. 5. Intestinal
Permeability in Inflammatory Bowel Disease; 6. Intestinal Absorption of
Small Particles; J. Seifert. Section III: Bile Acid, Amino Acid and Drug
Metabolism - It's Not Only the Liver, it May be the Gut. 7. State of the
Art Lecture: Bacterial Enzymes and Bile Acid Metabolism: Peaceful
Coexistence vs. Deadly Warfare; A.F. Hofmann. 8. Gastric First Pass
Metabolism of Alcohol: Interaction with Ammonia and Associated Gastritis;
C.S. Lieber. 9. Ethanol Oxidation and Acetaldehyde Production by Colonic
Microbes; M. Salaspuro, et al. 10. Adaptation of Liver Cell Function to
Enteral Resorption: Role of Cell Liver Hydration; D. Hässinger, et al. 11.
Amino Acid Metabolism in the Gut; M. Plauth, A.E. Roske. 12. Drug
Metabolism in the Intestinal Wall; U. Klotz. The Role of Gut Bacteria in
Drug Metabolism; T.M. Bauer. Section IV: Gut-Derived Bacterial Toxins and
Liver Injury. 14. How Bacterial Toxins Affect the Intestinal Mucosa -
Molecular Mechanism of the Action of Clostridium Difficile Toxins; K.
Aktories. 15. Acute and Chronic Endotoxemia: Effects on Hepatic Neutrophil
Influx and Respiratory Burst; J.A. Spitzer. 16. Experimental Liver Injury:
The Role of Lipopolysaccharides and Cytokines; A. Wendel, et al. 17.
Endotoxin, Kupffer Cells and Alcoholic Liver Injury; R.G. Thurman, et al.
18. Hepatic Injury and Biliary Tract Diseases Associated with Small
Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth; R.B. Sartor, S.N. Lichtman. 19.
Endotoxemia in Chronic Hepatitis and Cirrhosis: Epiphenomenon or of
Pathological Relevance? H. Fukui, et al. 20. Endotoxemia and Disseminated
Intravascular Coagulation in Cirrhosis; F. Violi, et al. 21. The Role of
Gut-Derived Bacterial Toxins (Endotoxin) for the Development of Alcoholic
Liver Disease in Man; Ch. Bode, et al. 22. Endotoxaemia and Cholestasis;
E. Walter. 23. Adverse Effects of Gut-Derived Bacterial Toxins in Liver
Transplantation; W. Lauchart. Section V: Gastrointestinal Dysfunction in
Liver Disease. 24. Altered Gastrointestinal Motility in Chronic Liver
Disease; R.K. Zetterman. 25. Portal Hypertensive Intestinal Vasculopathy;
T.R. Viggiano. 26. Role of Lipopolysaccharide and Inducible Nitric Oxide
Synthase in Gastrointestinal and Hepatic Disease: Actions of Selective
Inhibition of iNOS on Microvascular Integrity in the Gut and Liver; F.
László, et al. 27. Bacterial Overgrowth in the Small Intestine in Chronic
Liver Disease; F. Casafont, et al. Section VI: Spontaneous Bacterial
Peritonitis in Cirrhotics. 28. Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis Incidence,
Diagnosis and Clinical Course; A. Ochs. 29. Treatment and Prophylaxis of
Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis; A. Rimola, et al. Section VII: Liver
Injury in Patients with Diseases of the Gastrointestinal Tract. 30.
Haemochromatosis: A Defect in Gut Transport Leads to Liver Injury; W.
Stremmel, et al. 31. Liver and Biliary Abnormalities in Ulcerative Colitis
and Crohn's Disease; R.H. Wiesner. 32. Liver Abnormalities in Coeliac
Disease; M.B. Jacobsen. 33. Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis: New Therapeutic
Strategies; A. Stiehl, et al. 34. Jejunoileal Bypass: An Unintended Model
of Steatophepatitis (Nash Syndrome) in Man; D.L. Kaminski. Index.
Gut: Confrontation and Cooperation. 1. Intestinal Microbiota: Control and
Overgrowth; A.B. Onderdonk. 2. The Intestinal Immune System; T. Marth, M.
Zeitz. Section II: Gastrointestinal Permeability and Translocation. 3. The
Intestinal Permeability Barrier - What is Measured, What Does It Mean; S.
Gabe, et al. 4. Bacterial Translocation; R.D. Berg. 5. Intestinal
Permeability in Inflammatory Bowel Disease; 6. Intestinal Absorption of
Small Particles; J. Seifert. Section III: Bile Acid, Amino Acid and Drug
Metabolism - It's Not Only the Liver, it May be the Gut. 7. State of the
Art Lecture: Bacterial Enzymes and Bile Acid Metabolism: Peaceful
Coexistence vs. Deadly Warfare; A.F. Hofmann. 8. Gastric First Pass
Metabolism of Alcohol: Interaction with Ammonia and Associated Gastritis;
C.S. Lieber. 9. Ethanol Oxidation and Acetaldehyde Production by Colonic
Microbes; M. Salaspuro, et al. 10. Adaptation of Liver Cell Function to
Enteral Resorption: Role of Cell Liver Hydration; D. Hässinger, et al. 11.
Amino Acid Metabolism in the Gut; M. Plauth, A.E. Roske. 12. Drug
Metabolism in the Intestinal Wall; U. Klotz. The Role of Gut Bacteria in
Drug Metabolism; T.M. Bauer. Section IV: Gut-Derived Bacterial Toxins and
Liver Injury. 14. How Bacterial Toxins Affect the Intestinal Mucosa -
Molecular Mechanism of the Action of Clostridium Difficile Toxins; K.
Aktories. 15. Acute and Chronic Endotoxemia: Effects on Hepatic Neutrophil
Influx and Respiratory Burst; J.A. Spitzer. 16. Experimental Liver Injury:
The Role of Lipopolysaccharides and Cytokines; A. Wendel, et al. 17.
Endotoxin, Kupffer Cells and Alcoholic Liver Injury; R.G. Thurman, et al.
18. Hepatic Injury and Biliary Tract Diseases Associated with Small
Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth; R.B. Sartor, S.N. Lichtman. 19.
Endotoxemia in Chronic Hepatitis and Cirrhosis: Epiphenomenon or of
Pathological Relevance? H. Fukui, et al. 20. Endotoxemia and Disseminated
Intravascular Coagulation in Cirrhosis; F. Violi, et al. 21. The Role of
Gut-Derived Bacterial Toxins (Endotoxin) for the Development of Alcoholic
Liver Disease in Man; Ch. Bode, et al. 22. Endotoxaemia and Cholestasis;
E. Walter. 23. Adverse Effects of Gut-Derived Bacterial Toxins in Liver
Transplantation; W. Lauchart. Section V: Gastrointestinal Dysfunction in
Liver Disease. 24. Altered Gastrointestinal Motility in Chronic Liver
Disease; R.K. Zetterman. 25. Portal Hypertensive Intestinal Vasculopathy;
T.R. Viggiano. 26. Role of Lipopolysaccharide and Inducible Nitric Oxide
Synthase in Gastrointestinal and Hepatic Disease: Actions of Selective
Inhibition of iNOS on Microvascular Integrity in the Gut and Liver; F.
László, et al. 27. Bacterial Overgrowth in the Small Intestine in Chronic
Liver Disease; F. Casafont, et al. Section VI: Spontaneous Bacterial
Peritonitis in Cirrhotics. 28. Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis Incidence,
Diagnosis and Clinical Course; A. Ochs. 29. Treatment and Prophylaxis of
Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis; A. Rimola, et al. Section VII: Liver
Injury in Patients with Diseases of the Gastrointestinal Tract. 30.
Haemochromatosis: A Defect in Gut Transport Leads to Liver Injury; W.
Stremmel, et al. 31. Liver and Biliary Abnormalities in Ulcerative Colitis
and Crohn's Disease; R.H. Wiesner. 32. Liver Abnormalities in Coeliac
Disease; M.B. Jacobsen. 33. Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis: New Therapeutic
Strategies; A. Stiehl, et al. 34. Jejunoileal Bypass: An Unintended Model
of Steatophepatitis (Nash Syndrome) in Man; D.L. Kaminski. Index.