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Comparative Study
. 2004 May-Jun;51(57):684-8.

Von Willebrand gene expression in damaged human liver

Affiliations
  • PMID: 15143893
Comparative Study

Von Willebrand gene expression in damaged human liver

Y Baruch et al. Hepatogastroenterology. 2004 May-Jun.

Abstract

Background/aims: von Willebrand factor (vWf) is an adhesive glycoprotein known to play a role in hemostasis and in tissue injury. It is found in high levels in plasma of patients with acute hepatic failure and chronic liver disease. The aim of this study was to investigate the pattern of tissue vWf in acute liver failure in humans.

Methodology: We studied vWf immunostaining and mRNA expression in the liver of three patients with fulminant liver failure, two patients with chronic liver disease, and two controls. PECAM-1 (CD31) immunostaining and mRNA expression were used as an additional endothelial marker.

Results: In chronic liver cirrhosis, vWf deposits were strongly detected at the scar-parenchyma interface. In fulminant hepatic failure, intense deposits were seen in tissue sections in the area of necrosis. A similar pattern of immunostaining was seen with PECAM-1. vWf transcripts were abundant in the liver of patients with chronic disease and minimally expressed in patients with acute hepatic failure and in controls.

Conclusions: vWf is deposited within the liver sinusoids early after liver damage. The factor is only partially produced locally during the acute phase of the disease, but is overproduced in chronic disease states. These changes may suggest a role for vWf in liver injury and repair.

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