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Experimental obstructive cholestasis: the wound-like inflammatory liver response.

Maria-Angeles Aller email, Jorge-Luis Arias email, Jose Garcia-Dominguez email, Jose-Ignacio Arias email, Manuel Duran email and Jaime Arias email

Fibrogenesis & Tissue Repair 2008, 1:6doi:10.1186/1755-1536-1-6

Published: 3 November 2008

Abstract (provisional)

Obstructive cholestasis causes hepatic cirrhosis and portal hypertension. The pathophysiological mechanisms involved in the development of liver disease are multiple and linked. We propose to group these mechanisms according to the three phenotypes mainly expressed in the interstitial space in order to integrate them. Experimental extrahepatic cholestasis is the model most frequently used to study obstructive cholestasis. The early liver interstitial alterations described in these experimental models would produce an ischemia-reperfusion phenotype with oxidative and nitrosative stress. Then, the hyperexpression of a leukocytic phenotype, in which Kupffer cells and neutrophils participate, would induce enzymatic stress. And finally, an angiogenic phenotype, responsible for peribiliary plexus development with sinusoidal arterialization, occurs. In addition, an intense cholangiocyte proliferation, which acquires neuroendocrine abilities, stands out. This histopathological finding is also associated with fibrosis. It is proposed that the sequence of these inflammatory phenotypes, perhaps with a trophic meaning, would ultimately produce a benign tumoral biliary process although it poses severe hepatocytic insufficiency. Moreover, the persistence of this benign tumor disease would induce a higher degree of dedifferentiation and autonomy and, therefore, its malign degeneration.

The complete article is available as a provisional PDF. The fully formatted PDF and HTML versions are in production.


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