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Hepatic injury in chronic iron overload. Role of lipid peroxidation
Authors:Bruce R. Bacon and Robert S. Britton
Affiliation:

a Department of Medicine, Louisiana State University School of Medicine, Shreveport, Louisiana, U.S.A.

b Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Louisiana State University School of Medicine, Shreveport, Louisiana, U.S.A.

Abstract:In both hereditary hemochromatosis and in the various forms of secondary hemochromatosis, there is a pathologic expansion of body iron stores due mainly to an increase in absorption of dietary iron. Excess deposition of iron in the parenchymal tissues of several organs (e.g. liver, heart, pancreas, joints, endocrine glands) results in cell injury and functional insufficiency. In the liver, the major pathological manifestations of chronic iron overload are fibrosis and ultimately cirrhosis. Evidence for hepatotoxicity due to iron has been provided by several clinical studies, however the specific pathophysiologic mechanisms for hepatocellular injury and hepatic fibrosis in chronic iron overload are poorly understood. The postulated mechanisms of liver injury in chronic iron overload include (a) increased lysosomal membrane fragility, perhaps mediated by iron-induced lipid peroxidation, (b) peroxidative damage to mitochondria and microsomes resulting in organelle dysfunction, (c) a direct effect of iron on collagen biosynthesis and (d) a combination of all of the above.
Keywords:Hemochromatosis   Hepatotoxicity   Iron   Lipid peroxidation   Oxy-radicals   Iron overload
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