Research Journal of Medical Sciences

Year: 2008
Volume: 2
Issue: 3
Page No. 145 - 154

Abstract: Constitutive production of cytokines is absent or minimal in the normal liver but, in response to various types of injury, hepatocyte and cholangiocyte damage causes the local recruitment of neutrophils and macrophages that produce cytokines and chemokines and the former mediate the inflammatory response that leads to the regeneration of the liver tissue and ultimately, to the deposition of extracellular matrix by activated stellate cells. Cytokine production can have both beneficial and harmful effects, depending on the amount and duration of cytokine release. Within the spectrum of chronic liver diseases, cytokines play a pivotal role in the loss of immune tolerance characterizing chronic autoimmune hepatitis and primary biliary cirrhosis. This study will provide a general overview on cytokines and focus on their role in initiating and driving the inflammatory infiltrate in autoimmune liver diseases. A better understanding of this process might allow therapeutic interventions to switch off the peculiar inflammatory response which occurs in these conditions before irreversible damage occurs.

How to cite this article:

Pietro Invernizzi , Ilaria Bianchi , Francesca Bernuzzi , Lisa Caliari and Massimo Locati , 2008. Cytokines in Autoimmune Liver Diseases. Research Journal of Medical Sciences, 2: 145-154.

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