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Antibodies to hepatic-specific lipoprotein in the blood
Last reviewed: 23.04.2024
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Normally, antibodies to liver-specific lipoprotein in serum are absent.
Antibodies to liver-specific lipoprotein are determined by the method of indirect immunofluorescence. Hepatic-specific lipoprotein (LSP) is a heterogeneous material from hepatocyte membranes, containing 7-8 antigenic determinants, some of them are hepatic-specific, others are nonspecific. It is the antibodies to the liver-specific lipoprotein that cause an autoimmune reaction with the development of antibody-dependent cytolysis of hepatocytes and provoke a relapse with the abolition of glucocorticosteroids in patients with chronic autoimmune hepatitis. The presence of antibodies to liver-specific lipoprotein in the blood serum is a hallmark of autoimmune hepatitis. Nevertheless, it is established that they appear in chronic liver diseases of viral etiology (in 48-97% of cases).
[1], [2], [3], [4], [5], [6], [7], [8], [9], [10], [11], [12]