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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:2.6.1.1 (
aspartate aminotransferase
)
21,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Guinea pigs infected with 9-mile phase I strain of Coxiella burnetii had increased blood glucose concentrations; alkaline phosphatase (ALP),
glutamic-oxalacetic transaminase
(GOT), alpha-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase (alpha-HBDH), and creatine phosphokinase (CPK) activities; and bilirubin value. Hypocalcemia and hypophosphatemia were evident in the latter days of infection. At necropsy of the guinea pigs, necrotic foci were in liver, spleen, and heart. Seemingly, the major pathophysiologic changes in infected guinea pigs were the direct result of lesions in liver, spleen, and heart in which rickettsial bodies were readily observable with histologic staining procedures. The guinea pig may serve as an animal disease model for
Q fever
.
...
PMID:Pathophysiologic features of Q fever-infected guinea pigs. 114 49
Rickettsia spp. infections produce hepatic damage with transaminases elevation and biological signs of cholostasis. Classical biochemical tests of hepatic function were analyzed and compared in 8 patients with
Q Fever
(QF) and 7 with Boutonneuse Mediterranean Fever (BMF). Liver enlargement was detected in 75% of the QF group of patients as compared with the 57% of the BMF group. Transaminases were raised in 75% of the patients of the QF group and in 85, 7% of the BMF patients. Only one patient in the QF group showed manifest clinical jaundice. Statistically significant differences were found between the values of
AST
, ALT, alkaline phosphatase and GGT, which were higher in the QF group. Liver involvement is more important in patients with QF than in FBM. There is a large percentage of clinically silent involvement in both diseases. Liver function tests should be carried out in infections by Rickettsia spp.
...
PMID:[Liver involvement in Q fever and Mediterranean boutonneuse fever. Comparative study]. 787 63
Between the dates of May 4th-August 6th 2002, 46 cases were detected with abdominal pain nausea, vomiting, arthralgia/myalgia, headache, fever, diarrhea and rash, in the middle Blacksea and north inner Anatolia regions. Their laboratory findings yielded elevated levels of liver enzymes (
AST
, ALT, LDH), leucopenia and thrombocytopenia. As the infection was treated easily with tetracyclines, clinical diagnosis was considered to be rickettsiosis or ehrlichiosis. Serum and blood samples obtained from some of the patients were tested against Rickettsia, Ehrlichia, Leptospira and Coxiella, in the national and international laboratories. Samples from 19 patients were sent to National Reference Centre and WHO Collaborating Centre for Rickettsial Reference and Research Laboratory, France, and 7 of them were reported as acute
Q fever
while 8 of them were reported as passed
Q fever
(QF) cases. In May 2003, new cases with similar symptoms have been reported from the same regions, with different epidemiologic and serologic findings (tick exposure history was higher, response to tetracycline was lower, C. burnetii antibodies were negative), indicating a viral etiology. The samples of these patients have been sent to National Reference Centre and WHO Collaborating Centre for Arboviruses and Viral Heamorrhagic Fevers, France, and the initial reports were marked as Crimean Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV). Then the serum samples of previous 26 patients which were stored in National Serum Bank have been retrospectively investigated for viral aetiology in the same center, and 17 of them have been found positive for CCHFV IgM antibodies. Four of these patients were diagnosed as acute QF in 2002, one was passed QF, 2 were negative for QF and 10 were patients not investigated for QF. As a result, the detection of the both infections together in the same area shows the essential need for further epidemiological investigations.
...
PMID:[Epidemiological evaluation of a possible outbreak in and nearby Tokat province]. 1529
The clinical information of acute
Q fever
in Taiwan was limited. A clinical study of 109 adults with serologically documented acute
Q fever
in the past decade (1994-2005) at 3 referral hospitals in southern Taiwan was reported. Their clinical manifestations, laboratory findings, and clinical outcomes were analyzed. Males predominated (98, 90%). There is a significant correlation between monthly average temperature and case numbers of acute
Q fever
(r = 0.74, P = 0.006). Fever (99%), chills (69%), and headache (45%) were the common symptoms, and relative bradycardia (44/60, 73 %) was often noted. Acute hepatitis, defined as either serum
aspartate aminotransferase
>or=60 IU/L or alanine aminotransferase >or=78 IU/L, was found in 88 (85%) cases, and more than one-third (31/87, 36%) had hyperbilirubinemia (serum total bilirubin >or=1.4 mg/dL) at initial presentation. The intervals between initiation of appropriate therapy to defervescence were longer in patients with hyperbilirubinemia than those without hyperbilirubinemia, irrespective of tetracycline or fluoroquinolone therapy. Of note, 8 (7.3%) cases experienced a prolonged period of fever (>28 days). In southern Taiwan, the predominant presentation of acute
Q fever
is acute febrile illness with hepatitis with or without jaundice. Acute Q fever should be added to the list of differential diagnoses of patients with fever, headache, relative bradycardia, elevated serum aminotransferase levels, or prolongation of activated partial thromboplastin time, irrespective of jaundice.
...
PMID:Acute Q fever in southern Taiwan: atypical manifestations of hyperbilirubinemia and prolonged fever. 1794 35
A 9-year-old girl developing fever and hyperemia of both bulbar conjunctiva 5 days before admission to the Saitama Children's Medical Center after antibiotics proved ineffective was found on admission to have general fatigue and a temperature of 39 degrees C. Physical examination showed hyperemia of the bulbar conjunctiva, fissures of the lips, redness of the pharynx, and swelling of the cervical lymph nodes. Laboratory tests detected neutrophilia (11,200/microL), mild anemia (11.4g/dL), thrombocytopenia (110,000/microL), and elevated serum
aspartate aminotransferase
(242IU/L), alanine aminotransferase (328IU/L), and C-rective protein (25.2 mg/dL). Autoantibodies such as anti-nuclear, anti-SS-A/Ro, and anti-Jo-1 were also found. Echocardiography showed no abnormality of the coronary arteries. She was diagnosed as having incomplete Kawasaki disease on day 7 of illness, necessitating that a high dose of immunoglobulin be given intravenously. Her temperature dropped temporarily to 37 degrees C, but she developed erythema of the cheek and fever. Intravenous immunoglobulin was restarted, and minocycline introduced because her daily contact with a pet cat indicated richettsial infection such as
Q fever
. Mild fever, muscle pain, and elevated C-reactive protein did not improve, but clinical signs and symptoms gradually lessened after ibuprofen was given, then disappeared. A definitive diagnosis of
Q fever
was made through an over 4-fold rise in phase II IgG antibody titers against Coxiella burnetii, titer of less than 1 : 16 on day 14 of illness, and titer of 1 : 256 on day 34. This case study describes on atypical case of
Q fever
with clinical manifestations mimicking Kawasaki disease.
...
PMID:[A case report of acute Q fever showing Kawasaki disease-like symptoms in a 9-year-old girl]. 1952 8
Our purpose was to describe the clinical, epidemiological and laboratory characteristics of patients hospitalised with acute
Q fever
in an endemic area of Israel. We conducted a historical cohort study of all patients hospitalised with a definite diagnosis of acute
Q fever
, and compared them to patients suspected to have acute
Q fever
, but diagnosis was ruled out. A total of 38 patients had a definitive diagnosis, 47% occurred during the autumn and winter seasons, only 18% lived in rural regions. Leucopaenia and thrombocytopaenia were uncommon (16% and 18%, respectively), but mild hepatitis was common (mean
aspartate aminotransferase
76 U/l, mean alanine aminotransferase 81 U/l). We compared them with 74 patients in which acute
Q fever
was ruled out, and found that these parameters were not significantly different. Patients with acute
Q fever
had a shorter hospitalisation and they were treated more often with doxycycline than those without acute
Q fever
(6.4 vs. 14 days, P = 0.007, 71% vs. 38%, P = 0.001, respectively). In conclusion, acute
Q fever
can manifest as an unspecified febrile illness, with no seasonality. We suggest that in endemic areas,
Q fever
should be considered in the differential diagnosis in any febrile patient with risk factors for a persistent infection.
...
PMID:Epidemiological, clinical and laboratory characteristics of acute Q fever in an endemic area in Israel, 2006-2016. 3086 6