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Query: EC:2.6.1.2 (
alanine aminotransferase
)
26,722
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The impact of
dengue
on liver function was studied by biochemical tests on 125 male and 145 female patients diagnosed with this disease during an outbreak that extended from November 1987 to December 1988. Abnormal levels of aspartate aminotransferase (AST),
alanine aminotransferase
(
ALT
), bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (G-GT) were observed in 93.3%, 82.2%, 7.2%, 16.3% and 83.0% of the patients, respectively. The elevation of transaminases was mild to moderate in most cases, but was 10-fold greater than the normal upper limit for AST and
ALT
in 11.1% and 7.4% of the patients, respectively. Initially, the level of AST was greater than that of
ALT
, increasing to maximum levels nine days after the onset of symptoms, then decreasing to normal levels within two weeks. Results of the biochemical tests did not differ significantly between the cases with and without hepatitis B or hepatitis C virus infection, but significantly higher elevations of AST,
ALT
, and G-GT were observed in patients with episodes of bleeding. Liver biopsies of two patients showed features of lobular hepatitis. Of the five fatal cases, three died of hepatic failure. It is concluded that
dengue
fever may cause hepatic injury and transaminase elevation similar to that in patients with conventional viral hepatitis. In epidemic or endemic areas,
dengue
fever infection should be considered in the differential diagnosis of hepatitis.
...
PMID:Liver biochemical tests and dengue fever. 135 50
The prevalence of antibodies to hepatitis C virus (anti-HCV) was investigated among different populations in Taiwan, where anti-HCV was detected in 0.8% (24/2,994) of adult volunteer blood donors, 0.1% (1/1,305) of youngsters and children, 12.5% (8/64) of adult volunteer blood donors with elevated
alanine aminotransferase
(
ALT
), 36.5% (23/63) of hemodialysis patients, 4.1% (13/318) of male homosexuals, 25.4% (16/63) of cases positive for antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus (anti-HIV), 82.2% (578/703) of intravenous drug users (IVDUs), and 10.3% (23/223) of female prostitutes (FPs). Among patients with chronic liver diseases including chronic hepatitis, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the overall prevalence rate for anti-HCV was 34.1% (42/123), and a higher prevalence was noted in hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)-negative cases than in HBsAg-positive cases. The prevalence of anti-HCV in volunteer blood donors and high prevalence found in IVDUs, hemodialysis patients, anti-HIV positive cases, and FPs are consistent with those results from other countries. These findings suggest that hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is transmitted by both blood-borne and sexual contact routes. Among flavivirus infections, anti-HCV was detected in 0.3% (1/289) and 1.3% (4/310) of Japanese encephalitis and
dengue
fever patients, respectively. In conclusion, in Taiwan, an area with high endemicity of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, the epidemiological status of HCV infection is similar to that observed in other countries, and no serum cross-reactivity was noticed between HCV and flavivirus infections.
...
PMID:Prevalence of antibodies to hepatitis C virus (anti-HCV) in different populations in Taiwan. 165 45
Southern Taiwan experienced a
dengue
(type 1) outbreak in the autumn of 1988. One hundred and thirteen febrile patients suspected as having
dengue
infection were seen in the emergency room of the Kaohsiung Medical College Hospital. These patients were recruited for this study. Two hundred and eighty-six sequential serum aspartate transaminase (AST) and
alanine transaminase
(
ALT
) data from these patients were analyzed. Data analysis showed serum AST had increased daily and all data were out of normal range from day 6 of the illness. Compared to the AST level on the first day of the illness, the AST level was noted to elevate to an average of 9.25 folds on day 6. The sequential changes of AST were as follows: AST had elevated since the third ill-day in most cases and reached a peak on the 7th or 8th ill-day. It then declined gradually from the 8th ill-day and became normal about 3 weeks later. The changes of
ALT
level were about the same as AST but had later onset and lower peak. Abdominal sonographic examinations showed thickening of the gall bladder wall, splenomegaly and ascites in some patients during acute stage of the illness and recovered completely after patients recovered from the
dengue
attack. The sequential change of serum transaminase levels and sonographic findings were compatible. These findings may be used as a reference for the differential diagnosis among
dengue
fever, acute hepatitis and acute cholecystitis.
...
PMID:Sequential changes of serum transaminase and abdominal sonography in patients with suspected dengue fever. 221 70
Fifteen Thai children, diagnosed with
dengue
hemorrhagic fever and admitted to the Children's Hospital in Bangkok, were studied. All cases were serologically proved to be secondary
dengue
infections. The clinical signs and symptoms in the first few days of the acute febrile phase were similar to those observed in cases with classical
dengue
fever, and included continuously high fever, headache, muscle pain, nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain, etc. In the laboratory findings we noted hypoalbuminemia and mild elevation of the GOT and
GPT
. The hemogram showed an increasing atypical lymphocyte count during the acute febrile period. Prolongations of the partial thromboplastin time and thrombin time were also found, especially in the severe shock cases. All patients had varying degrees of hepatomegaly and pleural effusion from their chest x-rays accompanied by a rapid increase in the hematocrit of more than 20% and a fall in the platelet count to less than 100000/microliters. During the plasma leakage period the patients easily developed shock, even leading to death, unless adequate fluid supplies were given. This is also the major pathophysiological difference between
dengue
hemorrhagic fever and classical
dengue
fever. Although some studies concerning the pathogenesis of
dengue
hemorrhagic fever have been reported, but the exact mechanisms need further investigation.
...
PMID:[Clinical observation of 15 Thai children with dengue hemorrhagic fever]. 234 55
The aim of the study reported here was to demonstrate that
dengue
hemorrhagic fever occurs in Puerto Rico, that it is underreported, and that this underreporting is due partly to underdiagnosis in hospitals. Surveillance for severe
dengue
identified 986 hospitalizations for suspected
dengue
in 1990-1991. At the time, on the basis of available clinical and laboratory data, the surveillance system routinely identified 20 DHF cases, including three with
dengue
shock syndrome (DSS). Our subsequent review of these 986 patients' hospital records identified 102 whose records supported a clinical diagnosis of DHF (88) or DSS (14). Of the 102, there were 57 with positive virologic or serologic results for
dengue
and that met the World Health Organization criteria for DHF (fever, hemorrhagic manifestations, thrombocytopenia, and excessive capillary permeability). This group of 57 patients had a mean age of 38 years, contained a preponderance of males (34, 59.3%), included eight cases of DSS, and involved two (3.5%) fatalities (in females 16 and 55 years old). Hemorrhagic manifestations were mild; hemoconcentration, hypoalbuminemia, and elevated aspartate and
alanine aminotransferase
(AST and
ALT
) levels were frequently encountered. The median duration of hospitalization was five days. The clinical description of these laboratory-positive DHF cases in Puerto Rico is consistent with previous descriptions of DHF in the medical literature; but the patients' age distribution is similar to the pattern typically found in the Americas (where all age groups tend to be affected), as opposed to Southeast Asia (where mostly younger children are affected). The number of DHF cases identified by our study was nearly three times that reported through the established surveillance system. Our findings indicate that recognition and reporting of DHF by local clinicians needs to be improved.
...
PMID:Clinical manifestations of dengue hemorrhagic fever in Puerto Rico, 1990-1991. Puerto Rico Association of Epidemiologists. 918 59
The impact of
dengue
haemorrhagic fever (DHF) on liver function was studied by measuring serum transaminase levels on 45 patients with DHF confirmed by virus isolation and serodiagnosis in 1995. Abnormal levels of AST and
ALT
were observed in 97.7 and 37.3% of the patients, respectively. The fact that the level of AST was higher than that of
ALT
and that the elevation of transaminases was mild to moderate in most cases (< 5-fold greater than the normal upper limit for AST and
ALT
) showed that liver involvement was also mild to moderate in most cases of DHF. The results of transaminases did not differ significantly between cases with and without hepatitis B or hepatitis C virus infection, nor between primary and secondary cases of infection, but a significantly higher elevation of AST and
ALT
was observed in DHF patients with gastrointestinal haemorrhage. Two patients with
dengue
encephalopathy (in 1992) and one patient with
dengue
encephalopathy who died of massive gastrointestinal haemorrhage (in 1995) had unusually high transaminase levels as a sign of acute liver failure. It is concluded that DHF may cause mild to moderate liver dysfunction in most cases; only some patients may suffer from acute liver failure leading to encephalopathy and death.
...
PMID:The impact of dengue haemorrhagic fever on liver function. 927 78
During an outbreak of
dengue
fever in 1996, 66 children between 45 days and 12 years of age with
dengue
fever and 25 healthy controls were studied for antioxidants and other biochemical abnormalities. As per World Health Organization (WHO) criteria, 14 children were classified as having classical
dengue
(
DEN
), 42 with
dengue
haemorrhagic fever (DHF), and 10 (including three who died) as having
dengue
shock syndrome (DSS). Superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione peroxidase (GPX), and albumin (ALB), the three main antioxidants studied, were found to be abnormal in 96, 94, and 40 per cent of the cases respectively. The levels for aspartate aminotransferase (AST),
alanine aminotransferase
(
ALT
), creatinine phosphokinase (CPK), total protein (TP), total cholesterol (CHO), and triglycerides (TGL) were abnormal in 79, 50, 30, 93, and 67 per cent of the cases respectively. Among the different groups of
dengue
the abnormalities were more marked in children with DSS than in those with
DEN
and DHF, especially with respect to ALB, TP, TGL, AST,
ALT
, and CPK (p < 0.005). This preliminary report of
dengue
confirms the assumption of free radical generation and alteration in antioxidant status during acute illness. However, to understand their complex interaction in disease progression and therapeutic utility, further studies are required.
...
PMID:Status of antioxidants and other biochemical abnormalities in children with dengue fever. 1019 85
Hepatic functions of 61 children, diagnosed to have
dengue
infection (DI), aged 2 months to 12 years comprising 37 cases of
dengue
fever (DF), 16 with
dengue
hemorrhagic fever (DHF), and eight with
dengue
shock syndrome (DSS) were prospectively studied during the acute attack. Hepatomegaly (74 per cent), epistaxis (26 per cent), jaundice (25 per cent), and petechial rashes (18 per cent) were the common clinical manifestations of DI. On admission, levels of serum aspartate transaminase (AST), serum
alanine transaminase
(
ALT
) and serum alkaline phosphatase (AP) were raised in 80-87 per cent of children with hepatomegaly (group I) and 81 per cent of cases without hepatomegaly (group II). During the second week of hospitalization the proportion of cases with raised levels of AST,
ALT
, AP and serum bilirubin increased and the mean levels were significantly higher (p < 0.05) in both the groups. These levels gradually declined over the next 2-3 weeks. All the cases with DSS and DHF had raised AST,
ALT
and AP levels and the mean levels of these enzymes were significantly higher (p < 0.05) as compared to DF. Our results suggest a transient derangement of liver functions in childhood DI, more so in DSS and DHF, with or without hepatomegaly.
...
PMID:Hepatic dysfunction in childhood dengue infection. 1073 40
Dengue fever
is a major cause of febrile illness in the tropics, and we describe 44 patients with
dengue
fever seen at Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen from 1988-98. A worldwide increase in transmission of
dengue
fever was reflected in the number of patients seen in 1997-1998. All patients had fever and headache, and were biochemically characterised by thrombocytopenia, leucopenia, increased levels of
alanine aminotransferase
and a rise in haematocrit. One patient had
dengue
haemorrhagic fever, and two patients exhibited unusual reactions to the infection, one in the form of extended febrile neutropenia complicated by an episode of of E. coli septicaemia, and one patient developed progressive paralysis of both legs, and remains partially paretic.
...
PMID:[Dengue fever among 44 Danish travellers investigated in the department of epidemics at the Rigshospitalet during 1988-1998]. 1101 37
The impact of
dengue
on liver function was studied on fifty serologically confirmed
dengue
cases admitted to Hospital Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (HUKM). Twenty-five of these patients had classic
dengue
fever (DF) and 25 had grade 1 or 2
dengue
hemorrhagic fever (DHF). There were more (60%) DHF patients with hepatomegaly compared to DF (40%) but the difference was not statistically significant. Analysis of the liver profile showed that liver dysfunction was commoner in DHF compared to DF, indicating that the degree of liver impairment may be related to the severity of DHF. Hyperbilirubinemia was noted in 3 (12%) DHF and 2 (8%) DF patients. The mean (range) serum bilirubin was higher in DHF [14.2(5-50) micromol/l] compared to DF [10.9(5-30) micromol/l)] (p > 0.05). Elevated levels of serum
alanine aminotransferase
(
ALT
) and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) were observed more frequently in DHF (20 and 12 patients respectively) compared to DF (16 and 8 patients respectively). Nine (36%) DHF and 6 (24%) DF patients had concomitant elevation of
ALT
and ALP levels. The mean (range) serum
ALT
levels were 109.3(23-325) U/l in DHF and 90.8(13-352) U/l in DF (p > 0.05). The mean (range) serum ALP levels were 102.2(15-319) U/l in DHF and 93.3(34-258) U/l in DF (p > 0.05). The
ALT
and ALP levels were significantly higher in DHF patients with spontaneous bleeding than those without bleeding (p < 0.05) None of the patients developed fulminant hepatitis. The immunoregulatory cells, which include the T (CD3), B (CD 19), CD4, CD8, CD5 and natural killer (NK) cells were significantly lower in DHF compared to DF patients (p < 0.05). However, the reduction in these cell counts did not correlate with the liver dysfunction seen in DHF patients. In conclusion, hepatomegaly and liver dysfunction were commoner in DHF compared to DF.
...
PMID:A comparison of the pattern of liver involvement in dengue hemorrhagic fever with classic dengue fever. 1112 22
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