Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.6.1.2 (alanine aminotransferase)
26,722 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The prevalence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection among the patients of a hemodialysis unit in Taiwan was determined by an immunoblot and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction algorithm to be 58.8% (67 of 114 patients) after serological surveys with two advanced-generation enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) for anti-HCV and a C 100-3 single-antigen test. The results of the second-generation ELISAs, the supplementary immunoblot test, and the test for HCV RNA were in good agreement with each other, from 86.0 to 98.2%. The first-generation C 100-3 test lacked the sensitivity of the four other systems. The two advanced-generation screening ELISAs for anti-HCV, a multiple-recombinant-antigen test, the Abbott second-generation ELISA, and a synthetic peptide multiple-antigen test, the UBI HCV EIA, provided reliable and virtually equivalent detection of potentially infected blood. Antibodies to capsid 1 and capsid 2 determinants of the Liatek immunoblot system were the most frequently detected reactivities to HCV in the HCV-infected hemodialysis patients. The percentage of HCV-infected patients with abnormal liver function (alanine aminotransferase level, greater than 100 IU/liter) was higher than that of the uninfected patients. The prevalence of HCV infection was correlated to the duration of hemodialysis treatment and the amount of blood transfused, and the most common transmission mode was thought to be patient-to-patient transmission through the dialysis equipment. Several means of reducing the frequency of transmission between hemodialysis patients are suggested.
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PMID:Hepatitis C markers in hemodialysis patients. 768 54

From 8 Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Centers, 296 patients with varying degrees of alcoholic liver disease were tested for hepatitis C (HCV) infection using an EIA and RIBA 2. A high frequency of positive response was observed with 13.9% reactive to both and an additional 4.4% positive only to RIBA 2 (total 18.3%). An evaluation of known risk factors (injection drug use and prior blood transfusions) failed to account for the mode of transmission in 42.6% of the HCV+ patients. The clinical severity of the liver disease and degree of liver pathology were nearly identical in HCV+ vs. HCV- patients. However, the process was accelerated in the HCV+ patients occurring at a 12.8% younger age (p < 0.0001) with a 43% increase in ALT (p = 0.05). The most striking differences were observed in immune parameters. In peripheral blood, total lymphocyte counts were increased 20% (p = 0.01) accompanied by a 56% increase in B cells (p = 0.01) and a 35% elevation of IgG levels (p = 0.0001) in HCV+ patients. T cell changes consisted of a 50% increase in CD8 cells (p = 0.047). However, lymphocyte infiltration into liver was not significantly different (HCV+ vs. HCV-) for any of the subsets studied (CD4, CD8, B cells, NK cells). The combined presence of HCV and alcohol injury did not significantly increase mortality but did significantly increase the number of hospitalizations from 2.4 to 4.0 per year (p = 0.0005).
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PMID:Relevance of anti-HCV reactivity in patients with alcoholic hepatitis. VA cooperative Study Group #275. 768 17

An extended follow-up study of hepatitis C virus (HVC) infection was conducted in Guangzhou and its nearby regions on patients hospitalized with acute hepatitis. Routine screening of blood donors for HCV was not yet instituted at the time of this study. HCV was found to be a common cause of the disease, and the infection had a close association with recent histories of blood transfusion. Sequential sera obtained from patients during hospitalization and after discharge were tested for the presence of HCV antibodies by the first and the second generation of commercial test kits, for levels of alanine aminotransferase (ALT), and for the presence of HCV-RNA. The development of HCV antibodies in some of the patients may be delayed for protracted period following clinical onset. HCV-RNA was only intermittently detectable both before and after seroconversion. Six of 33 patients studied showed seroreversion and 5 of them were accompanied by loss of HCV-RNA and serum ALT returned to normal levels. The disease persisted in 24 of 27 patients without seroreversion, accompanied by intermittent detection of HCV-RNA throughout the protracted course of the infection. Our results indicate that both EIA for detection of HCV antibodies and PCR for serum HCV-RNA should be used in combination for reliable diagnosis of HCV infection and screening of blood for transfusion.
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PMID:Follow-up study of acute hepatitis C. 798 12

We studied the occurrence of anti-hepatitis C (HCV) antibodies in patients with malignant disease (53), in patients undergoing haemodialysis (56), and in blood donors (204) as healthy population controls. The study was carried out using the second-generation EIA test. Anti-HCV positivity was 23.2% in haemodialysis (HD) patients, 0.5% in blood donors, and 0% of the patients with malignant disease (MD). There was no association between anti-HCV positivity and the results of AST, ALT and HBsAg tests in patients and controls. But there was significant association of blood transfusion frequency and duration of HD with anti-HCV positivity in patients undergoing HD, and conversely an absence of this association in patients with MD. However, two of the anti-HCV-positive HD patients did not have any blood transfusion history. One HCV-positive blood donor had a history of surgical operation. Nosocomial transmission of HCV infection has replaced blood transfusion as the main risk factor in HD patients, and preventive measures should be performed in this direction to control infection.
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PMID:The prevalence of anti-HCV positivity in patients undergoing haemodialysis or with malignant disease. 817 77

A 27-peptide fragment derived from natural HDAg sequence was selected, identified and synthesized. It was used to develop an EIA method for detection of anti-HD. The 27-peptide possessed the similar antigenicity with the corresponding fragment of natural HDAg, and could also compete with natural HDAg for serum anti-HD. High specificity and no cross-reaction were found among the peptide and normal human sera, normal mice sera and sera positive with HAV, HBV or HCV antibody alone. 36 serum samples were identified previously, with Abbott kits with a coincident rate of 97.2%. Anti-HD was also detected in serum samples of some blood donors and patients with liver diseases and HBV infection from 1990-1992. One (0.33%) of 300 blood donors was positive (two times higher than normal ALT level in serum). 62 patients with hepatitis A and 58 patients with non-hepatitis B were anti-HD negative. 100 (11.64%) of 859 patients with HBV infection were positive: ASC 13/410 (3.17%), AH 7/63 (10.29%), CPH 1/9 (11.11%), CAH 22/121 (18.18%), SH 15/75 (20.00%), LC 23/78 (29.49%), PHC 19/89 (19.39%). The results are consistent with our previous reports.
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PMID:[Synthetic oligopeptide of hepatitis D virus antigen and its clinical application]. 822 Dec 44

To elucidate whether breast milk, vaginal discharge and contamination with maternal blood at birth are possible routes of mother-to-child transmission of hepatitis C virus (HCV), we examined HCV RNA in the cord and peripheral blood of infants, and in the blood, vaginal discharge, and breast milk of anti-HCV seropositive mothers. From July 1991 to July 1992, we studied 20 healthy pregnant women, who were seropositive with the Ortho anti-HCV EIA, and their infants. Using a sensitive nested polymerase chain reaction (nested PCR), we investigated the presence or absence of hepatitis C virus in the above-mentioned specimens. Moderate elevation of aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) was observed in only one woman in the first and third trimesters. The nested PCR and subsequent Southern hybridization detected 0.5-5.5 copies of HCV c-DNA. HCV RNA was detected in 17/20 blood samples (85%), 7/14 vaginal discharge samples (50%) and 4/10 cord blood samples (40%). However, no HCV RNA was identified in the peripheral blood of infants or breast milk. The mother-to-child transmission of HCV at delivery or via breast milk does not appear to contribute much to maintaining the global HCV reservoir.
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PMID:Studies on transmission of hepatitis C virus from mother-to-child in the perinatal period. 825 May 98

The pathogenesis of experimental hepatitis E has not been thoroughly investigated. The purpose of this study was to more accurately document the events in this disease. Cynomolgus macaques were inoculated intravenously with bile or feces containing hepatitis E virus (HEV). Serum, bile, and liver specimens were evaluated with light microscopy, immune electron microscopy, immunofluorescence microscopy, EIA, and polymerase chain reaction. In the third week, there were histopathologic changes and HEV antigen (HEVAg) in liver, HEV in bile, and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) elevations. Widespread pathologic changes were detected during the fourth week and antibody to HEV (anti-HEV) and peak ALT values in the fifth or sixth week. By the sixth week, HEVAg had disappeared but pathologic changes persisted. This study supports the concept that experimental hepatitis E has an initial phase in which hepatic HEV replication is accompanied by the onset of hepatitis and a later phase in which the appearance of anti-HEV is accompanied by progression of the hepatitis.
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PMID:Experimental hepatitis E: pathogenesis in cynomolgus macaques (Macaca fascicularis). 835 1

The prevalence of antibodies against hepatitis C virus (HCV) was determined in 103 haemodialysis patients who attended two dialysis units in South Africa. With the use of a second-generation enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (UBI HCV EIA, Organon Teknika, The Netherlands) and a 4-recombinant immunoblot assay (Chiron Corporation, USA), antibodies to HCV were found in 22 patients (21%). Statistically significant associations with anti-HCV carrier status were duration of dialysis (P = 0.0005) and number of blood transfusions received (P = 0.008). With stepwise logistic regression analysis it was not possible to separate the effects of HCV status associated with these two variables. A transient elevation in alanine aminotransferase (ALT) occurred in 8 of the 22 anti-HCV-positive patients, compared with 14 of the 81 anti-HCV-negative patients (P = 0.054). As yet, no patients have clinical evidence of ongoing liver disease or persistently elevated ALT levels. Of the 45 dialysis staff members tested, none was positive for anti-HCV.
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PMID:The prevalence of antibodies to hepatitis C virus at two haemodialysis units in South Africa. 859 92

Chronic liver disease due to hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is a major problem in hemophiliacs. Recent reports suggested that hemophiliacs coinfected with hepatitis C virus and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) have an increased incidence of liver failure but the mechanism of accelerated liver injury is not clear. We tested plasma from 100 hemophiliacs for anti-HCV by second generation ELISA, anti-HIV by EIA, and HCV RNA and HIV RNA by branched DNA and polymerase chain reaction assays to determine if hemophiliacs coinfected with HCV and HIV have higher HCV RNA levels and more active liver disease. Seventy-nine (79%) patients were anti-HCV positive, of whom 85% were HCV RNA positive. None of the anti-HCV-negative patients had detectable HCV RNA in plasma. Forty-two (42%) patients were anti-HIV positive, of whom 47% had detectable HIV RNA. All the anti-HIV-positive patients were also anti-HCV positive. The prevalence of both anti-HCV and anti-HIV increased significantly with age. There was no difference in HCV RNA levels between anti-HIV-positive and anti-HIV-negative patients (mean: 21 +/- 4 vs 18 +/- 5 Meq/ml), although HCV RNA levels were significantly higher in anti-HIV-positive patients with CD4 counts < 200/mm3 (P = 0.008). There was an inverse correlation between HCV RNA levels and CD4 counts but no correlation was found between HCV RNA and serum aminotransferase levels. We found a high prevalence of HCV and HIV coinfection in our hemophiliacs. Hepatitis C virus replication appears to be increased in patients with severe immunodeficiency secondary to progressive HIV infection. However, there was no correlation between HCV RNA and serum ALT level, suggesting that HCV is not directly cytopathic.
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PMID:Effect of human immunodeficiency virus infection on hepatitis C virus infection in hemophiliacs. 865 62

Second generation enzyme immunoassays (EIA-2) for antibodies to hepatitis C virus (anti-HCV) have a higher specificity and sensitivity than first generation enzyme immunoassays (EIA-1). We studied how many anti-HCV-positive blood donors were missed by the EIA-1, how many were false positive, how false-positive donors should be dealt with and how the results of the EIA-2 correlate to demographic data and serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) level. A total of 208, 544 northern German blood donors, not preselected for anti-HCV negativity, were tested for anti-HCV with EIA-2 and, if repeatability reactive (rr), were retested with a licensed supplementary test (RIBA-2). 0.43% of the donors were EIA-2 rr, but only 0.12% of women and 0.09% of men were RIBA-2 positive. RIBA-2 positivity rates were very low in donors 18 to 27 years old (0.03% and 0.05%) and rose with age in women but not in men. Infected women were significantly more often Rhesus-negative than men. The rate of unspecifically positive EIA-2 results (entirely negative in RIBA-2) increased with age in both sexes and did not correlate with ALT. The ALT distribution was age-dependent with a different pattern for men and women. Confirmation of EIA-2 results with RIBA was rare when ALT was low and frequent when ALT was high. ALT screening before introduction of Anti-HCV detected one out of six infected donors. To exclude this one infectious donation, 46 uninfected donations had to be excluded in addition. Only 8% of the then RIBA-2-positive donors were not detected by EIA-1. Apparent seroconversions in EIA-2 are usually not specific; only 1 out of 66 apparent seroconversions could be confirmed by RIBA-2 suggesting recent HCV infection. 0.15% of the donor population showed an inconsistent EIA-2 pattern during follow-up. We conclude that donors should not be excluded from further donations, even on the basis of multiple EIA-1 positive results or on the basis of only one EIA-2 positive donation. Anti-D-immunoglobulin prophylaxis may have been a source of infection in some Rhesus-negative women. ALT screening should not be discontinued because recent HCV infection can be detected earlier by ALT than by anti-HCV, but exclusion limits should be elevated to increase specificity and limit unnecessary exclusion of donations.
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PMID:Non-specific and specific anti-HCV results correlated to age, sex, transaminase, rhesus blood group and follow-up in blood donors. 934 94


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