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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Serum hepatitis is a dreaded risk in connection with regular dialysis treatment (RDT). Liver damage, however, can be cuased by other diseases, such as infection with
cytomegalovirus
(CMV). Two cases in our artificial kidney unit revealed signs of liver damage with increased liver enzyme activity. Case 1, a woman, was on RDT after an unsuccessful renal transplantation, and Case 2, a man, belonged to the staff. Serum hepatitis was initially suspected in both cases, but repeated examinations of the sera revealed no hepatitis B antigen or antibodies (HbAg and HbAb). Later on, both showed a significant increase in antibodies in complement fixations reaction (CF) to CMV-antigen. CMV could be isolated from urine in Case 2. Case 1 had been bilaterally nephrectomized. The symptoms (
tiredness
, muscle pain and headache) and the course of the disease were mild in both cases and liver enzymes became normal within 1-2 weeks. Twenty out of 31 examined patients and staff had antibodies in CF to CMV-antigen, but in none was there any significant increase. The source of infection may have been transfusion of fresh blood in Case 1, but in Case 2 no particular source could be suspected. Thus, in liver damage CMV-infection may be an etiological alternative. In routine work at artficial kidney unite patients and personnel are regularly examined in respect of bilirubin, liver enzymes, HbAg and HbAb in serum. We recommend also examination of serum for antibodies in CF to CMV-antigen. Until a firm differential diagnosis has been established the patient should be isolated and the dialysis equipments used only by that patient.
...
PMID:Cytomegalovirus hepatitis in an artificial kidney unit. 18 60
Human herpesvirus-6 (HHV-6) was first isolated in 1986 from peripheral blood leukocytes of patients with lymphoproliferative disorders. Although HHV-6 is distinct from the other human herpes viruses, DNA studies have revealed some genomic similarities with
cytomegalovirus
. It has recently become evident that up to 95% of older children and adults are HHV-6 seropositive. Infection is believed to occur early in life, after maternal antibody has waned. Up to 92% of healthy adults shed HHV-6 in saliva, and evidence indicates that this secretion is important in spread of the virus. In situ hybridization and immunochemical studies suggest that the salivary glands themselves may be the site of replication and persistence of HHV-6. There is good evidence that HHV-6 is causally linked to exanthema subitum, a common febrile disease of infants. Associations of HHV-6 with postviral
fatigue
syndrome, lymphoproliferative disorders and progression of AIDS have all been examined, but the evidence in these cases remains conflicting.
...
PMID:Human herpesvirus-6: the latest human herpes virus. 166 30
Six distinct human herpesviruses have been identified. They include Herpes simplex virus type 1 and type 2 (HSV-1 and HSV-2),
Cytomegalovirus
(CMV), Varicella-zoster virus (VZV), Epstein-Barr virus and the recently described Human herpesvirus 6 (HHV-6). With the exception of HSV-2, the members of the family are ubiquitous and infect most of the human population in the first decade of life. HHV-6 possesses morphological and structural features characteristic of members from the herpesvirus family but it is both genetically and immunologically distinct from other members. The virus was first identified in 1986 by the group at the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda. Not until 1988 was the primary disease identified as that of a common childhood disease, exanthema subitum. There are independent reports on isolations of HHV-6 from the USA, Japan, U.K., Australia and Africa, demonstrating that the virus is a widespread agent. Its possible involvement in chronic
fatigue
disease and as a cofactor of development of AIDS are still subjects for discussion.
...
PMID:Virological and clinical characteristics of human herpesvirus 6. 166 41
Ordinarily, severe disease due to acquired
cytomegalovirus
(CMV) infection does not occur in immunocompetent children. We describe a previously healthy boy who acquired primary
CMV infection
at approximately 2 years of age and experienced a 2-year-long debilitating multisystem illness from which he ultimately recovered. Clinical features of this illness included
fatigue
, poor weight gain, pallor, unexplained fever, musculoskeletal complaints, drenching night sweats, lymphadenopathy, and massive hepatosplenomegaly. Laboratory abnormalities included elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, lymphocytosis, and elevated immune complex levels. Cellular immune function was impaired during the illness but was demonstrably normal during convalescence, and there was no other evidence for a known immunodeficiency state. Immunoblot analysis showed enhanced antibody response to a 66-kd infected cell protein after symptomatic recovery. Despite consistently normal indices of hepatic function, liver enlargement persisted after other symptoms had resolved. Liver biopsy demonstrated a mononuclear cell portal tract infiltrate with fibrosis, but CMV could not be demonstrated directly in this tissue. Primary
CMV infection
has not been reported previously to cause the persistent symptoms seen in this child.
...
PMID:Protracted mononucleosis-like illness associated with acquired cytomegalovirus infection in a previously healthy child: transient cellular immune defects and chronic hepatopathy. 184 49
Nine female and 6 male adolescents (mean age 14.5 +/- 1.7 [SD] years) were evaluated for chronic
fatigue
associated with at least three additional symptoms present for 18.4 +/- 8.4 months. Eleven subjects experienced the onset of symptoms with an acute illness (seven Monospot-positive). Medical history, physical examination, and laboratory testing yielded little helpful information. Serologic testing for Coxsackie B viruses 1 through 6,
cytomegalovirus
, Epstein-Barr virus, human herpesvirus 6, and Toxoplasma gondii in subjects and healthy controls provided little evidence for an infectious cause of persistent
fatigue
. Children's Depression Inventory scores and psychiatric interviews with the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia-Children's Version (K-SADS) identified five subjects with major depression. On the K-SADS, the 10 fatigued subjects without major depression endorsed many secondary symptoms of depression but were less likely than depressed psychiatric clinic patients to endorse primary symptoms such as depressed mood, guilt, and suicidality. At telephone follow-up 13 to 32 months after intake, 4 subjects were completely well, 4 markedly improved, and 7 unimproved or worse. Further research is necessary to determine whether chronic
fatigue
in adolescents is prodromal depression, a discrete psychosomatic condition, or an infectious or immunologic disorder that mimics depression.
...
PMID:Chronic fatigue in adolescents. 841 93
The aim of the study was to examine the frequency, severity, persistence and etiology of relapses occurring during the hepatitis A viral infection. Therefore, a prospective study of 910 patients suffering from hepatitis A (HA) was carried out. The clinical examination and determination of glutamyl pyruvic transaminase (GPT) in the serum every 7-14 days till recovery (usually during 6--8 months) were performed. HAV infection was confirmed by detecting anti-HAV IgM in the blood of all the examined by radioimmunoassay. In 876 (93.3%) patients HA had typical clinical features and a monophasic course. All cases made a rapid clinical recovery and liver function tests improved strikingly between 1 and 4 months after the onset of illness. However, in 34 (3.7%) of 910 patients, after an asymptomatic interval of 4--8 weeks, relapsing hepatitis occurred. Mild clinical symptoms:
fatigue
, myalgia, nausea, epigastric discomfort accompanied by the elevated levels of GPT in the serum were noticed in 11 patients, while 3 of them redeveloped jaundice. In 23 remaining patients relapses of hepatitis were asymptomatic, except for the reappearance of icterus in six cases. The only way to establish the exacerbation of the disease was through the pathological findings of GPT in the serum, which increased 10--60 times above the upper limit of the normal value. While 25 patients had one relapse, in 9 there were two or more relapses, so that hepatitis had a biphasic or polyphasic course. The second relapse was registered 3--6 weeks after the first one disappeared. Through biochemical tests the average values of the GPT were established: 1566 U/L in the acute stage, 107 U/L during the early stage of convalescence and 1016 U/L during the first relapse of hepatitis. After the first relapse and during remission, in 9 patients the average values of GPT in the serum were 84 U/L, while during the second relapse 518 U/L. Clinical signs of relapsing hepatitis disappeared approximately in 4 days, but liver function tests decreased slowly and persisted elevated between 5 and 12 months. A possibility of establishing the etiology of relapsing hepatitis, which has yet remained unknown, is discussed. Anti-HAV IgM were present in all 34 patients during the initial and relapsing phase of hepatitis and in 26 cases in the latter phase of convalescence between 9 and 11 months after the beginning of the disease. Serological tests excluded infection with hepatitis B,
cytomegalovirus
and Epstein-Barr virus. With a great probability other infections and toxic agents damaging the liver could have been excluded.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Recurrences of viral hepatitis A]. 207 29
We report two cases of
cytomegalovirus
(CMV) encephalitis in immunologically normal adults. Patient 1, a 53-year-old man: onset was acute with headache and pyrexia, followed by moderate disturbance of consciousness with meningeal signs. Repeated lumbar puncture revealed 58 CSF cells per microliters and 96 mg protein per dl. On the 11th day after onset, we started treatment with adenine arabinoside (ara-A). He recovered completely. With IgG-ELISA methods, antibody to CMV turned into positive on the third week, and into negative again on the fifth week, and these conversions were concomitant with the symptomatic aggravation and amelioration, respectively. Patient 2, a 78-year-old woman: onset was acute with general
fatigue
and pyrexia, followed by meningeal signs and mild disturbance of consciousness. Consciousness level was worsened and two courses of acyclovir (Acv) treatment were started on the 59th and on the 93rd day after onset, but consciousness level went down to coma and she died. Repeated lumbar puncture revealed 787 CSF cells per microliters and 229 mg protein per dl. CMV antibody titer (CF) in CSF was 1:32 and antibody index was 58 or more, suggesting antibody production in central nervous system. CMV encephalitis in immunologically normal adults is very rare, only 10 cases having been reported so far. Most patients recover spontaneously, but some may be fatal. In our view ara-A treatment should be taken in consideration in case of acute encephalitis unresponsive to Acv.
...
PMID:[Cytomegalovirus encephalitis in immunologically normal adults]. 216 21
A 43-year-old homosexual man visited his dentist with painful, nodular, ulcerated lesions on the soft palate, right buccal mucosa, and right posterior maxillary gingiva. Serologic studies for exposure to human immunodeficiency virus, performed before biopsy, were positive. Biopsy of the maxillary gingiva demonstrated sheets of histiocytes containing small intracellular yeasts, which on culture were identified as Histoplasma capsulatum. Bilateral leukoplakic lesions with some vertical furrowing involving the lateral borders of the tongue were also noted. Histologically, hyperkeratosis and fungal hyphae were identified. The patient was treated for histoplasmosis with amphotericin B, which resulted in significant improvement of the oral lesions. He was subsequently hospitalized for
fatigue
and dyspnea and was found to have Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. Pulmonary status deteriorated within a 3-week period, and the patient died. Autopsy findings were negative for histoplasmosis but positive for necrotizing and cavitary P. carinii pneumonia, pulmonary and hepatic herpes simplex infections, and pulmonary and intestinal
cytomegalovirus infection
.
...
PMID:Oral histoplasmosis as a presenting disease in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 223 84
Twenty-three patients with low natural killer syndrome (LNKS), 7 males and 16 females, are reported here. These LNKS patients had an age range from 14 to 77 years, with a median of 36.5 years. LNKS is a newly proposed category of immune disorders, being characteristically diagnosed by lowered NK cell activity against K562 target cells as a definite laboratory abnormality, in association with general clinical symptoms of remittent fever and uncomfortable
fatigue
, persisting without explanation for more than 6 months. Other immune parameters, such as the DNA synthesis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) in either the presence or absence of mitogens, the T4+/T8+ ratio and the number of Leu-11+ PBMCs, were usually within the normal range. Also, routine laboratory tests did not detect any abnormal findings. The LNKS patients responded well to the administration of an immunopotentiator called 'lentinan', a glucan extracted from the Japanese mushroom Lentinus edodes, despite no responses to conventional fever treatments such as the administration of antipyretics or antibiotics. All LNKS patients observed were universally free of antibodies in their sera to human T-lymphotropic retroviruses I and III, and lymphadenopathy was infrequent, indicating that the LNKS is a syndrome independent of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) or AIDS-related complex. Antibodies to other known viruses tested such as Epstein-Barr or measles virus, or
cytomegalovirus
were also negative or not significantly elevated in the sera before the initiation of lentinan administration. If a virus is the cause of LNKS, it may be a new, unknown virus or an unknown substrain of known viruses. None of the LNKS patients has died of this syndrome.
...
PMID:Low natural killer syndrome: clinical and immunologic features. 244 2
A mononucleosis-like illness is frequently recognized retrospectively as the first manifestation of infection with human immunodeficiency virus-type 1 (HIV-1). This acute but transient retroviral syndrome may include symptoms such as malaise, fever, sweats, myalgia, arthralgia, maculopapular rash, diarrhea, and lymphocytic meningitis. We observed two intravenous drug users who developed a severe, febrile illness with subsequent oral thrush (one also had biopsy-proven esophageal candidiasis). Both patients had weight loss, arthralgia, myalgia, and
fatigue
. These symptoms occurred two weeks after needle-sharing and persisted for 7 weeks in one patient and 10 weeks in the other. Both patients had serologic evidence for both acute HIV-1 and
cytomegalovirus infection
.
Cytomegalovirus
enhances HIV-1 replication in vitro, presumably by stimulating HIV-1 gene expression. Thus, the observed syndrome suggests that this viral interaction may be clinically significant because it appears to cause severe additional morbidity, which is not typical for primary infection with HIV-1. After 6 months of follow-up, one patient is completely asymptomatic but shows markedly reduced CD4+ lymphocytes. The other patient developed persistent lymphadenopathy after the acute illness, but is feeling well 21 months after infection.
...
PMID:Co-infection with human immunodeficiency virus-type 1 (HIV-1) and cytomegalovirus in two intravenous drug users. 215 58
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