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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 5-year-old girl who was an asymptomatic carrier of hepatitis B surface antigen developed simultaneously acute type A viral hepatitis and acute glomerulonephritis. She recovered from both acute illnesses uneventfully. We suggest that the kidney involvement was also caused by the hepatitis virus.
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PMID:[Acute type A hepatitis and acute glomerulonephritis in a carrier of hepatitis B antigen]. 279 47

Transplacental transmission of Neospora caninum was studied in 2 pregnant cats (queens). Queen 1 was inoculated subcutaneously with 2 x 10(6) cell culture-derived N. caninum tachyzoites on day 47 of gestation. She gave birth to a full-term kitten on the 17th day after inoculation. The kitten died the second day after birth due to generalized N. caninum infection. The mother cat was killed on the third day after parturition and was found to have a macerated kitten in the uterus. Severe placentitis, metritis, hepatitis, and nephritis due to N. caninum were seen in tissues from the queen. Queen 2 was fed N. caninum tissue cysts and mated 111 days later. She gave birth to 3 healthy full-term kittens. The kittens were necropsied at 2, 22, and 30 days of age. Neospora caninum was recovered from the organs and was seen in histologic sections in 1 of the 3 kittens. Results indicate that N. caninum can be transplacentally transmitted in cats during acute and chronic stages of infection. Neospora caninum-specific IgG antibodies were demonstrated in the sera of inoculated cats and nursing kittens.
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PMID:Transplacental Neospora caninum infection in cats. 279 79

We reported a case of halothane-induced fulminant hepatitis with acute renal failure which developed 6 days after reexposure to halothane. The patient was a 58-year-old female. She had a history of liver dysfunction after exposure to halothane 6 years previously. She had surgical treatment of clubfoot under halothane anesthesia in other hospital. Preoperative physical examination and laboratory data were normal. On the 6th post-operative day she abruptly developed high fever and general fatigue. Next day, she was transferred to our hospital. At admission, fulminant hepatitis complicated with acute renal failure was diagnosed with severe liver and renal damage. She was immediately treated with plasma exchange, glucose-insulin therapy, and hemodialysis. Serum transaminase level returned to normal value within a week. However, despite repeated hemodialysis, renal function did not improve, and she died of P. aeruginosa sepsis on 28th day after the operation. It may be suggested that in this patient hypersensitivity to halothane has persisted during the six years.
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PMID:[A case of fulminant hepatitis after reexposure to halothane six years later]. 281 Jul 19

A 24-year-old patient was admitted to our hospital because of vertigo, coldness and exercise-dependent pain in the left arm. She reported to have suffered from tuberculosis of the lung and a non-A-non-B hepatitis five years ago. Angiography of the aorta thoracica revealed a complete obstruction of the left arteria (a.) subclavia, stenosis of the a. carotis communis on both sides, of the a. carotis interna and the a. vertebralis on the left side as well as a non-detectable perfusion of the upper and medium segment of the left lung. ESR was elevated with 89/128 mm n.W., a hypochromic anaemia, thrombocytosis, hypalbuminaemia, elevation of alpha 2 and gammaglobulins in serum as well as a reduced quick value were found. AT III and protein C concentrations in plasma were also decreased, whereby protein C activity was reduced additionally. HLA-B-51 was positive. Takayasu's arteriitis was diagnosed by us. High-dose treatment with corticosteroids led to a considerable improvement of the clinical status and laboratory parameters of the patient. As this therapy was not associated with a normalization of protein C and AT III concentrations in plasma, protein C and AT III deficiency could be of significance in the development of Takayasu's arteriitis. Until now protein C and AT III deficiency were not described in patients with Takayasu's arteriitis.
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PMID:[A patient with Takayasu arteritis and protein C and AT III deficiency]. 288 94

An autopsy case of adenovirus hepatitis with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) is presented. A 7-month-old female was admitted to the Kitasato University Hospital with chief complaint of persistent fever. A diagnosis of severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) was made because of defective function in both T and B lymphocytes. Respiratory disturbance and severe hepatic dysfunction were manifested after admission. She died of respiratory failure on the 40th hospital day. Autopsy findings revealed many focal necroses scattered irregularly throughout the liver. Degenerating hepatocytes around the focal necrosis contained nuclear inclusion bodies, and crystalline arrays of adenovirus virions were recognized in these cells by electron microscopy. Adenovirus antigens were brilliantly detected in the nuclear inclusion bodies by indirect immunofluorescence.
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PMID:Adenovirus hepatitis in a patient with severe combined immunodeficiency. 303 94

A 3-month-old girl presented with anorexia, failure to thrive and drowsiness. She was mildly icteric with hepatomegaly and peripheral oedema. Disordered liver function tests were associated with the biopsy appearances of a giant cell hepatitis and with a Fanconi syndrome. At the age of 16 weeks she collapsed with profound hypoglycaemia. Fasting also provoked hypoglycaemia with lactic acidaemia. She became increasingly irritable and hypotonic and, although initially liver and renal function improved, she deteriorated and died of hepatocellular failure and septicaemia. A post-mortem revealed massive fatty degeneration of the liver. The activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase in her cultured skin fibroblasts was 16% of controls. Her brother died at the age of 4 weeks of sudden infant death syndrome.
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PMID:Mitochondrial phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase deficiency. 308 95

An autopsy case of hepatitis associated aplastic anemia was presented. A 58-year-old Japanese female with non-A, non-B hepatitis was admitted on August 2, 1983. Moderate grade of fever and hemorrhagic diathesis appeared on September 16, when hepatitis was evaluated as being under resolving. The peripheral blood and bone marrow findings were consistent with aplastic anemia. Since infection was suggested by increased levels of serum gammaglobulin and CRP, treatment with antibiotics as well as prednisolone and blood transfusion was initiated. Since September 21, gradual tenderness and edema on the right lower abdominal wall appeared. She died on October 3. On postmortem examination, systemic plasmacytosis with lymphadenopathy and septic monilial infection was revealed. Numerous plasma cells were atypical, but were immunohistochemically proved to be polyclonal. The bone marrow showed a massive and diffuse plasma cell proliferation with extremely scarce myeloid cells and megakaryocytes. There was a large granulomatous lesion with monilial infection in the wall of the ileocecum. By these findings, systemic plasmacytosis was suspected to be due to chronic monilial infection. The pathogenesis of systemic plasmacytosis in aplastic anemias and in other diseases were discussed with relation to the present case.
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PMID:Hepatitis-associated aplastic anemia with systemic plasmacytosis. 310 39

A case report is presented of a 43-year-old woman with generalized peliosis hepatitis that developed during longterm use of oral contraceptives (OCs). The patient had been in good health until the last 2 years when she began to experience vague epigastric pains and a feeling of abdominal distension. Several months prior to admission, she had started to complain of itching and fatigue. There was no history of dark urine, white stools, or hepatitis. On physical examination, no jaundice or cutaneous stigmata of chronic liver disease were observed. Laboratory studies showed a normal erythrocyte sedimentation rate and hematological blood count. A radionuclide study of the liver showed hepatomegaly; especially the left lobe was enlarged. A computerized tomographic scan of the liver showed multiple areas of decreased density in both of the enlarged lobes. There was no evidence of a tumor. Selective transfemoral angiography of the celiac artery also showed hepatic enlargement but no signs of a space-occupying lesion. At laparoscopy, the liver was grossly enlarged and had a lumpy appearance, but again there were no signs of a tumor. No evidence of veno-occlusive disease or hepatocellular adenoma was found. The diagnosis was peliosis hepatitis. The OCs were withdrawn, and the patient was discharged. Regular follow-up in the outpatient department showed no decrease in the size of the liver. The alkaline phosphatase level rose. The fatigue became worse, and cholestyramine was prescribed for progressive itching. In September 1980, the patient was admitted for reevaluation. A repeated CT scan and angiography of the liver again yielded no evidence of a tumor. Esophagoscopy showed the presence of varices grade 2. The liver at laparoscopy had the same appearance as it had in 1976. Histological examination of a biopsy specimen showed occasional dilated sinusoids and locally marked periportal and intralobular fibrosis. No regeneration nodules were found. The diagnosis was liver fibrosis. The patient's condition deteriorated gradually in the following years. She experienced increasing fatigue. Steatorrhea developed, and the patient lost weight. She needed increasing doses of cholestyramine and oral supplementation of vitamins A, D, and K. She was admitted for a 3rd time in February 1985. Esophagoscopy revealed varices grade 4. A CT scan of the liver showed no change. The patient successfully underwent an orthotopic liver transplantation in January 1987. The diagnosis of peliosis hepatis was well documented in this patient.
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PMID:Generalized peliosis hepatis and cirrhosis after long-term use of oral contraceptives. 312 33

We describe here two cases of delta hepatitis (a coinfection and a superinfection) presenting as acute HBsAg-negative hepatitis. The first patient, a parenteral drug abuser, had a biphasic course of the disease, with HBsAg detectable transiently only during the relapse. Testing for delta markers on stored sera gave evidence of HBV/HDV coinfection. The other patient, a hospital nurse, chronic asymptomatic carrier of HBsAg, developed fulminant hepatitis with the transient appearance of antibody to HBsAg. She survived massive liver necrosis, and serological analysis of HDV markers documented a hepatitis delta virus superinfection. These cases demonstrate the possible substantial repression of HBV gene products exerted by the replication of delta virus, with a likely misdiagnosis if delta markers are not determined in serial serum samples.
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PMID:A possible misdiagnosis in patients presenting with acute HBsAg-negative hepatitis: the role of hepatitis delta virus. 322 May 81

A 25-year-old female was admitted for further investigation of the right renal mass, which was noted during evaluation for hepatitis. She had no personal or family history of stigmas of tuberous sclerosis. On physical examination, a movable hard smooth mass of fist size was palpable in the right abdomen. Drip infusion pyelography revealed an elevation of right kidney. Ultrasonography revealed that the abdominal mass had a high amplitude echo area. On CT the mass was heterogeneous with irregular margin and had regions of low attenuation value, suspicious of a tumor with high fat content. An angiogram of the right renal artery revealed a hypervascular tumor showing multiple saccular aneurysms, and absence of arteriovenous shunting. Based on the aforementioned findings, the mass was diagnosed as renal angiomyolipoma. Partial right nephrectomy was performed through an extraperitoneal approach. Pathological diagnosis was a renal angiomyolipoma. Convalescence was uneventful, and the remaining parenchyma of right kidney was working well on drip infusion pyelography three months after operation. The management of renal angiomyolipoma from the conservative point of view is also discussed.
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PMID:[A case of renal angiomyolipoma treated by partial nephrectomy--the management of renal angiomyolipoma from the conservative point of view]. 337 96


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