Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Maternal mortality is examined from June 1980 to December 1986 at Mulago, Nsambyo, Old Kampala, Rubaga, and Mengo Hospitals in Kampala, Uganda. Clinical or immediate causes, direct and indirect, were recorded from case summary forms based on ICD9 definitions of obstetric complications. The nonabortion maternal mortality rate (NAMMR) was 2.65/1000 deliveries (580 deaths); the abortion-related maternal mortality rate (ARMMR) was 3.58/1000 abortions. The hospital maternal mortality rate was 2.0/1000 deliveries. 75% of maternal deaths of women of 28 weeks' gestation or more had delivered outside the hospital. NAMMR doubled between 1980-86, a statistically significant increase. ARMMR increases were almost significant. 75% were direct obstetric and 21% were indirect obstetric causes. 38% had clinical anemia, 29% had some sepsis, 18% had substantial bleeding, and 14% had obstructed labor. Other contributing conditions were pneumonia, ruptured uterus, laparotomy, evacuations and curettage, malaria, preeclampsia, sickle cell anemia, pulmonary embolism, malnutrition, tetanus, meningitis, prolonged labor, and hepatitis. At admission, 48% were in poor condition, 30% in good condition, and 22% in fair condition. 27% had sickle cell anemia, high blood pressure, multiple pregnancy, or malaria at admission. 64% were admitted within 24 hours after delivery, 67% 1-7 days after delivery, and 92% 7-42 days after delivery. Those in good condition were all admitted 7 days postdelivery. 41% of deaths were due to lack of drugs, 7% lack of fluids, 20% with theater problems, 14% with doctor-related factors, and 3% with midwife-related factors. Better information is needed on mortality before delivery, mortality in hospitals vs. outside, and mortality from abortion, and ectopic and hydatidiform molar pregnancies. An explanation given for the increase in maternal mortality is the decline in economic conditions. Abortion complications may be due to the concealment practiced. Causes are consistent with trends from the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s in Uganda and developing countries in general. Availability and accessibility of gynecological and obstetric services needs great improvement. Training traditional birth attendants and obtaining rural ambulance services are also needed. Health workers lack creativity and imagination for developing country conditions; scarce resources are not the only problem.
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PMID:Incidence and causes of maternal mortality in five Kampala hospitals, 1980-1986. 176 15

The causes (medical, reproductive factors, health care delivery system, and socioeconomic factors) of maternal mortality in India and strategies for reducing maternal mortality are presented. Maternal mortality rates (MMR) are very high in Asia and Africa compared with Northern Europe's 4/100,000 live births. An Indian hospital study found the MMR to be 4.21/1000 live births. 50-98% of maternal deaths are caused by direct obstetric causes (hemorrhage, infection, and hypertensive disorders, ruptured uterus, hepatitis, and anemia). 50% of maternal deaths due to sepsis are related to illegal induced abortion. MMR in India has not declined significantly in the past 15 years. Age, primi and grande multiparity, unplanned pregnancy, and related illegal abortion are the reproductive causes. In 1985 WHO reported that 63-80% of maternal deaths due to direct obstetric causes and 88-98% of all maternal deaths could probably have been prevented with proper handling. In India, coordination between levels in the delivery system and fragmentation of care account for the poor quality of maternal health care. Mass illiteracy is another cause. Effective strategies for reducing the MMR are 1) to place a high priority on maternal and child health (MCH) services and integrate vertical programs (e.g., family planning) related to MCH; 2) to give attention to care during labor and delivery, which is the most critical period for complications; 3) to provide community-based delivery huts which can provide a clean and safe delivery place close to home, and maternity waiting rooms in hospitals for high risk mothers; 4) to improve the quality of MCH care at the rural community level (proper history taking, palpation, blood pressure and fetal heart screening, risk factor screening, and referral); 5) to improve quality of care at the primary health care level (emergency care and proper referral); 6) to include in the postpartum program MCH and family planning services; 7) to examine the feasibility of a national blood transfusion service network; 8) to improve transportation; 9) to educate young girls on health and sex; 10) to informally educate the masses on MCH; 11) to focus obstetrics and gynecology training primarily on practical skills in management of labor and delivery; 12) to research reproductive behavior; and 13) to assure every women the right to safe motherhood.
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PMID:Maternal mortality in India: current status and strategies for reduction. 181 58

Perinatal transmission of hepatitis B (HB) virus occurs if the mother has had acute HB infection during late pregnancy or in the first months postpartum, or if the mother is a chronic HB antigen carrier. Vertical transmission from chronic carriers exceeds 90% and accounts for up to 40% of the world chronic carriers in endemic areas. Hepatitis in pregnancy is not associated with increased abortion rate, stillbirth, or congenital malformation. However, prematurity seems to be increased if hepatitis is acquired in the last trimester. Sixty percent of pregnant women who acquire acute HB infections at or near delivery will transmit the HB virus to their offspring. Although infection is rarely symptomatic, 70 to 90% of the babies will remain chronically infected into adult life and be prone to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Because of such high risks and the safety and efficacy (seroconversion 90 to 100%) of HB vaccine in preventing HB infection, it is recommended that HB vaccine be given to pregnant women at high risk. However, its safety to the fetus is not well documented. Only one human study reports the safety and efficacy of Heptavax, but only when administered (to 72 pregnant women) in the last trimester of pregnancy when embryopathy cannot occur. We report pregnancy outcome in ten women, mostly health care personnel or patients traveling to endemic areas exposed to the vaccine during the first trimester of pregnancy. No congenital abnormalities were observed and all the infants are physically and developmentally normal for their ages at 2 to 12 months. Although small, this cohort suggests safe use of the vaccine in early pregnancy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Hepatitis B vaccine in pregnancy: maternal and fetal safety. 182 84

Over two consecutive malaria seasons in 1987 and 1988, 37 patients were admitted to the Gonder College Hospital with malaria in pregnancy. In 10 patients the diagnosis was missed initially and delayed for up to 72 hours after admission. The differential diagnoses considered on first line included incomplete abortion, labour, postpartum haemorrhage, and fulminant hepatitis in pregnancy. Twelve patients (32.4%) died, five of these died undelivered. Fifteen pregnancies (40.5%) ended up in abortion, preterm delivery with early neonatal death and still birth. This study has shown that malaria in pregnancy can have different clinical manifestations that may mislead the physician. This may delay the diagnosis and initiation of treatment which may have a fatal outcome for both the mother and the baby.
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PMID:Malaria in pregnancy: clinical features and outcome of treatment. 191 17

We report three cases of rubeola during pregnancy complicated by pneumonia. All had bacterial superinfection of the lungs and a clinically mild hepatitis. One woman delivered at term and two underwent successful tocolysis, one of whom had an unexplained stillbirth 7 weeks later. Rubeola virus is not a teratogen, although it has been associated with increased spontaneous abortion and perinatal mortality.
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PMID:Rubeola during pregnancy. 192 30

Experiences, including results of original experimental work on Campylobacter fetus, C. jejuni and C. coli induced diseases of cattle, sheep, dogs, rabbits poultry and men in Hungary are reviewed. Out of 31 cases of abortion in cows 29 (93.5%) were causes by C. fetus subsp. venerealis and only one case each (3.2%) by C. fetus subsp. fetus and C. jejuni, respectively. Out of the 29 strains of C. fetus subsp. venerealis, 26 belonged to serogroup 01 (A) and only 3 to serogroup 02 (B). Campylobacter abortions in sheep flocks were caused in 18 cases (78.3%) by C. fetus subsp. fetus and in 5 cases (21.7%) by C. jejuni. The latter strains belonged to Penner's serogroup 1 (6 strains), 5 (4 strains) and 8 (5 strains), respectively. In scouring dogs 12.7% of the cases were caused by C. jejuni. The same pathogen caused diarrhoea also in young rabbits. Isolated strains belonged to serogroup 2. In cases of Campylobacter hepatitis of laying hens, egg production has been reduced by 8 to 15% for 2 to 3 weeks. Row poultry meat represents often the source of infection for men. The 32 strains of C. jejuni isolated from faecal samples of men affected with diarrhoea belonged to 12 serogroups.
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PMID:[Occurrence and significance of different Campylobacter types in domestic animals in Hungary]. 220 54

The outcome of all pregnancies complicated by congenital factor XIII (F XIII) deficiency has resulted in abortion without replacement therapy. We experienced a case with this disease and succeeded in normal vaginal delivery after treatment with weekly F XIII concentrate (Fibrogammin P, Behringwerke AG) during pregnancy. This 20-year-old woman, gravida 1, para 0, was found to have an F XIII level of 0% at age 6 and was treated with F XIII concentrate occasionally when she suffered from massive bleeding. In 1986 she became pregnant and was hospitalized at 6 weeks' gestation because of genital bleeding. Subsequent to this episode, F XIII concentrate was administered every week. At 37 weeks' gestation a 2,646-gram girl with a 1-min Apgar score of 9 was delivered. Postpartum blood loss was 260 ml. One year after delivery neither the mother nor the infant were found to have hepatitis B, nonA, nonB hepatitis, ATL or HIV. F XIII concentrate proved effective in such cases without any risk of viral infection.
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PMID:Congenital factor XIII deficiency with treatment of factor XIII concentrate and normal vaginal delivery. 235 99

Causes of maternal mortality were investigated in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, from September 1981 to September 1983. Viral hepatitis ranked third among the leading causes of maternal mortality behind septic abortion and puerperal sepsis. There were 26 deaths from viral hepatitis during the 2-year study period for a hospital maternal mortality rate of 91.0 per 100,000 live births. Although 30% of women who died of all maternal causes received antenatal care in Addis Ababa, only 13% of women who died from viral hepatitis in our hospital study received antenatal care. Low socio-economic status (SES) has been shown to be associated with low antenatal care utilization and with an increased risk of protein malnutrition. Malnutrition is considered a predisposing factor for liver damage. Suggestions for reducing hepatitis transmission and maternal mortality through education, better hygiene, and improved sanitation are discussed.
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PMID:Viral hepatitis as a major cause of maternal mortality in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. 288 44

Herpes simplex virus (HSV, probably type 2) antigen has been detected in endometria and abortion tissue (companion paper) and in placentae, umbilical cords, and fetal and neonatal organs by avidin-biotin complex immunohistochemical studies. HSV cytologic abnormalities were not detected in any of the 12 normal and 64 abnormal cases analyzed, nor was HSV detected by culture or electron microscopy in selected cases. Antigen was present in single epithelial and, rarely, mesenchymal cells of various organs. Clinically unexplained fetal or neonatal problems associated with HSV antigen positivity included intrauterine death, fetal growth retardation, cystic brain degeneration, hydrops, interstitial pneumonitis, necrotizing enterocolitis, hepatitis, encephalitis, myocarditis, and renal failure. Maternal floor infarct of placenta and calcifying funisitis are the manifestations of intrauterine HSV infection in most cases. Maternal history of HSV infection was uncommon. It is concluded that intrauterine HSV infection may persist in the fetus and neonate in a latent fashion without cytologic abnormalities or detectable virus. This latent infection may be associated with intrauterine and neonatal death, organ damage, and neonatal disease.
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PMID:Intrauterine latent herpes simplex virus infection: II. Latent neonatal infection. 302 73

History of diagnosed illnesses, medical symptoms, and reproductive outcomes and their relation to combat intensity and herbicide exposure were studied, via a mailed questionnaire, among 6810 American Legionnaires who served during the Vietnam War (42% in Southeast Asia, 58% elsewhere). Heart disease, venereal disease, and benign fatty tumors were reported significantly more often by Vietnam veterans than by controls. Combat intensity was significantly dosage-related to history of high blood pressure, ulcers, arthritis and rheumatism, genito-urinary problems, nervous system disease, major injury, hepatitis, and benign fatty tumors. Agent Orange exposure was significantly dosage-related to history of benign fatty tumors, adult acne, skin rash with blisters, and increased sensitivity of eyes to light. Rates of the latter two conditions and of change in skin color were especially elevated in men whose military occupations involved direct handling of herbicides. Five "symptom complex" scales were constructed via factor analysis to measure degrees of feeling faint, fatigue or physical depression, body aches, colds, and skin irritation. Means of all five scales were significantly higher in Vietnam veterans compared to controls, and in herbicide handlers compared to nonhandlers. Both combat and Agent Orange exposure were significant, independent predictors of each of the five scales. Neither combat nor Agent Orange exposure was associated with difficulty in conception, time to conception of first child, or to birthweight or sex ratio of offspring, but maternal smoking was strongly related to reduced birthweight. The percentage of spouses' pregnancies which resulted in miscarriages was significantly higher for Vietnam veterans than controls (7.6% vs 5.5%, P less than 0.001). Logistic regression analysis showed that Agent Orange exposure and maternal smoking were both independently and significantly associated with miscarriage rates in a dose-related manner.
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PMID:Health and reproductive outcomes among American Legionnaires in relation to combat and herbicide exposure in Vietnam. 326 69


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