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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fulminant liver failure is an unusual complication that may be seen in patients with hepatic infiltration by non-Hodgkin's lymphomas and leukemias. In such cases, hepatomegaly, marked abnormalities of serum liver function tests, and
lactic acidosis
may simulate severe viral, alcoholic, or drug
hepatitis
. We describe the clinical presentation of severe cholestatic
hepatitis
with liver failure in a patient who was found to have widespread liver involvement by Hodgkin's disease at autopsy. The major histologic findings included extensive portal and periportal Hodgkin's infiltrates, associated loss of periportal liver cells, and variable damage to small bile ducts.
...
PMID:Hepatic Hodgkin's disease simulating cholestatic hepatitis with liver failure. 383 55
Acute alcohol ingestion can affect life expectancy and is directly responsible for 3,500 deaths per year. Acute lung diseases are mainly caused by pneumococci, Gram negative bacilli and anaerobic germs, and are often due to multiple microbes. In this case, evolution toward abscess can be feared. Septicaemia and enterobacterial peritonitis are frequently observed in cirrhotic patients. Ethanol, hypokaliemia and hypophosphoraemia also lead to rhabdomyolysis. Rhabdomyolysis can be complicated with acute renal failure and hyperkaliaemia. Alcoholic ketoacidosis and the hypoglycaemia favored by prolonged inadequate nutrition, are corrected by infusion of glucose solutions. Hyponatraemia can be complicated by convulsions and central pontine myelinolysis. Minor forms of alcoholic hepatitis remiss after stopping alcohol intoxication. The major forms can evolve toward fatal encephalopathy; treatment with corticosteroids improves the prognosis in severe
hepatitis
. The cardiac failure with
lactic acidosis
in shoshin beriberi rapidly evolves to collapsus; treatment is based on emergency administration of vitamin B1. Management of patients in acute alcohol episodes requires great vigilance. Careful clinical examination and biological tests should eliminate severe somatic complications before concluding to simple alcoholic intoxication.
...
PMID:[Severe somatic complications of acute alcoholic intoxication]. 813 83
We report two cases of fulminant hepatic failure in HIV-1-infected patients treated with didanosine (ddI). Clinical manifestations including vomiting, diarrhoea and dyspnoea were identical in both cases. Biological data mainly revealed hepatic failure and
lactic acidosis
. Histological examination of liver biopsies showed diffuse microvesicular steatosis. The outcome was fatal in both patients. The only comparable case previously reported (Lai et al., 1991) showed close similarities in the clinical, biological and histological manifestations with microvesicular steatosis. This prompted us to suspect that ddI might be responsible for fulminant
hepatitis
in all three AIDS patients. This toxic effect may be added to the list of potential adverse events occurring during ddI therapy.
...
PMID:Fulminant hepatitis with severe lactate acidosis in HIV-infected patients on didanosine therapy. 815 Dec 70
Chronic hepatitis B is a widespread viral illness with the serious sequelae of cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Current therapy with interferon is not universally efficacious, and this has led to the evaluation of other antiviral agents. A recent Phase II trial of the nucleoside analogue, fluoroiodoarabinofuranosyluracil (fialuridine, FIAU) was halted because of the sudden development of severe multisystem toxicity characterized by hepatic failure,
lactic acidosis
, and pancreatitis, which resulted in the deaths of five patients. We systematically evaluated pre- and post-therapy biopsy, explant, and autopsy specimens from the 15 patients involved in this trial to define the hepatic changes of fialuridine toxicity and to determine whether the degree of pre-existing
hepatitis
contributed to the severity of toxicity. Severe hepatotoxicity from fialuridine was characterized by hepatomegaly with diffuse, predominantly microvesicular steatosis, hepatocellular glycogen depletion, marked bile ductular proliferation, and cholestasis. Ultrastructural examination revealed intracytoplasmic lipid droplets and marked mitochondrial injury. Patients in whom severe toxicity did not develop mainly showed changes caused by the underlying chronic hepatitis B alone. There was a subtle increase in the amount of microvesicular steatosis in two of six patients with mild or no symptoms of toxicity. The microscopic and ultrastructural pattern of injury and systemic symptoms in patients with fialuridine toxicity are consistent with severe mitochondrial and metabolic derangements. Similar hepatic pathologic findings have been reported rarely for other antiviral nucleoside analogues, which suggests that the mechanisms of toxicity might be related.
...
PMID:Histopathologic changes associated with fialuridine hepatotoxicity. 907 26
A 45-year-old HBsAg carrier (HBeAb positive with normal liver function tests) underwent renal transplantation for mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis. Sixteen months later he developed jaundice. Investigations showed he remained HBeAb positive, but HBV-DNA levels were 99 pg/ml, indicating active replication of a HBV pre-core mutant. He was commenced on lamivudine therapy with a subsequent rapid fall in HBV-DNA levels to 2.8 pg/ml, but liver function tests continued to deteriorate and he developed hepatorenal failure. Liver biopsy showed fibrosing cholestatic
hepatitis
. He underwent liver transplantation, which was complicated by
lactic acidosis
. Lamivudine was withdrawn and HBV prophylaxis with HB immunoglobulin was commenced. Unfortunately he died 38 days post-transplant of surgical complications with no evidence of HBV recurrence. We discuss the use of nucleoside analogues in fibrosing cholestatic
hepatitis
and review the literature.
...
PMID:Nucleoside analogue therapy in fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis--a case report in an HBsAg positive renal transplant recipient. 958 65
Woodchucks were used to study the antiviral activity and toxicity of fialuridine (FIAU; 1,-2'deoxy-2'fluoro-1-beta-D-arabinofuranosyl-5-iodo-uracil). In an initial experiment, groups of six chronic woodchuck
hepatitis
virus (WHV) carrier woodchucks received daily doses of FIAU by intraperitoneal injection for 4 weeks. At 0.3 mg/kg/d, the antiviral effect was equivocal, but at 1.5 mg/kg/d, FIAU had significant antiviral activity. No evidence of drug toxicity was observed during the 4-week period of treatment or during posttreatment follow-up. In a second experiment, groups of nine WHV carriers or uninfected woodchucks were given 1.5 mg/kg/d of FIAU orally for 12 weeks, and the results compared with placebo-treated controls. After 4 weeks, the serum WHV-DNA concentration in the FIAU-treated carrier group was two to three logs lower than that in the placebo-treated group. After 12 weeks of FIAU treatment, serum WHV DNA was not detectable by conventional dot-blot analysis, hepatic WHV-DNA replicative intermediates (RI) had decreased 100-fold, and hepatic expression of WHV core antigen was remarkably decreased. No evidence of toxicity was observed after 4 weeks, but, after 6 to 7 weeks, food intake decreased and, after 8 weeks, the mean body weights of woodchucks treated with FIAU were significantly lower than controls. Anorexia, weight loss, muscle wasting, and lethargy became progressively severe, and all FIAU-treated woodchucks died or were euthanized 78 to 111 days after treatment began. Hepatic insufficiency (hyperbilirubinemia, decreased serum fibrinogen, elevated prothrombin time),
lactic acidosis
, and hepatic steatosis were characteristic findings in the final stages of FIAU toxicity in woodchucks. The syndrome of delayed toxicity in woodchucks was similar to that observed previously in humans treated with FIAU, suggesting that the woodchuck should be valuable in future investigations of the molecular mechanisms of FIAU toxicity in vivo and for preclinical toxicological evaluation of other nucleoside analogs before use in patients.
...
PMID:Antiviral activity and toxicity of fialuridine in the woodchuck model of hepatitis B virus infection. 965 11
Nucleoside analogues can induce myopathy or
hepatitis
by means of mitochondrial dysfunction. We report the case of a 31-year-old man infected with HIV who had a severe
lactic acidosis
without muscle or liver symptoms. He improved after hemodialysis and withdrawal of antiviral drugs. Muscle and liver evaluation allowed us to ascribe
lactic acidosis
to a mitochondriopathy induced by zidovudine and didanosine.
...
PMID:Severe lactic acidosis induced by nucleoside analogues in an HIV-infected man. 1042 37
Lactic acidosis
and hepatic steatosis caused by mitochondrial toxicity of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTI) is a rare cause of liver disease with a high mortality rate. This report describes a male, HIV-positive patient with a 4-week history of nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain. His medication consisted of prednisone 5 mg od (because of auto-immune thrombocytopenia), didanosine (for 2 years) and stavudine (for 3 months). Laboratory studies showed cholestasis and elevation of aminotransferases. Lactic level was not measured. Liver biopsy revealed steatosis and cholestatic
hepatitis
. In the absence of other causes of liver disease a probable diagnosis of stavudine-induced hepatic toxicity was made. After discontinuation of NRTI, he recovered completely. Because
lactic acidosis
had not been confirmed, stavudine was restarted and within 1 week the lactate level increased significantly. Therefore stavudine was discontinued again. One year later the patient is doing well on a double protease inhibitor regimen. In conclusion, clinicians treating patients with NRTI should be aware of the risk of
lactic acidosis
and hepatic steatosis. When this is suspected, all NRTI must be stopped. The diagnosis can be made when elevated lactate levels and hepatic steatosis are present in the absence of other causes of liver disease.
...
PMID:Hepatic steatosis and lactic acidosis caused by stavudine in an HIV-infected patient. 1106 65
A substantial body of evidence provides support (but not definitive proof of efficacy) for the use of antiretroviral agents as postexposure prophylaxis for occupational exposures to HIV in the healthcare workplace. Despite the lack of definitive evidence of the efficacy of these agents in this setting, over the past decade this intervention has become the standard of care for healthcare workers who sustain occupational exposures to HIV. Administration of these agents--even for a relatively short 28-day postexposure course--is often fraught with difficulty. All of the agents currently used for postexposure prophylaxis regimens have substantial adverse effects, and significant adverse effects occur in more than two-thirds of individuals electing prophylaxis. This manuscript reiterates current US Federal Government guidelines for the administration of postexposure prophylaxis, specifically noting that zidovudine plus lamivudine (with or without a protease inhibitor) remains the recommended regimen. The paper summarises the significant toxicities associated with nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (primarily nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea and bone marrow suppression), non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (rash, fever, gastrointestinal symptoms and
hepatitis
, including hepatic decompensation necessitating liver transplantation) and protease inhibitors (nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, abdominal pain, hyperglycaemia, hyperlipidaemia, headache and anorexia). As a class, the antiretroviral agents have an extraordinary number of drug interactions. The non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors and the protease inhibitors are metabolised through the cytochrome P450 pathway, and the effects of concomitant administration of protease inhibitors with other agents in the same class are discussed, as well as the effects of concomitant administration of protease inhibitors with non-nucleoside agents. The potential for numerous and medically risky drug interactions emphasises the importance of planning antiretroviral prophylaxis in consultation with practitioners or clinical pharmacists who are skilled in the use of these agents and knowledgeable about the potential for significant drug interactions that could either reduce the benefit of prophylaxis or increase the potential for toxicity. Another common problem encountered by individuals managing postexposure prophylaxis programmes relates to the administration of chemoprophylaxis to a pregnant healthcare worker who has sustained an occupational exposure to HIV. We address what is known about the potential for toxicity and emphasise the recently published warning concerning the deaths of pregnant women and their offspring from
lactic acidosis
while receiving regimens containing stavudine and didanosine.
...
PMID:Tolerability of postexposure antiretroviral prophylaxis for occupational exposures to HIV. 1148 Apr 91
A boy presented with
lactic acidosis
, hepatomegaly, hypoglycemia, generalised icterus, and muscle hypotonia in the first weeks of life. At the age of 2 months, neonatal giant cell
hepatitis
was diagnosed by light microscopy. Electron microscopy of the liver revealed an accumulation of abnormal mitochondria and steatosis. Skeletal muscle was normal on both light and electron microscopy. At the age of 5 months, the patient died of liver failure. Biochemical studies of the respiratory chain enzymes in muscle showed that cytochrome-c oxidase (complex IV) and succinate-cytochrome-c oxidoreductase (complex II + III) activities were (just) below the control range. When related to citrate synthase activity, however, complex IV and complex II + III activities were normal. Complex I activity was within the control range. The content of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) was severely reduced in the liver (17% to 18% of control values). Ultracytochemistry and immunocytochemistry of cytochrome-c oxidase demonstrated a mosaic pattern of normal and defective liver cells. In defective cells, a reduced amount of the mtDNA-encoded subunits II-III and the nuclear DNA-encoded subunits Vab was found. Cells of the biliary system were spared. Immunohistochemistry of mtDNA replication factors revealed normal expression of DNA polymerase gamma. The mitochondrial single-stranded binding protein (mtSSB) was absent in some abnormal hepatocytes, whereas the mitochondrial transcription factor A (mtTFA) was deficient in all abnormal hepatocytes. In conclusion, depletion of mtDNA may present as giant cell
hepatitis
. mtTFA and to a lesser degree mtSSB are reduced in mtDNA depletion of the liver and may, therefore, be of pathogenetic importance. The primary defect, however, is still unknown.
...
PMID:Depletion of mitochondrial DNA in the liver of an infant with neonatal giant cell hepatitis. 1195 53
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