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)

In the Tri-State Leukemia Survey, the history of diseases in 605 adult male leukemia cases 15 years and older and in 668 adult male population controls was examined. These diseases occurred at least 1 year before leukemia was diagnosed. The data were based on respondents' answers that the disease was diagnosed by a physician; the respondent was either the subject or his spouse. Of 30 diseases studied, 7 showed an excess among the patients with leukemia: infectious hepatitis, eczema, psoriasis, diabetes, arthritis and rheumatism, heart disease, and ankylosing spondylitis. Mumps had a lower reported occurrence among the cases, whereas pneumonia was less frequent in acute lymphatic cases than in population controls. Three diseases occurred significantly less in controls than in persons with specific histologic types of leukemia. Our data revealed a more frequent history of herpes zoster (shingles) in chronic lymphatic leukemia, more hives in acute chronic myeloid cases, and meningitis in acute myeloid leukemia. When we only considered the patients' responses, more of them admitted having had acne than did our controls. The remaining diseases--childhood viral diseases, infectious mononucleosis, smallpox, typhoid fever, dysentery, scarlet fever, tuberculosis, asthma, hay fever, and goiter did not occur more frequently in cases than in controls. The findings were consistent with evidence from previous laboratory and clinical studies. The increased occurrence of infectious hepatitis in our case series is consistent with the findings of other studies showing an increased frequency of Australia antigen in patients with hepatitis, leukemia, and Down's syndrome.
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PMID:Epidemiology of diseases in adult males with leukemia. 99 1

This study attempts to collect reliable data on maternal deaths, estimate maternal mortality rate for the western state of Nigeria, and identify major causes of maternal deaths in the state. Standardized questionnaires were sent to randomly selected medical institutions (5 specialist hospitals and 25 general/district hospitals) in the state; only 23 institutions (4 specialist and 19 district/general hospitals) completed the questionnaires. The results show that maternal mortality ranged from 0/1000-13.3/1000 total births in 1972 and 0/1000-11.0/1000 total births in 1973; overall maternal mortality rate was 3.8/1000 in 1972 and 4.7/1000 in 1973. Mortality was higher among unbooked patients, accounting for 71.2% and 66.4% of total deaths in 1972 and 1973. Hemorrhage (antepartum and postpartum), obstructed labor (uterus unruptured and ruptured), eclampsia and anemia of pregnancy accounted for over 80% of total deaths. Nonobstetric causes of maternal deaths including poisoning, infective hepatitis, meningitis, encephalitis, bronchial asthma, hypertension, and pulmonary embolism. The major causes of death in this series were preventable. Maternal mortality is associated with age, parity, and past reproductive and medical history. The high maternal death rate in this study is compounded by nonutilization of available medical services by pregnant women most especially for antenatal care, the lack of basic essential life-saving facilities (e.g., for blood transfusion), lack of adequate transportation system, failure of medical/nursing personnel to refer patients early to specialist hospitals, and relative lack of obstetric services both in quality and quantity all over the country. Better coordination and integration of health services are needed, as are nationwide data collection of maternal death statistics, publication of periodical reports, and establishment of standards for overall maternity care.
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PMID:Maternal mortality in Western Nigeria. 108 Dec 90

1. Antimitochondrial antibody titers of 1:160 are practically diagnostic of primary biliary cirrhosis [71]. Serum antimitochondrial antibody titers of less than 1:16 are seen in 10% of cases of primary biliary cirrhosis. The antimitochondrial antibodies are usually absent in jaundiced patients with extrahepatic obstruction, drug sensitivity, and viral hepatitis. 2. Anti-smooth-muscle antibodies are noted in the various autoimmune liver disorders, viral hepatitis, infectious mononucleosis, malignancy, and intrinsic bronchial asthma. The smooth muscle antibody test helps in the differential diagnosis of lupoid hepatitis vs. systemic lupus erythematosus. The anti-smooth-muscle antibodies are usually absent in systemic lupus erythematosus. 3. The antinuclear antibody is frequently positive in the autoimmune liver diseases. In cases of chronic aggressive hepatitis associated with a high titer of antinuclear antibody the prognosis is usually grave. 4. The presence of antimicrosomal liver and kidney antibody is indicative of chronic aggressive liver disease, which is different from the classic lupoid hepatitis [95, 97]. 5. Hepatitis-B-antigen assay should be performed routinely to exclude viral hepatitis, type B. Heterophile antibody tests should done when the possibility of infectious mononucleosis must be considered. 6. Serum immunoglobulin determinations are of secondary importance in the laboratory diagnosis of autoimmune liver disorders. There is usually a polyclonal elevation of the major immunoglobulin in most chronic parenchymal liver diseases[48].
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PMID:Laboratory tests for diagnosis of autoimmune diseases. 110 71

Inhalation anesthesia first with halothane followed by enflurane relieved a patient with status asthmaticus who was refractory to conventional therapy including mechanical ventilation. After 13 days of anesthesia while on mechanical ventilation and employing nondepolarizing muscle relaxants, significant neuromuscular impairment, manifested by tetraplegia and sensory disturbance, developed. Anesthesia was discontinued on day 14, and the patient was weaned from mechanical ventilation on day 16. Over the next two months, the neuromuscular impairment markedly improved. Halothane was associated with cardiac arrhythmias and hepatitis necessitating replacement by enflurane. Enflurane appeared to be as effective a treatment for refractory asthma as halothane. The most probable cause of the neuromuscular impairment in our patient was the long-term use of inhalation anesthetics or nondepolarizing muscle relaxants.
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PMID:Transient neuromuscular impairment resulting from prolonged inhalation of halothane and enflurane. 214 34

A pathological study was carried out in 200 autopsied cases experienced in our department from 1981 to 1988. Eight patients (4.0%) had herpes simplex virus (HSV) infections in their visceral organs. Another one patient was diagnosed as HSV hepatitis through necropsy of liver. The nine patients (five of them were male) ranged in age from 34 to 70 years (mean, 58). Four patients had non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and the other included one with adult T-cell leukemia, one with multiple myeloma, one with idiopathic interstitial pneumonia and one with bronchial asthma, however, one did not have any underlying disease. Two patients died of HSV fulminant hepatitis and one died of HSV diffuse interstitial pneumonia. The most commonly involved organ was esophagus (7/8), followed by tongue (5/8), liver (3/9), spleen, pancreas, lymph node (2/8), and lung, adrenal, tonsil (1/8). Typical herpetic changes such as ballooning degeneration of cells, multinucleated giant cells, ground-glass nuclei and Cowdry type A intranuclear inclusions were observed at the margin of the ulcer or coagulation necrosis. Indirect immunoperoxidase stain revealed HSV-1 antigen in all of the 9 cases, HSV particles were demonstrated in 2. Seven patients had concomitant infections with one or more pathogens in addition to HSV, which included cytomegalovirus in 5, aspergillus in 4, candida in 3 and bacteria in 3.
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PMID:[A pathological study on herpes simplex virus infections in adults]. 250 85

Although interview information is usually the sole source of data in case-control studies, the accuracy of such data is infrequently assessed. We compared interview data on selected medical conditions and surgical procedures with medical records of subjects with chronic lymphocytic leukemia. We examined agreement by type of respondent (self or surrogate), age, sex, race, and type of hospital. The strength of agreement between the two data sources (as measured by kappa statistics) was substantial kappa greater than 0.6) for splenectomy, appendectomy, asthma, and systemic lupus erythematosus; moderate kappa greater than 0.4) for tonsillectomy/adenoidectomy, tuberculosis, diverticulitis, hepatitis, rheumatic fever, and drug allergy; and poor kappa less than 0.3) for chronic bronchitis, chronic sinusitis, psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, and most other types of allergy. In general, self respondents had more accurate recall than surrogate respondents. Among self respondents the strength of agreement tended to be greater for males than females, for whites than blacks, and for subjects from referral hospitals than for community hospitals. No consistent patterns were apparent by age. Despite a number of limitations, the findings of the study provide an addition to the scant epidemiologic literature on this topic, and suggest that for certain conditions medical record data collection may be needed to supplement interview information.
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PMID:A comparison of interview data and medical records for previous medical conditions and surgery. 258 11

This article deals with the use of oral contraceptives and IUDs by chronically ill adolescent females. Results of controlled studies of contraceptive choices and problems are reviewed for teenagers with cardiac disease, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, migraine headaches, asthma, cystic fibrosis, inflammatory bowel disease, hepatitis, diabetes mellitus, thyroid disease, oligomenorrhea and amenorrhea. If oral contraceptives (OC) are prescribed for use in teens with cardiac disease, a contraceptive with 35ug or less of estrogen and the equivalent of 1 mg or less of norethindrone should be used. The low-dose progestin only pill can be prescribed, but should be used in conjunction with a back-up barrier method. Reports to date have failed to reveal increased seizure activity in epileptic pattients on OCs, and there is no significant evidence to date that OCs alter the course of multiple sclerosis. Although the evidence is inconclusive, the physician should use extreme caution in prescribing OCs for teens with prior migraines. Regarding asthmatic patients, no problems have been reported with IUD use except in regard to steroid therapy and its possible effect on reducing IUD effectiveness. No adverse effects 2ndary to the use of OCs in asthmatic patients have been reported. OCs should be avoided or used with extreme caution in the cystic fibrosis patient. Teens with active inflammatory bowel disease should be advised that OCs may be ineffective or dangerous; there are no reports available on the effects of the IUD on the disease. The pill is contraindicated during active liver disease or cirrhosis. The IUD is not highly recommended for contraception in diabetic teenagers, whereas a low-dose combined OC can be used with extreme caution. However, OCs should be avoided in the diabetic patient with nephropathy, vascular complications or retinopathy. There is at present no contraindication for contraceptive use by women with thyroid disease. Finally, patients with prolonged post pill amenorrhea and infertility are generally females with amenorrhea or oligomenorrhea before pill use.
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PMID:Contraceptive use in the chronically ill adolescent female: Part I. 351 58

We studied the responses to antigen in animals selected from a colony of inbred dogs sensitized to specific allergens to determine if they had characteristics similar to those of human asthmatics. They were immunized with ragweed and grass pollen extracts (10 micrograms in alum) immediately after routine vaccination with attenuated live virus (distemper and hepatitis) and killed bacteria (Leptospira) at 4, 8, and 12 wk of age. Subsequently, ragweed and grass injections were repeated every 2 months. Immunized dogs made specific IgE-antibodies in serum averaging 3 to 4 times that of control animals (no immunization with pollen or vaccine). They showed positive skin responses to the injection of ragweed pollen extract, whereas control dogs did not respond to ragweed pollen by quantitative skin test or inhalation challenge. In immunized dogs under barbiturate anesthesia, air-flow resistance of the total respiratory system increased from 0.60 +/- 0.07 (mean +/- SEM) before to 12.6 +/- 3.4 cm H2O/lps 5 min after the start of antigen aerosol; respiratory resistance remained increased for 20 min and was associated with 0 hypoxemia and increased arterial plasma histamine. In addition, airway responsiveness to both inhaled histamine and methacholine was greater in immunized dogs than in nonimmunized dogs of comparable age. Airway responses to each agonist were highly reproducible on repeated testing. These results indicate that physiologic responses to antigen by inbred, ragweed-sensitized dogs resemble human asthma closely and that these dogs appear suitable for a variety of experimental studies of asthma with respect to pathogenesis, diagnosis, prevention, and treatment.
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PMID:Airway responsiveness to inhaled antigen, histamine, and methacholine in inbred, ragweed-sensitized dogs. 389 78

Aspirin (ASA) and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) share common pharmacologic effects in the prevention of inflammation, at least in part through inhibition of prostaglandin formation. ASA and NSAIDs have predictable side effects such as gastric pain, ecchymosis, and tinnitus. They also cause anaphylactoid shock, urticaria/angioedema, nephropathy, and hepatitis in individuals who appear to be normal and in whom prediction of such reactions cannot be made. Two selected populations of patients are likely to experience hypersensitivity reactions to both ASA and NSAIDs. Patients with asthma have an 8% to 20% chance of experiencing asthmatic attacks after ingesting ASA and NSAID. If such patients have associated rhinosinusitis (polyps), prevalence increases to 30% to 40%. Patients with chronic urticaria/angioedema have a 21% to 30% chance of experiencing an urticarial flare after ingesting ASA and NSAIDs.
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PMID:Diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of adverse reactions to aspirin and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. 643 54

The zinc, an important enzymatic cofactor, is involved in many metabolic processes. Its deficiency might be due either to malabsorption or to excessive utilization. In the medical literature of the latest 10 years, zinc was considered to play a part in the immune processes. The authors of the present paper intend to study the zinc and immunoglobulin levels in various diseases, i.e., chronic progressive hepatitis, liver cirrhosis (LC), dermatitis, bronchial asthma. This preliminary investigation was carried out in 30 patients with LC in whom serum zinc values were assayed by atomic absorption spectrophotometry and the immunoglobulin levels were determined using the Mancini type simple radial immunodiffusion technique. All these patients presented considerable decrease of serum zinc concentration, the values ranging between 3.06 and 7.65 mumol/l as compared with 19.8 +/- 1.5 mumol/l in the controls, alongside with the increase of immunoglobulins G and M. In the patients treated with Zincum metallicum CH5 it was observed after about 30 days of treatment that the clinical state was considerably improved and IgG and IgM as well as serum zinc had resumed their normal values. This treatment should not be interrupted since in LC, without permanent additional supply, the serum zinc returns rapidly to the initial deficit or even lower.
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PMID:Treatment with zincum metallicum CH5 in patients with liver cirrhosis. Preliminary study. 786 38


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