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)

Fractionation technology has made Factor IX concentrates available. In addition to a very high incidence of hepatitis, thrombosis is being recognized as a consequence of their use. Contradictory reports exist in the literature as to the incidence of thrombotic events. A recent study of thrombohemorrhagic phenomena after infusion with Factor IX concentrates in patients with congenital Factor IX deficiency (hemophilia B) or liver disease, revealed an incidence of twenty episodes in 188 cases (11%). It is imperative to delineate the thrombogenic factors and find methods for their removal to insure the safety of Factor IX products.
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PMID:Factor IX and thrombosis. 26 96

In a six year old boy with severe hemophilia prophylactic substitution of factor VIII was started in 1973 in order to prevent early invalidity due to series of bleeding in the right anklejoint. A substitution of factor VIII over 8 months with 21 resp. 30 U/kg body-weight did not lead to a significant improvement. But since the factor VIII in a dosage of 18 U/kg body-weight is given three times a week no bleeding occurred during the treatment time of 14 months and also the ability to walk improved to an excellent degree.--So far no signs of hepatitis or an factor-VIII-antibody could be detected.--Some results from the prophylactic treatment of severe hemophilia and Christmas disease are cited from the literature.
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PMID:[Prophylactic replacement therapy in hemophilia. A case report (author's transl)]. 96 9

The use of epsilon-aminocaproic acid has proved to be an efficient and practical method for treating hemophiliacs who require dental work. In the past, patients requiring extractions were admitted to a hospital for approximately ten days and received replacement infusions every 12 hours during their stay. This resulted in a large expense because of the cost of the material and the hospitalization itself, not to mention the trauma sustained by the patient both physically and psychologically. Also, by decreasing the number of factor infusions, the risk of complications such as the transmission of hepatitis, allergic reaction, or inhibitor formation decreased. The same protocol using a single infusion of the appropriate factor replacement with supplementary epsilon-aminocaproic acid can be used for the management of patients with other coagulation disorders such as factor IX deficiency (Christman disease), factor XI deficiency, and von Willebrand's disease. Since this paper was submitted, seven more patients have been treated using this protocol. An additional seven odontectomies, 33 extractions, operative dentistry in 18 quadrants, and alveoloplasties in two full arches have been performed. This brings the total to 23 treatment sesions with 18 patients undergoing 124 procedures. One additional minor bleeding episode occurred, resulting in a total rate of four bleeding episodes in 23 treatment sessions and 124 procedures. Our incidence of complications secondary to epsilon-aminocaproic acid specifically remains zero.
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PMID:The use of epsilon-aminocaproic acid for the management of hemophilia in dental and oral surgery patients. 106 90

Factor IX concentrates are of paramount importance in the treatment of hemophilia B. Growing reports of thromboembolic complications and of disseminated intravascular coagulation, coupled with the danger of hepatitis transmission, suggest that the concentrates should be primarily reserved for the treatment of hemophilia B. Concise guidelines for treatment are presented.
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PMID:[Clinical use of factor IX concentrates]. 121 1

Hemophilia B, one of two common hereditary bleeding disorders, is caused by a deficiency of factor IX in the circulation. Molecular mechanisms of hemophilia B are highly heterogeneous including gene deletions, insertions, complex rearrangements, and a large number of point mutations. Currently, hemophilia B is treated by plasma protein replacement therapy. This therapy is effective but exposes patients to possible side effects and complications such as infection of blood-borne pathogens including hepatitis viruses and HIV-1. Intensive efforts to develop alternative, safer therapies for hemophilia B, including somatic gene therapy, are now under way.
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PMID:Biology of factor IX. 140 83

Guidelines have been prepared by the National Hemophilia Foundation, USA, for treating patients with haemophilia, these are: 1. General recommendations. The risks of withholding treatment far outweigh risks of treatment. Patients should however be educated to use appropriate clotting factor doses to minimize overuse and contain costs. 2. Factor VIIIC-deficient patients. DDAVP should be used whenever possible by patients with mild or moderate factor VIIIC deficiency. When feasible, an alternative to concentrates may be the use of cryo-precipitate prepared from one well-screened donor or from a small number of such donors. (a) Prevention of hepatitis. Hepatitis B vaccination is essential for uninfected patients. Preliminary data suggest that products that are pasteurized, solvent/detergent-treated or monoclonal antibody-purified are at a reduced risk of transmitting hepatitis viruses. (b) Prevention of HIV-1. Concentrates pasteurized, treated with solvent/detergent, purified with monoclonal antibody, heated in suspension with organic solvents, or dry heat-treated for long periods are preferred. These products carry a substantially reduced risk of transmitting HIV-1. 3. Factor IX deficiency. For patients with severe deficiency the use of virus-inactivated Factor IX concentrate is recommended. For mild to moderate patients when feasible an alternative would be fresh, frozen plasma prepared from one well-screened and repeatedly-tested donor or from a small number of such donors. In the past few years, significant progress has been made in understanding the nature of the defect in haemophilia both at the molecular and structural levels, such a foundation is necessary for definitive treatments in the future. For now, however, the dark side of replacement therapy must be accepted along with its benefits.
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PMID:HIV-1 infection in haemophilia. 210 39

Factor IX is a vitamin K-dependent blood clotting zymogen that is functionally defective or absent in patients with hemophilia B. A method of immunoaffinity chromatography has been developed for a one-step high yield purification of factor IX directly from plasma. The technique utilizes conformation-specific antibodies that bind solely to the metal-stabilized factor IX conformer, but not to the conformer of factor IX found in the absence of metal ions. Anti-factor IX-Ca(II) antibodies were immobilized on an agarose matrix. Human plasma in the presence of 7.5 mM MgCl2 was applied to the antibody-agarose column. The factor IX that binds to these antibodies was specifically eluted by metal chelation with EDTA. This immunopurification resulted in a 10,000-fold one-step purification of the fully functional zymogen. Purified factor IX yielded a single band upon gel electrophoresis in Na-DodSO4 and had a specific activity of 120-150 units/mg. The purified factor IX was separated from other vitamin K-dependent blood clotting proteins and hepatitis virus; no activated factor IX was detected. This method has application for the large scale purification of factor IX for the treatment of hemophilia B.
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PMID:Immunoaffinity purification of factor IX (Christmas factor) by using conformation-specific antibodies directed against the factor IX-metal complex. 240 69

Alpha's Wet Heat-Treatment process is being applied to both Factor VIII (AHF) and Factor IX Complex (PTC). Twelve hemophilia A, five hemophilia B, and one von Willebrands patient have been followed for at least 6 months for evidence of non-A, non-B hepatitis. No ALT elevations were seen in the hemophilia B patients. There have been four cases of ALT elevation, three in hemophilia A patients and one in the von Willebrand's patient. A subset of these patients have been followed for over one year for anti-HTLV-III status. No patient, either hemophilia A, hemophilia B, or von Willebrand's seroconverted to anti-HTLV-III positive status. Intravenous gamma globulin was studied in 11 normal patients given a single infusion and in 23 immune deficient patients with multiple infusions and evaluations of liver enzymes over a two year period. No elevated ALT or AST values were seen in either group.
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PMID:Evaluation of human viral disease transmission through plasma products. 244 Jul 44

Hemophilia is an inherited hemorrhagic disease which is due to the insufficiency of Factor VIII, or Factor IX, or Factor XI. Hemophilia patients are regarded as special patients with increased dental problems. The present paper consists of two parts. In the first part the types of hemophilia, ways of transmission, severity forms, and clinical characteristics are described. In the second part a protocol concerning the dental treatment of hemophilia patients is presented. There are four basic types of hemophilia: hemophilia A or classical hemophilia or Factor VIII deficiency, hemophilia B or Christmas disease, hemophilia C and von Willebrand's disease. Hemophilia is transmitted either as a sex-linked recessive or as an autosomal dominant trait, depending on the type of the disease. The severity of hemophilia depends on the amount of the coagulation factor present. According to this amount, there are four scales of severity. The clinical characteristics of the disease also depend on the amount of the factor present and vary, from occasional bleedings to serious and even life-threatening bleeding episodes. In the second part of the paper the special psychological and physiological problems of the hemophiliacs are discussed. In addition, there is reference to the hematologic coverage these patients need, as well as to the protection measures for the dental personnel against hepatitis and AIDS. The dental treatment plan at the office is presented in detail, including a discussion of the advantages and disadvantages of the treatment of hemophilia patients in the operating room under general anesthesia.
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PMID:[Hemophilic patients. Treatment protocol in the dental office]. 297 76

Haemophilia B, or Christmas disease, is an inherited X-chromosome-linked bleeding disorder caused by a defect in clotting factor IX and occurs in about 1 in 30,000 males in the United Kingdom. Injection of factor IX concentrate obtained from blood donors allows most patients to be successfully managed. However, because of impurities in the factor IX concentrate presently in use, this treatment involves some risk of infection by blood-borne viruses such as non-A, non-B hepatitis and the virus causing acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Because of the recent concern about the increasing incidence of AIDS amongst haemophiliacs, a factor IX preparation derived from a source other than blood is desirable. Here, we report that after introduction of human factor IX DNA clones into a rat hepatoma cell line using recombinant DNA methods, we were able to isolate small amounts of biologically active human factor IX.
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PMID:Expression of active human clotting factor IX from recombinant DNA clones in mammalian cells. 298


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