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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Determination of the complement titer in the serum and plasm of 120 patients with chronic liver diseases showed that in eight (7%) patients with cirrhosis of the liver, chronic active or chronic inactive
hepatitis
complement in the serum was less than half in the plasma. The dissociation of complement serum and plasma was due to
cold
activation of the classical pathway of complement in vitro since serum drawn from these patients at 37 degrees C lost hemolytic activity in 4 hours when transferred to a
cold
environment. Neither HB antigen nor cryoglobulin participated in this phenomenon. The activation of complement in the
cold
could be prevented by increasing the ionic strength, or by adding vitamin E or, to a lesser extent its vehicle HCO-60, while heparin, Trasylol, soybean trypsin inhibitor, or hirudin had no effect. Trans-AMCHA prevented activation in one case. It is speculated that a factor appearing as a result of blood clotting is able to activate the classical pathway of complement in the
cold
; it is probably not related to Hageman factor (factor XII), factor VII, thrombin, kallikrein.
...
PMID:Cold activation of complement i. presence of coagulation-related activator. 5 81
Hepatitis B (HbsAg) surface antigen has been detected in the serum of patients with a variety of diseases and immune complexes of this antigen and antibody have been implicated in tissue damage to various organs. Previously we have demonstrated that serum cryoproteins occur in a variety of immune complex disorders and represent pathogenic complexes of antigen and specific antibody. Sera from patients with acute HbsAg positive
hepatitis
, chronic hepatitis B antigenemia, acute and chronic HbsAg negative
hepatitis
, as well as a variety HbsAg negative miscellaneous liver diseases and normals were studied for the presence and nature of cryoproteins. Cryoproteins were detected in a large number of patients with acute and chronic HbsAg positive
hepatitis
and chronic HbsAg carriers. The quantity of these
cold
insoluble precipitates was highest in acute hepatitis. Cryoproteins were detected with much less frequency in HbsAg negative patients and were not found in normals. The precipitates in HbsAg patients contained either HbsAg, anti-HBsAg or both, along with immunoglobulins and occasionally complement and rheumatoid factor. The cryoproteins in these patients had biological properties attributable to immune complexes and several of the patients had clinical manifestations of acute or chronic serum sickness. Cryoproteins from HbsAg negative patients did not contain HbsAg or antibody to HbsAg and did not have biologic properties of immune complexes. In HbsAg positive patients HbsAg and antibody to HbsAg were concentrated in the cryoprecipitate. The preliminary studies suggest that investigation on cryoproteins in
hepatitis
may be of clinical and immunopathogenic value.
...
PMID:The nature and incidence of cryoproteins in hepatitis B antigen (HbsAg) positive patients. 13 Jun 50
Viral diseases exert their major impact through morbidity, impairment of personal health, loss of time at work and school, and cost of medical care. Relatively few of the known viruses cause a significant number of deaths; influenza, childhood viral pneumonia, and
hepatitis
are the only viral diseases causing more than 1,000 deaths per year. Data based on the National Health Interview Survey of the National Center for Health Statistics show that the
common cold
annually causes 35.6 acute illnesses per 100 persons. The data reported by the National Therapeutic Disease Index (on the basis of visits by patients to a sample of 1,500 private physicians) show that influenza and other acute respiratory conditions account for about one-third of all visits to physicians. Nearly all viruses first infect humans in infancy and childhood, with a relatively low fatality rate but with frequent episodes of illness.
...
PMID:Measurements of the prevalence of viral infections. 18 Feb 8
Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBs Ag) and associated particles, e antigen (e Ag) and DNA polymerase are unevenly distributed during Cohn's
cold
ethanol fractionation of plasmas positive for these markers of the hepatitis B virus (HBV). Most of the e Ag, Dane particles and DNA polymerase are retained in fraction III whereas the bulk of HBs Ag is recovered in fraction IV where only 22 nm spheres and short filaments are still identified. These results suggest that differences in quantitative distribution of HB virions together with alteration of infectious particles during the fractionation process may in addition to heat inactivation account for the relative
hepatitis
risk of the various plasma derivatives.
...
PMID:Different fates of hepatitis B virus markers during plasma fractionation: a clue to the infectivity of blood derivatives. 67 42
A 16-year-old girl with myocarditis and
hepatitis
in the course of mycoplasma pneumoniae infection was reported. She had fever and coughed for ten days prior to admission. At the time of admission infiltrations of the left lower lung field were revealed on the chest X-ray films. The ESR was elevated and CRP+6. There were no leukocytosis and anemia, but S-GOT, S-GPT and LDH were moderately increased. On the 11th day of admission VPC in bigeminy appeared and the third sound was heard. Subsequently biphastic and inverted T waves in leads V2 and V3 and flattening of T waves in leads II and aVF appeared. At the same time, the cardiac shadow was enlarged. Antibody titer to mycoplasma pneumoniae increased to more than 1:640 two weeks after admission and then it decreased gradually. The
cold
agglutinin test was 1:64 on the 8th day of the disease and then it became normal. ASO, antibodies to DNA and immunoglobulins were normal; ANA, Coombs test and LE test were negative. The abnormal ECG-findings were normalized three months later.
...
PMID:A case of myocarditis caused by Mycoplasma pneumoniae. 74 5
The mechanism responsible for making the differences between plasma and serum complement (CH50) was studied on eight patients with
hepatitis
-B(s) antigen negative alcoholic liver cirrhosis. CH50 and C4 activities of the sera of all patients were equal to those of the corresponding EDTA-plasma, when sera wre separated after clotting the blood at 37 degrees C. CH50 and C4 activities of the sera, prepared at 21 degrees C or 4 degrees C, from four of eight patients were very low. When serum from one of these four patients was added to normal human serum, C4 activity of the serum mixture markedly decreased at 4 degrees C but not at 37 degrees C. The inactivation of C4 was prevented by adding EDTA or heparin to the serum mixture. These results indicated that very low complement in the sera, prepared at 21 degrees C or 4 degrees C, of the four cases were due to the
cold
activation of the classical complement pathway.
...
PMID:The cold activation of the classical complement pathway: The cause of the differences between plasma and serum complement in liver cirrhosis. 84 48
Sera of altogether 282 patients with different forms of
hepatitis
and cirrhosis were screened for
cold
reacting complement dependant auto-lympho-cytotoxins (CoCoCy). These antibodies are 19S-IgM-immunoglobins and have no HLA-antigen-specificity. CoCoCy occurred in 48% of the patients with chronic aggressive
hepatitis
(CAH), in 14% of the patients with chronic persistent hepatitis (CPH) and in intermediate rates in the sera of patients with acute hepatitis. No correlations was found between CoCoCy and hepatitis B-antigen (HB-Ag). CoCoCy could be demonstrated also in 20% of the sera of a HB-Ag-positive and in 6% of a HB-Ag-negative control group. The serum concentration of CoCoCy is low. CoCoCy seems to be of T-cell-specificity and to reflect the overall-immunoreactivity without relation to the specificity of the antigenic stimulus. Thus demonstration of CoCoCy may be of pathogeneic and pathodynamic rather than of diagnostic interest.
...
PMID:[Autolymphocytotoxins (CoCoCy) in different forms of hepatitis and cirrhosis (author's transl)]. 108 62
In the last four years, 551 liver transplantations have been performed at the Paul Brousse center, for a total of 840 liver transplantations performed from 1984 to 1992. Several changes have been observed in the field of liver transplantation in the past years. The field of immunosuppression was marked mainly by the advent of FK506 as a preventive treatment of rejection and as a treatment of cortico-resistant rejection. Results are still under analysis. From the surgical viewpoint, the main modification was the advent of UW solution, which extends
cold
ischemic time. However, our policy was to maintain the
cold
ischemic time at less than 12 hours. Primary indications for liver transplantations have changed with an increase in the rate of patients transplanted for cirrhosis related to
hepatitis
virus infection: from 24% in the period 1984-1988 to 42% in the period 1989-1992. The difference was due mainly to HCV-related cirrhosis, which increased from 8% to 20%. Alcoholic cirrhosis was a rare indication in the period 1989-1992 (3.4%); however, it was an increasing indication in the last 2 years. In order to improve the long-term results, major attention was given to the recurrence of initial liver disease. In patients transplanted for HBsAg-positive liver disease, long-term passive anti-HBs immunoprophylaxis was administered, which reduced the rate of HBV recurrence in patients without HBV replication before transplantation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The Paul Brousse liver transplant series 1989 to 1992: new trends in the last four years. 133 27
Anti-lamin-B autoantibodies at a significant level had been found on two occasions in the serum of a 56-year-old woman who was suffering from an apparently idiopathic chronic
cold
urticaria. Anti-lamin autoantibodies can be detected in various autoimmune disorders including
hepatitis
, vasculitis and peripheral blood cytopenia. In our patient, there was no other clinical or biological abnormality. A chance association cannot be ruled out.
...
PMID:Anti-lamin-B autoantibodies in a patient with cold urticaria. 142 28
In hepatic transplantation, the recipient and the graft must manage a difficult symbiosis. The causes that can unbalance the mutual adaptation are various, but the clinical-biochemical hepatic graft syndromes they produce are not specific. Morphological study of the graft shows a distinct pattern for each type of dysfunction etiopathogeny. Such study may find: (1) immune attack: acute rejection or chronic rejection; (2) technical complications in the biliary tract or in the blood perfusion of the graft; (3) nonspecific cholestasis secondary to graft
cold
ischemia or preceding development of chronic rejection; (4) recurrence of the previous illness: graft infected by
hepatitis
virus; (5) opportunistic viral infections (cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus, herpesvirus, adenovirus); (6) reactions to drugs and toxics; and (7) combinations of several etiologies. Morphological knowledge enables the pathologist to collaborate in hepatic transplantation programs: elaborating protocols, selecting patients, diagnosing hepatic graft dysfunction, and assessing program quality.
...
PMID:The role of histopathology in hepatic transplantation. 152 58
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