Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although transfusion of blood products is an essential and potentially life-saving measure, not all blood transfusions are beneficial to patients. The associated risks, particularly transfusion-transmitted viral illnesses, such as
hepatitis
and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, require that careful consideration be given before a decision is made to transfuse any blood product. Many institutions have established a local committee to monitor transfusion practices and audit such practices regularly. To assist in this task, the Pediatric Hemotherapy Committee of the American Association of Blood Banks has developed guidelines for the conduct of pediatric blood transfusion audits. These guidelines, summarized herein, cover transfusion of red blood cells, platelets, white blood cells, fresh-frozen plasma, albumin, and clotting concentrates. The use of
cytomegalovirus
low-risk and irradiated blood products is also discussed. Throughout the report, special attention is given to the transfusion needs of newborn infants.
...
PMID:Guidelines for auditing pediatric blood transfusion practices. 164 58
Seventy-seven blood samples from normal controls aged 0-8 years and 93 blood samples from children of similar ages with various viral hepatitis were investigated by measuring plasma superoxide dismutase (EC 1.15.1.1) using chemiluminescence immunoassay (CLIA). Total and Cu,Zn-SOD activities of normal controls of group 2 (1-8 years old) were significantly higher than that of normal controls of group 1 (0-1 year old) (P less than 0.01, P less than 0.01), while there were no differences of Mn-SOD activities between the two groups. Total, Cu,Zn- and Mn-SOD activities significantly increased in the acute phase (0-4 weeks after onset) and dropped to the normal levels in the restoration phase (4th week later) for 29 children with
cytomegalovirus
hepatitis
(CMVH), in comparison with group 1. Only Mn-SOD activities were significantly increased in the acute phase (with increased ALT levels) and restoration phase (with normal ALT levels) for 18 children with hepatitis A (HA). Total and Cu,Zn-SOD activities significantly decreased and Mn-SOD activities significantly increased in both the active (with increased ALT levels) and the inactive phases (with normal ALT levels) for 36 children with chronic persistent hepatitis (CPH). Only Cu,Zn-SOD activities fell significantly in both active and inactive phases for 10 children with chronic active hepatitis (CAH).
...
PMID:Plasma superoxide dismutase measurement in children with viral hepatitis. 164 17
The epidemiology of infections associated with orthotopic liver transplantation is summarized herein, and approaches to prophylaxis are outlined. Infection is a major complication following orthotopic liver transplantation, and more than half of transplant recipients develop at least one infection. The risk of infection is highest in the first month after transplantation, and the most common pathogens are bacteria and
cytomegalovirus
(CMV). Bacterial infections usually occur in the first month, arise in the abdomen, and are caused by aerobes. The peak incidence of
CMV infection
is late in the first month and early in the second month after transplantation. CMV syndromes include fever and neutropenia,
hepatitis
, pneumonitis, gut ulceration, and disseminated infection. Other significant problems are Candida intraabdominal infection, Herpes simplex mucocutaneous infection or
hepatitis
, adenovirus
hepatitis
, and Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. Prophylaxis of infection in liver transplant recipients has not been well-studied. Several different regimens of parenteral, oral absorbable, and/or oral non-absorbable antibiotics active against bacteria and yeast have been used at various centers, but no randomized controlled trials have been conducted. Selective bowel decontamination appears to be a promising approach to the prevention of bacterial and Candida infections, while oral acyclovir may be a relatively convenient and effective agent for CMV prophylaxis.
...
PMID:Infections following orthotopic liver transplantation. 165 Feb 45
Cytomegalovirus
(CMV)-specific immunoglobulin (IVIG) was evaluated in a randomized controlled trial in CMV-seronegative marrow transplant patients with seropositive marrow donors for the prevention of primary
CMV infection
during the first 100 days after transplant. Patients received 200 mg/kg CMV IVIG on days 8 and 6 before transplant, the day after transplant, weekly for the first month, and then every 2 weeks to complete 10 doses. Patients were followed with weekly CMV cultures and serologic studies and for clinical and histologic evidence of CMV disease. Sixty patients were evaluable in each group. There was significantly less CMV excretion (P = .04) and viremia (P = .01) in the treatment group. However, the incidence of CMV disease including CMV pneumonia, CMV enteritis, and CMV syndrome (fever, leukopenia,
hepatitis
) was not statistically different. There was also no difference in median time of onset of
CMV infection
or disease, median number of hospital days, or survival between the two groups.
...
PMID:Cytomegalovirus (CMV)-specific intravenous immunoglobulin for the prevention of primary CMV infection and disease after marrow transplant. 131 74
Twenty-seven infants with
cytomegalovirus
hepatitis
were followed up for 15-40 months after onset of the illness. They had recovered from the
hepatitis
, but microcephaly was present in 2 (7.4%), sensorineural hearing loss in 5 (18.5%), quadriplegia, mental retardation, ventricular septal defect and tooth defects in 1 (3.7%) each. The patients with congenital infection had more severe and complex defects, some with perinatal infection had mild defects, those with postnatally acquired infection had no sequelae. The mean MDI and frequency of expressive language delay in the former group differed significantly from those of the other 2. Five patients still excreted
cytomegalovirus
in the urine at follow-up.
...
PMID:Effects of cytomegalovirus hepatitis on growth, development and nervous system of infants. A follow-up study. 165 27
Sera from 50 orthotopic liver transplant recipients were examined for antibodies to human herpesvirus 6 (HHV-6) and
cytomegalovirus
(CMV), and the findings correlated with the clinical condition of the patients. Both primary and secondary HHV-6 infections were detected serologically following liver transplantation. Interpretation of serological assays is complicated by CMV and HHV-6 antibody cross reactions which were common. Sera from 5 patients became HHV-6 antibody negative following absorption with CMV infected cells. Thirty patients were initially seronegative for HHV-6 antibodies, 12 remained so following transplantation, 5 developed cross reacting antibodies, and 13 seroconverted. The seroconversions occurred at 4 to 8 weeks post-transplant in the same time period as CMV antibody rises. HHV-6 IgM was detected in only 4 of the 13. Of the 7 patients who had serological evidence of active HHV-6 infections but no evidence of
CMV infection
, 4 (56%) had fever, 1 (14%)
hepatitis
, 1 (14%) lung dysfunction, and 3 (42%) neurological disorders. In the 12 patients who remained HHV-6 antibody negative, there were fewer fevers and neurological disorders.
...
PMID:A serological investigation of human herpesvirus 6 infections in liver transplant recipients and the detection of cross-reacting antibodies to cytomegalovirus. 165 18
A clinical case of a 58 year old male suffering from
hepatitis
non A, non B, and terminal chronic renal insufficiency under periodic dialysis, is presented. Following a 600 cc of packed red blood cells transfusion, there was an increase of antibodies IgG against
cytomegalovirus
(from 1/160 to 1/1560), detected by ELISA. At the same time, there were an increase of transaminases up to 404 UI/ml of GPT. Total bilirubin persisted normal. The possible etiology of the
hepatitis
non A, non B caused by
cytomegalovirus
is discussed and the results compared to those observed by other authors in immunosuppressed renal transplant patients.
...
PMID:[Non-A non-B hepatitis associated with cytomegalovirus infection]. 165 42
Many agents are associated with bone marrow failure, including toxins, inherited metabolic defects, ionizing radiation, and viral infection. In most cases, the etiologic agent is unknown. Many of these unclassified cases have symptomatic, immunologic, or epidemiologic similarities to viral infections. Viruses from different taxonomic families have been implicated in bone marrow failure syndromes, and they appear to cause hematosuppression by a variety of mechanisms. Some of the viruses involved in relatively well characterized suppressive interactions will be reviewed, including parovovirus B19, dengue,
hepatitis
viruses, Epstein-Barr virus,
cytomegalovirus
and the human immunodeficiency virus.
...
PMID:Viruses and bone marrow failure. 165 29
Samples from prospectively followed recipients, their respective donors, and a cohort of random donors were used to evaluate the specificity and efficacy of a recombinant immunoblot assay (RIBA) as an adjunct to anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) testing by enzyme immunoassay (EIA). RIBA reacted (RIBA+) in 100 percent of patients who developed
hepatitis
associated with anti-HCV seroconversion documented by EIA and in 100 percent of the EIA-positive (EIA+) donors implicated in these cases. In contrast, RIBA reacted in none of 10 recipients who were EIA+ but did not develop
hepatitis
, in none of 7 EIA+ patients with hepatitis B or
cytomegalovirus infection
, in 33 percent of EIA+ donors who were not implicated in
hepatitis
transmission, and in 37 percent of EIA+ random donors. Hence, the vast majority of EIA+ individuals who have ancillary evidence of HCV infection react on RIBA, whereas the majority of EIA+ individuals in low-risk settings do not react (RIBA-negative, or RIBA-). There was a strong association between RIBA reactivity and the presence of a surrogate marker (elevated alanine aminotransferase [ALT] and/or antibody to hepatitis B core antigen); 43 percent of RIBA+ implicated donors had a surrogate marker as compared to none of 14 EIA+, RIBA- donors. Among EIA+ random donors, 77 percent of those with a surrogate marker were RIBA+, as compared with 29 percent of those without a surrogate marker. In addition, in EIA+ donors, RIBA reactivity correlated with the extent of ALT elevation; 86 percent of those with an ALT greater than 135 IU per L were RIBA+ compared with 18 percent of those with an ALT less than 30 IU per L.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The use of a recombinant immunoblot assay in the interpretation of anti-hepatitis C virus reactivity among prospectively followed patients, implicated donors, and random donors. 165 53
A case of agammaglobulinaemia with hyper IgM (the 'hyper-IgM syndrome') is described, in which a serological diagnosis of
cytomegalovirus infection
was made during repeated episodes of
hepatitis
. Three unrelated serological tests agreed with each other, but eventually it appeared that the reactions were non-specific. This shows the limitation of confirmation by tests which are used routinely.
...
PMID:Relapsing hepatitis due to cytomegalovirus? 166 17
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>