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)

Dengue hemorrhagic fever/dengue shock syndrome is a serious manifestation of dengue fever, which is observed predominantly in the tropical regions of the West Pacific and in Southeast Asia and is associated with secondary infections, mainly in children under age 15. A concomitant microangiopathic coagulopathy has been described; moreover, encephalopathy and even Reye's syndrome have been rarely reported. This report describes a 51-year-old man with secondary dengue infection who presented with clinical evidence of severe hepatitis, encephalopathy, cranial nerve palsy, and microangiopathic coagulopathy and who had a favorable outcome. A careful surveillance for the occurrence of secondary dengue in the Western Hemisphere is proposed, and dengue is suggested as a diagnostic possibility in obscure febrile illnesses presenting as either hepatitis, encephalopathy, or coagulopathy in places in which the mosquito vector, Aedes aegypti, is present.
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PMID:Dengue and hepatic failure. 406 82

Dengue hemorrhagic fever is caused by dengue virus infection. The classical manifestations consist of fever, thrombocytopenia, and hemoconcentration. However, its unusual complications may be fatal, such as prolong shock, massive bleeding, volume overload, and unusual manifestations, for example, severe rhabdomyolysis. Here we report a case of 17-year old Thai man who was referred to our hospital because of 7-day fever with thrombocytopenia, hemoconcentration and right pleural effusion. The serology tests confirmed to be dengue infection. He developed various complications: severe hepatitis, coagulopathy, and heavy proteinuria; encephalopathy that needed a respiratory ventilator. On day 12 of fever, he had myalgia and passed dark urine. Serum creatinine and serum creatinine phosphokinase (CPK) were found abnormally high. He was diagnosed as severe rhabdomyolysis with acute kidney injury, and immediate hemodialysis was performed. He did not respond to treatment and expired within three hours. Although the mechanism of severe rhabdomyolysis in dengue fever is not clearly known, it may theoretically be proposed such as direct muscle cell injury leading to myositis by dengue virus, myotoxic cytokines which are produced in response to viral infection, dehydration or hypophosphatemia.
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PMID:FATAL RHABDOMYOLYSIS IN DENGUE HEMORRHAGIC FEVER: A CASE REPORT. 2650 41