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)
The efficacy of two heating cycles (90 sec at 103 degrees C and 10 hr at 65 degrees C) used during manufacture of a plasma-derived
hepatitis
-B vaccine was validated for the inactivation of 12 virus families. A period of 15 min warming up to 65 degrees C had already completely inactivated representatives of nine virus families, ie, poxvirus (vaccinia), picornavirus (encephalomyocarditis virus), togavirus (sindbis virus), coronavirus (mouse
hepatitis
virus), orthomyxovirus (influenza virus), rhabdovirus (vesicular stomatitis virus),
herpes
virus (cytomegalovirus), lentivirus (human immunodeficiency virus), and retrovirus (murine leukemia virus). After prolonged heating at 65 degrees C or heating for 90 sec at 103 degrees C, parvovirus (canine parvovirus) and the phage phiX174 were also completely inactivated. Papovavirus represented by simian virus 40 (SV-40) was the most heat-resistant virus evaluated. The infectivity of SV-40 was reduced by 10(4) Tissue Culture Infectious Doses (TCID50) per ml after 90 sec at 103 degrees C, but a marginal residual activity (less than 1.5 TCID50 per ml) was observed. Subsequent pasteurization for 10 h at 65 degrees C did not further reduce the infectivity of SV-40. This study shows that the two heat-inactivation steps used during the production of this vaccine kill a wide variety of viruses that might be present in human blood.
...
PMID:Inactivation of 12 viruses by heating steps applied during manufacture of a hepatitis B vaccine. 282 25
We report our experience with 29 symptomatic herpesvirus infections occurring during the course of 87 pediatric transplant procedures performed over the 10-year period, 1973 to 1982. The yearly attack rate ranged from 0.05 to 0.40 case per cumulative patient years at risk. A greater proportion (9 of 14) of children who received more than 10 units of whole blood or packed red blood cells prior to transplantation developed a viral infection compared with those given 10 transfusions or fewer (8 of 25) (P = 0.10). Fever occurred in 22 (76%) children, pulmonary disease in 8 (28%),
hepatitis
in 11 (35%), leukopenia in 7 (24%), thrombocytopenia in 9 (31%) and central nervous system disease in 3 (10%). Herpesvirus infections were responsible for allograft loss in 7 (24%) patients. However, no differences in the actuarial graft survival curves were noted for transplants performed since 1979 in children with and without viral infection. The etiologic viral agents were cytomegalovirus in 19 (65%) episodes, herpes simplex virus in 8 (28%), Epstein-Barr virus in 2 (7%) and varicella-zoster virus in 2 (7%). Cytomegalovirus-infected patients were younger and more commonly developed primary infection compared with children with herpes simplex virus disease who were more likely to have secondary infection and to manifest a mucocutaneous vesicular rash. We conclude that the etiologic agents and clinical features of herpesvirus infections are similar in pediatric and adult renal allograft recipients. Moreover except for distinctive syndromes such as mucocutaneous vesicular eruption or a central nervous system lymphoma, the various
herpes
-viruses cause clinically indistinguishable illnesses in pediatric transplant patients with similar end organ involvement and untoward renal consequences.
...
PMID:Clinical manifestations of herpesvirus infections in pediatric renal transplant recipients. 299 34
Heat treatment at 60 degrees C for 10 h in solution (pasteurization) was introduced into the manufacturing process of factor VIII concentrate (Haemate P) in order to considerably reduce the risk of transmission of human pathogenic viruses to haemophiliacs. The results of experimental and clinical studies with regard to hepatitis B, non-A, non-B
hepatitis
, acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) and
herpes
virus infections are reviewed. From this data it is concluded that pasteurization of factor VIII results in a product which is safe with regard to these viral infections. Furthermore, it was shown that pasteurization does not form new antigenic determinants on the factor VIII molecule and compared with the native product does not alter the physiological properties of this protein in patients. In comparison to these advantageous properties of the pasteurized product a slight loss of coagulant activity seems to be acceptable. This loss of yield, however, does not influence the quality or the amount of factor VIII in the final container used for the therapy of haemophilia A patients.
...
PMID:Pasteurization as an efficient method to inactivate blood borne viruses in factor VIII concentrates. 301 13
Although case reports of herpes simplex virus (HSV) causing acute hepatitis in otherwise healthy adults have appeared recently in the literature, a prospective study of the incidence of HSV-
hepatitis
in the general population hitherto has not been reported. In the present study, serum samples from 124 young adults attending a sexually transmitted disease clinic with either genital herpes infections (n = 86) or non-
herpes
sexually transmitted diseases (n = 38) (controls) were analyzed for liver enzyme abnormalities (including aspartate aminotransferase [AST] and alanine aminotransferase [ALT]). Twelve of eighty-six (14%)
herpes
-infected patients had mildly abnormal liver enzyme tests (less than or equal to twice the upper limit of normal) as opposed to only 1 of 38 controls (2.6%), (P less than .05). All individuals in the
herpes
-
hepatitis
group were anicteric, and only two complained of constitutional symptoms (malaise and fatigue). Liver enzyme tests were repeated in nine
herpes
-
hepatitis
patients 1 week after their genital lesions had resolved, and in six of nine patients the results had returned to within normal limits. Four patients subsequently returned at the onset of a recurrence of their genital herpes. In all four, serum ALT levels were elevated from the previous occasion, and in three of the four levels just exceeded the upper limit of normal. One patient was followed through three recurrences of his genital herpes. In that individual, the extent of liver enzyme abnormalities appeared to correlate with the presence or absence of his genital lesions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Genital herpes and hepatitis in healthy young adults. 301 68
The authors report two cases of fulminant
hepatitis
in children. Coagulopathy was early demonstrated in the two patients. The illness progressed rapidly and the two children died before receiving antiviral treatment.
Herpes
virus was demonstrated in the hepatocytes by electron microscopy.
...
PMID:[Fulminant herpesvirus hepatitis in a child. Apropos of 2 cases]. 302 50
In comparison to older children and adults, neonates are immunologically incompetent. They are susceptible to infections caused by a variety of microorganisms, including bacteria, fungi and viruses. These infectious agents may be acquired by neonates either prenatally, during the intrapartum period or postnatally. The purpose of this review is to emphasize the potential impact of viral infections contracted by neonates at the time of delivery or within the neonatal period. The viruses reviewed include the
herpes
group of viruses (cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex viruses and varicella-zoster virus), type B
hepatitis
virus, human immunodeficiency virus, respiratory viruses, enteroviruses, rotavirus and human papilloma virus. For each virus the potential sources and incidence of the infection, the common manifestations of the illness, and possible means of prevention and therapy are discussed. Although infections caused by bacteria tend to be more clinically dramatic and more immediately life-threatening, it is emphasized that infections caused by viruses are common and associated with substantial long-term morbidity. Perinatal viral infections need to be recognized as early in life as possible so that their natural history can be more completely defined and any possible intervention made.
...
PMID:Perinatal viral infections. 304 Mar 92
The risk of opportunistic infection in the renal transplant patient is due to an interaction between two major factors: the epidemiologic exposures (particularly within the hospital environment) and the net state of immunosuppression. The net state of immunosuppression is determined by the nature, dose, and duration of the immunosuppressive therapy being administered; the presence or absence of granulocytopenia and technical factors that could compromise the primary mucocutaneous barriers to infection; such metabolic factors as uremia, hyperglycemia, and the state of nutrition; and, finally, the immunomodulating effects of such viruses as CMV, the
hepatitis
viruses, and HIV. The major types of opportunistic infection to which the renal transplant patient is susceptible are the following: the viruses of the
herpes
group and papovaviruses; bacteria such as L monocytogenes, N asteroides, and Legionella; such fungi as Candida, Aspergillus, C neoformans, and the Mucoraceae; and protozoans such as P carinii, S stercoralis, and T gondii.
...
PMID:Opportunistic infections in renal allograft recipients. 305 19
The practice of embalming preserves body tissues, and embalmed bodies may resist decay processes for many decades with relatively little change. As the chemicals used for embalming are poisonous to microorganisms, bacterial and viral cultures are futile after such funerary procedures are performed. However, embalming may act as a virtual tissue fixative, especially with arterial perfusion, and identification methods other than culture may be used to detect and identify pathogenic organisms. In the case presented here, a death from a fulminating, but unidentified, illness in a young girl was successfully diagnosed as
herpes
hepatitis
by immunofluorescent and electron-microscopic studies of tissue obtained 3 weeks after she was embalmed and interred. Routine embalming and burial should not eliminate these diagnostic procedures from consideration in specific situations where potentially useful information may be realized.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural and immunofluorescent detection of herpes simplex virus after embalming and burial. 331 81
During 1982-3, 31 specific and 12 uncharacterized infections were reported from 30 of 240 laboratories, representing 29 223 person-years of experience. Thirteen cases of
hepatitis
included 10 of type B or non-A, non-B
hepatitis
of probable occupational origin (attributable incidence 34.2 per 100 000 person years) affecting haematology, biochemistry, and postmortem workers. Of nine cases of tuberculosis, three were probably acquired in the laboratory (attributable incidence 10.3 per 100 000 person years) and affected microbiology, morbid anatomy, and postmortem staff. Microbiology staff also acquired, probably from the laboratory, four shigella infections and one each of brucella and
herpes
. The general community was the probable source of three cases of hepatitis A, two of rubella, and one of varicella. During the two years the risk of laboratory acquired infection mainly concerned the postmortem room and mortuary.
...
PMID:Infections in British clinical laboratories, 1982-3. 392 28
Gas chromatograms of sertim extracts of dogs inoculated with canine infectious hepatitis virus showed two metabolites not observed in uninoculated animals. Chromatograms of extracts of tissue cultures of dog kidney, inoculated with viruses causing canine
hepatitis
,
herpes
, and distemper, and a parainfluenza virus similar to simian virus-5, each showed two or more different metabolites. Two of the distinguishing products from cultures inoculated with
hepatitis
virus were chromatographically indistinguishable from those found in serums of the animals.
...
PMID:Gas chromatography for detection of viral infections. 429 47
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>