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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
21 patients with periarteritis nodosa (PN) were examined for evidence of viral hepatitis-B infection. Histologic evidence of PN was present in 11 patients, whereas in 10 patients the diagnosis of PN was based on the clinical presentation only. In the sera of 9 of the 21 patients (42%) HBsAg (4 patients) or anti-HBs (5 patients) was detected, while findings were present in 4-8% of blood donors.
Hypertension
, glomerulonephritis and renal failure developed more frequently in patients with
hepatitis
-B associated PN. The detection of immune complexes in the sera of
hepatitis
-B negative patients tends to suggest immune complex mediated mechanisms not related to
hepatitis
-B virus.
...
PMID:[Significance of hepatitis B serology in periarteritis nodosa]. 613 34
Human infection with Schistosoma haematobium and/or Schistosoma mansoni is known to be widespread in central Liberia, but no information is available about its clinical manifestations or its significance for public health. Details of a cross-sectional morbidity study are reported. A sample from hospital out-patients and samples from 3 villages situated in areas with different transmission patterns (lack of transmission, transmission of only S. haematobium and transmission of both S. haematobium and S. mansoni) were examined. All 184 individuals were examined by standardized case history, clinical and parasitological investigations, including a skin snip for onchocerciasis and a count of schistosomal and other intestinal worm eggs from stool and urine. A complete blood count, urine analysis, urine cultures,
hepatitis
-B surface antigen determination and abdominal X-rays were also carried out. Schistosomal egg counts ranged from 1 to 6200/10 ml urine for S. haematobium and from 1 to 228/g stool for S. mansoni. Difficulties for the definition of accurate morbidity indices are discussed. Except for haematuria and dysuria, the overall morbidity in the study area was not striking, neither for S. haematobium nor for S. mansoni infection. No cumulative pathology was observed in patients with mixed infection. The frequency of
hypertension
, hepato- and splenomegaly, ascites and bacteriuria was low and no relationship to schistosomiasis could be established. Bladder calcifications were found in 10% of people living in an area of transmission of S. haematobium. Although the intensity of infection is low for both S. haematobium and S. mansoni, long-term follow-up studies are essential for a more accurate assessment of the public health importance of these parasites.
...
PMID:The impact of schistosomiasis among rural populations in Liberia. 613 75
Sixty-four patients (43 men and 21 women) with acute viral hepatitis were subjected to clinical, clinical chemical and electroencephalographic examinations. A pathological EEG was found in 19 patients. The average age was the same in the entire group, in the group with normal EEGs and in the group with pathological EEGs (35.4, 35.8 and 35.2 years respectively). The proportion of HBsAg-positive to HBsAg-negative
hepatitis
in the groups with pathological and normal EEGs did not show any appreciable difference. Of the patients with pathological EEGs, 36.8% were drug addicts, and only 8.9% of these these with normal EEGs. A dependence of the EEG on the laboratory values SGOT, SGPT, prothrombin time or bilirubin was not found. In 14 of the 19 patients, there was a slight general alteration with irregular alpha rhythm and markedly increased 5--7 c/sec theta activity. In 5 patients, there was a moderately severe general alteration with predominant theta rhythm and interspersed delta waves. In 5 patients, the EEG normalized; it remained pathological in 14 patients. Even after exclusion of all other factors, such as drugs or
hypertension
, which might have led to a pathological EEG, we found pathological EEG findings in 15.6% of the 64 patients with acute viral hepatitis and no clinical encephalopathjy.
...
PMID:EEG changes in acute viral hepatitis. 615 95
In a survey the present possibilities are outlined to get knowledge about diseases of inner organs with the help of enzyme determinations in the urine. Here it is remarkable that changes of the enzyme excretion appear not only in renal disease with acute renal failure, pyelonephritis, glomerulonephritis, renal infarction and nephroptosis but are also to be observed in primarily extrarenal diseases such as diabetes mellitus, hyperthyroidism, thesaurismoses, myocardial infarction,
hypertension
, acute pancreatitis, epidemic
hepatitis
, liver cirrhosis, obstructive jaundice and rheumatoid arthritis. The causes of the changes of enzyme excretions are various. Since enzymes of different origin and localisation behave themselves variably, the simultaneous determination of a brush border marker (e.g. alanine aminopeptidase), a lysosomal enzyme (e.g. beta-glucuronidase or N-acetyl glucosaminidase) and a low molecular enzyme (e.g. lysozyme) is of use for the recognition of renal alterations. By the control of activities of urinary enzymes it is possible to get without risk informations about pathobiochemical processes in the kidney which are not to be gained by means of other methods.
...
PMID:[Urinary enzyme excretion in diseases of the internal organs]. 636 87
When larvae of C. sinensis reach the biliary system and mature, the flukes provoke pathological changes, both as a result of local trauma and of toxic irritation. The appearances vary with duration and severity of the infestation, but they are sufficiently distinctive and characteristic to allow a classification into four phases as follows; 1st phase, desquamation of epithelial cells, 2nd phase, hyperplasia and desquamation of epithelial cells, 3rd phase, hyperplasia and desquamation of epithelial cells, and adenomatous tissue formation, and 4th phase, marked proliferation of the periductal connective tissue with scattered abortive acini of epithelial cells and fibrosis of the wall of the bile duct. The onset of symptoms and signs is at times gradual, at times sudden. Chill and fever up to 40 degrees C occur during the acute stage, i.e. the period less than a month after parasite invasion. And a few weeks later, the chronic stage follows with the classical clinical features. In general, symptoms and signs can be classified as follows: mild, essentially symptomless, progressive, with irregular appetite, gastrointestinal disturbances, oedema, hepatomegaly, etc., and severe, with a syndrome associated with portal cirrhosis and
hypertension
. Pathogenic changes and complications are generally restricted to foci, but may eventually affect the whole liver. Calculi, acute suppurative cholangitis, recurrent pyogenic cholangitis, cholecystitis,
hepatitis
, and acute pancreatitis are important complications. Carcinoma of the liver is often found in association with clonorchiasis, too.
...
PMID:Clonorchis sinensis: pathogenesis and clinical features of infection. 639 2
The authors report the results from the follow-up of 14 patients with transplanted kidney, three out of them with a lethal end--mycotic sepsis--1, purulent peritonitis--1 and of transplant lung-syndrome--1. The rest (11-78,5%) were in a good condition during 1 year and 8 months to 6,5 years (an average of 4 years and 10 days by April 30, 1980). Eleven of the patients had their transplantations performed by Prof. Sumakov--Prof. Levizkii in Moscow and three--by Prof. Hamburger, Prof. Crosnier, Prof. Lacomb in Necker Hospital, Paris. During the follow-up period those 14 patients had the following complications: 15 acute crises of rejection, successfully coped, with residual phenomena in 4 of them; 10--uroinfections, 7--other infections, one mycotic sepsis and one purulent peritonitis with a lethal end; three with epidermic
hepatitis
, one--Herpes zoster, two bronchopneumonias, one perinephritis, 6--with arterial
hypertension
that necessitated binephrectomy in two, three patients with steroid diabetes--cured, four with aseptic osteonecrosis of the head of the femur, necessitating prosthesis of the femoral joint in one patient, 5--with surgical complications, corrected at the transplantation centers. Furthermore, one case with transplant lung-syndrome, successfully restored to health as reported by the authors. All those 11 patients with transplantations are in good health (one with a chronic rejection crisis) and 8 of them--work. The authors stress upon the follow-up of the renal patients with transplantation as an important step, consolidating the remote results of renal transplantation.
...
PMID:[Our experience with the dispensary observation and treatment of kidney transplant patients]. 701 86
Modern techniques of blood collection require health screening of donors by non-physicians using general guidelines. Health problems of concern to the donor and possible loss to future donation of actually individuals are inherent in this acceptance and deferral process. Of the 108,908 donors presenting at the bloodmobiles of regional blood center from September 1978 to February 1979, 9,542 were deferred. Of these, 1,203 with possible medical problems other than
hepatitis
,
hypertension
, or infectious disease were referred to their physician for further information concerning their suitability as donors. Over 80% had irregular pulses or histories suggestive of potential cardiovascular problems. The purpose of this study was to review the evaluation mechanism. Responses for evaluation were received from only 222 out of 1,203 (18%), and of these all but 29 (13%) were granted full permission to donate. Since only one evaluated individual with pulse or cardiovascular findings of possible significance was under the age of 35 years, this age is a reasonable cutoff for such deferrals. The minimum increase in collections with this change in deferral screening would be over 1,000 units per year in Connecticut, and perhaps 60,000 nationwide.
...
PMID:Evaluation of individuals deferred from blood donation for medical reasons. 705 61
The prevalence of diabetes mellitus in Kamchatka newcomers in 26.7/1000 of the subjects examined (21 among males and 30.7 in females). The urban population is more often subjected to the risk of diabetes mellitus development (30/1000), than that of the rural locality (15/1000). Among the groups of different ages it is maximum in males, aged 50 to 59 years (48.6/1000), and in females, aged 40 to 49 years (59/1000), and is minimum in boys and girls, aged 15 to 19 years (5 and 5.3/1000, respectively). The highest indices of the distributed tolerance to glucose were seen in males, aged 50 to 59, 60 years and older (86.9 and 73.1/1000) and females, aged 50 to 59 years (68.5/1000), remaining sufficiently high in subjects, aged 40 to 49,60 years and older (33.4 and 46.2/1000). High indices of the disease prevalence are observed among office workers (5.2/1000 in males and 49.3/1000 in females) and not engaged subjects (29/1000 among males and 36/1000 among females). Cases of diabetes mellitus risk were adaptation period, (247), heredity (207), biliary (150) and
hepatitis
(122) diseases, overeating (104), cardiovascular diseases (97) for males, aged 50 to 59 years (48.6), and females, aged 40 to 49 years (59), arterial
hypertension
(36). Diabetes mellitus risk factors, i.e. the birth of large foetuses, cardiovascular diseases, age, an increased, carbohydrate content in the diet were noted in the native population. A scientific system of prophylactic measures has been developed on the base of the results obtained.
...
PMID:[Prevalence of diabetes mellitus in the population of Kamchatka Province and its risk factors]. 714 80
Fifty-five renal allografts (44 from living-related and 11 from cadaver donors) that have functioned for at least 20 years (mean 22.9 +/- 2.3, range 20.1 to 30.7 years) were evaluated in three groups based on renal function: group I (n = 26), with a GFR of > or = 60 ml/min/1.73 m2 or serum creatinine < or = 1.4 mg/dl and no proteinuria; group II (n = 9), with a GFR of > or = 60 ml/min/1.73 m2 or serum creatinine < or = 1.4 mg/dl but > 150 mg proteinuria/24 hr; and group III (n = 20), with a GFR < 60 ml/min/1.73 m2 and/or serum creatinine > 1.4 mg/dL with or without proteinuria. Allograft factors, including acute rejection (AR) in 62% (34/55) and delayed function (DF) in 55% (6/11) of the cadaver grafts, did not preclude 20-year success and the prospect of continued survival since they were not significantly more frequent in group I, II, or III. However, AR was confined to a limited period within the first three months posttransplant in 18/18 recipients in groups I and II but only in 7/16 of group III (P = 0.0002). In groups I and II AR was treated with IVMP in 14/18 cases and only 6/16 in group III (P = 0.035). Donor age < or = 50 years and recipient age < or = 40 years each occurred in 87% (48/55) of these transplants. One- or two-HLA haplotype matching was present in 98% (43/44) of living related transplants. Major risks to the recipient were coronary artery disease (11 cases and 3 deaths), malignancy (18 cases and 1 death), and severe infection and
hepatitis
(35 cases and 3 deaths, 2 of whom also had coronary artery disease).
Hypertension
occurred in 25 recipients and diabetes mellitus in 12. Potential open-end success was compromised by renal dysfunction in groups II and III, but appeared possible in 12 of the 26 patients in group I. There is no apparent "safe-haven" point of time for immunosuppressed renal allograft recipients, who remain at increased risk for eventual renal allograft dysfunction, as well as cardiovascular, neoplastic, infectious, and metabolic diseases. In order to clarify and standardize the words "long-term," a simple classification of long-term allograft survivals is proposed.
...
PMID:The fate of renal allografts functioning for a minimum of 20 years (level 5A)--indefinite success or beginning of the end? A proposed classification of long-term allograft survivals. 748 35
Between 1975 and 1983 health care expenditures in Ghana dropped to a low point as a consequence of the structural readjustment program instituted by the World Bank. During 1975-76 only 15% of available funds were spent on primary health care (PHC), which was officially introduced in the late 1970s. PHC made up 20-25% of the health care expenditures by 1991 with about 25% of health personnel engaged in PHC. 2/3 of health care delivery covered urban areas when 60% of the population lived in the countryside. The district of Ejisu-Juaben in the Ashanti region had high morbidity. Tetanus, polio, whooping-cough, and diphtheria had been brought under control, but measles, diarrhea, and malnutrition were still widespread among children under 5 years old. Malaria, bilharzia, intestinal parasites, respiratory infections,
hepatitis
, anemia,
hypertension
, and vitamin A deficiency were also grave problems. AIDS was on the rise. Child mortality amounted to 130/1000 live births and maternal mortality to 1400/100,000 cases. The medical structure of the district comprises 10 health posts (6 governmental and 4 mission). Only 72 villages and 120,000 people are cared for. Each post has a mobile team. In 1993 a new community-based health care program began funded by Save the Children Netherlands. In 60 villages a village health committee existed but they were substandard. They were either reactivated or new committees were set up. Training activities were also started in prenatal care, delivery, care of malnutrition and diarrhea, hygiene, and sanitation. Two years later safe motherhood indicators had improved; postnatal care increased from 16% to 49%; medical deliveries increased from 27% to 37%; the share of families with contraceptive acceptance increased from 7% to 21%; and tetanus vaccination among mothers was estimated to have increased from 27% to 86%.
...
PMID:[Primary health care in Ghana: no pay no cure?]. 750 Oct 68
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