Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

67Gallium citrate isotope scanning was performed in a febrile patient with pneumonitis and hepatitis who was later shown to have psittacosis. Focal isotope uptake was detected in both lungs in the absence of radiological changes. There was no enhanced concentration in the liver where inflammatory cell infiltration was slight.
...
PMID:67Gallium uptake in psittacosis infection. 29 85

Mycoplasmal pneumonia, tularemic pneumonia, Q fever pneumonia, psittacosis, and Legionnaires' disease are the most frequently encountered treatable atypical pneumonias. Mycoplasmal pneumonia, the most common, is often accompanied by nonexudative pharyngitis, conjunctivitis, or otitis. The nonproductive cough is characteristic. Tularemic pneumonia is characterized by substernal chest pain, bloody pleural effusion, and bilateral hilar adenopathy. Although the clinical presentation is mild, roentgenographic findings are impressive. Q fever pneumonia resembles psittacosis but is less serious; it may be accompanied by subacute bacterial endocarditis, hepatitis, or both. Psittacosis is characterized by prominent headache, bloody sputum, and relative bradycardia. Tetracycline is the drug of choice for either. In Legionnaires' disease, pneumonia is accompanied by prominent extrapulmonary symptoms. The most important diagnostic clues include diarrhea and mental confusion. Relative bradycardia and laboratory abnormalities are also helpful. Erythromycin is the drug of choice unless doubt exists as to the diagnosis.
...
PMID:The atypical pneumonias: a diagnostic and therapeutic approach. 47 55

A 55-year-old female was admitted to our hospital because of high fever, nonproductive cough and dyspnea. Initially she had been treated with cephem antibiotics by a local doctor. However, acute respiratory failure due to severe pneumonia developed. The partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood was 55.5 Torr. Her chest X-ray revealed wide-spread infiltrates with air bronchograms throughout the entire left lung, and pleural effusions were also present in the chest CT scan. Because the patient had a history of the contact with birds, we suspected psittacosis and administered Minocycline immediately. As a result, her clinical condition improved and the abnormal shadow on the chest X-ray film improved markedly in three days. Because the serum titer of a complement fixation test against Chlamydia rose to 1:512, we made the diagnosis of psittacosis. In addition, femoral muscle pain, and a high level of serum GOT, GPT, CK, Aldolase and Myoglobin indicated hepatitis and myositis. In the lung tissue specimens obtained by TBLB performed on the 10th hospital day, slight interstitial pneumonia and intracellular inclusion bodies were found by light microscopy and Chlamydial agents were found electron microscopically.
...
PMID:[A case of fulminant psittacosis showing Chlamydia in TBLB specimens]. 204 Dec 51

Hepatic involvement is considered a rare complication of psittacosis. Occurrence of icteric hepatitis as the cardinal manifestation of the disease has been rarely reported. We describe two members of a family infected by psittacosis, in whom icteric hepatitis was the prominent expression of the disease. The diagnosis of psittacosis was confirmed by isolation of the pathogen and by detection of serum antibodies to Chlamydia species. No serological evidence for acute TWAR infection was found. Chlamydia psittaci was also isolated from the family's parrot.
...
PMID:Hepatitis in a family infected by Chlamydia psittaci. 206 2

Three members of a family of nine persons contracted psittacosis with severe pneumonia, respiratory failure, delirium, hepatitis and renal involvement. A newly purchased cockatiel was probably the primary source of infection but person-to-person transmission is likely to have taken place between twin brothers who shared a bedroom, one of whom had no direct contact with birds. Type-specific chlamydial serological tests identified the infecting agent as Chlamydia psittaci. The highest titres in the initial samples of serum from the patients, however, were to C. psittaci TWAR (Taiwan Acute Respiratory) and serological cross-reactivity among chlamydial strains was demonstrated. This study of a clearly defined outbreak of psittacosis provides useful information for those undertaking larger population surveys of chlamydial disease and emphasises the need for detailed serological investigation of cases.
...
PMID:Serological cross-reactivity among chlamydial strains in a family outbreak of psittacosis. 267 92

The relationship between infectious diseases due to various pathogenetic factors and cryoglobulin production mechanisms has been investigated. Cryoglobulins have been evidenced in infections caused by very heterogeneous pathogens, i.e. leptospirosis, psittacosis, Mediterranean tick typhus, brucellosis, gram-negative bacterial septicemias, in which they had never been previously reported. In type A hepatitis a high cryoglobulin prevalence (91%) has been confirmed during the acute phase, with a rapid decrease both in prevalence and concentration in the subsequent stages of the disease. Cryoglobulins were all of type III and were mainly represented by IgM; anti-HAV-IgM antibodies have been evidenced in all but one cryoprecipitates. In non-A, non-B hepatitis a lower cryoglobulin prevalence (44.7%) was shown during the acute phase and the same fast decrease has been noted in the subsequent stages. Cryoglobulins were all of type III and in some cases polyclonal IgG was the only Ig class present in cryoprecipitates. The cryoglobulin prevalence in the acute phase of HBsAg-positive hepatitis amounted to 73.4%; all the cryoprecipitates were of type III. No correlation between the presence of cryoglobulins and HBeAg positivity or between cryoglobulins and delta agent infections was found. In all the cases studied the presence of cryoglobulins was related to the persistence of liver damage. Cryoglobulins were not found in HBsAg chronic carriers, while they have been evidenced, by a preliminary study, in 41.6% of HTLV-III antibody-positive subjects complaining of a persistent generalized lymphadenopathy without clinical or laboratory signs of liver impairment. No HTLV-III antibodies were found by ELISA method in the type III cryoprecipitates.
...
PMID:Cryoglobulins and infectious diseases. 309 90

Patients usually provisionally diagnosed as having typhoid fever or pneumonia are regularly admitted to the Rietfontein Fever Hospital suffering from psittacosis. The main symptoms are intense headache, chills and fever and an irritating non-productive cough. Later most patients develop signs of pneumonitis most clearly seen on radiographic examination. An important clue to the diagnosis is a history of contact with birds, most often budgerigars and more recently cockatiels. The diagnosis may be confirmed by the isolation of Chlamydia psittaci, the causative organism, but more usually reliance is placed on the results of serological tests revealing the development of chlamydial antibodies. None of the patients in this series developed serious complications, but if not treated psittacosis sufferers may develop severe pneumonitis, hepatitis and gastro-enteritis; the mortality rate is up to 20%. A rare but fatal complication is chlamydial endocarditis, presenting with the signs and symptoms of subacute bacterial endocarditis, but giving repeated negative blood cultures. The illness responds specifically to treatment with tetracycline antibiotics within 48 hours. Chlamydial infections are widespread among avian species. In the RSA most cases of psittacosis have resulted from contact with budgerigars and cockatiels, but outbreaks have been associated with imported batches of birds including South American parrots and Australian finches, emphasizing the need for vigilance at seaports.
...
PMID:Psittacosis in the RSA. 370 61

After the official confirmation of psittacosis in a collection of psittacine birds a total of 40 of them died during treatment with tetracycline. 36 of them underwent post mortem examination. From 33 birds the causative herpesvirus of Pacheco's parrot disease (PPD) was isolated and/or a non-purulent hepatitis diagnosed, the latter a characteristic for PPD. The cause of the outbreak was assumed to be a latent herpesvirus infection of individual birds which was activated by various stress factors during the psittacosis treatment. The macroscopic and histologic lesions, the results of virological investigations and the in vitro effect of acyclovir on the multiplication of the isolated herpes virus are described.
...
PMID:[A herpesvirus-caused enzootic--Pacheco's parrot disease--in a psittacine collection]. 771 52

A microscopic, cytochemical technique for assay of interferon is described in which psittacosis virus is the indicator agent. Interferon, produced in tissue culture cells in response to duck hepatitis virus, is used to illustrate the procedure.
...
PMID:Cytochemical Assay of Interferon Produced by Duck Hepatitis Virus. 1778 96

Chlamydophila psittaci is the causative agent of psittacosis or ornithosis. The disease is transmitted to men predominantly from birds. Most commonly noted symptoms are fever, headache and cough, but a number of other symptoms or complications may arise such as renal impairment, hepatitis or neurological symptoms. In this article 3 cases of psittacosis are presented, with a review of the literature with emphasis on laboratory diagnosis.
...
PMID:Atypical pneumonia due to Chlamydophila psittaci: 3 case reports and review of literature. 2066 88


1 2 Next >>