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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Infectious mononucleosis (IM) patients, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-seropositive and seronegative healthy donors, and patients with other viral infections were tested for lymphocyte blastogenesis (LB) with phytohemagglutinin and six EBV (virus concentrate, culture supernatant, and soluble [S] antigen) or control antigens. Fluorescent antibodies to EBV viral capsid antigen of IgG, IgM, IgA specificities, to nuclear antigen (EBNA), and heterophile antibodies were also assayed. These were correlated with clinical parameters (fever,
pharyngitis
, adenopathy,
hepatitis
, splenomegaly, atypical lymphocytes, and total mononuclear cell counts). EBV viral and S antigen-induced LB was significantly greater in seropositive donors. IM patients had antigenspecific LB below that of seropositive donors initially and low responses for the acute phase of illness when clinical symptoms were present and antibody titers were maximal. Specific LB rose to a peak at 3.5 to 9 weeks when the patients had recovered, most laboratory findings had returned to normal, and antibodies had declined. At peak, specific LB in IM patients exceeded that of seropositive donors, but later declined. These results demonstrate specific cell-mediated immunity (CMI) to EBV, and indicate that this develops slowly in IM and contrasts with the evolution of the clinical events and humoral immunity. This correlation supports the hypothesis that CMI is the mechanism of terminating lymphoproliferation in IM.
...
PMID:Cellular immunity in infectious mononucleosis. II. Specific reactivity to Epstein-Barr Virus antigens and correlation with clinical and hematologic parameters. 8 Dec 24
A 35 year old previously healthy physician had clinical manifestations of a mononucleosis illness complicated by arthralgia, vesicular
pharyngitis
and
hepatitis
. Initially, the patient had cytomegalovirus (CMV) viremia (predominantly in polymorphonuclear leukocytes) followed by the presence of CMV in the urine, throat and semen. He also had an antibody response to the Epstein-Barr virus which appeared to be a secondary type. During the acute phase of illness, only 7 per cent of the patient's lymphocytes formed spontaneous T cell rosettes as compared to a normal value of 65 to 70 per cent. Concurrently, evidence of abnormal delayed hypersensitivity was manifested by the loss of reactivity to mumps skin test antigen. All clinical and laboratory abnormalities except for the persistence of CMV in the pharynx, urine and semen returned to normal after resolution of the clinical illness.
...
PMID:Cytomegalovirus mononucleosis in a healthy adult: association with hepatitis, secondary Epstein-Barr Virus antibody response and immunosuppression. 19 Aug 84
Special physical examinations were made in order to find out the actual status of damages to health that had broken out in a factory collecting V2O5 from iron sand; and the following results were found: 1.
Pharyngitis
and bronchitis were found in 25% of the workers exposed to vanadium, but neither pneumonia nor
hepatitis
was observed. 2. Among the subjective and objective symptoms, respiratory irritation and discoloration of the tongue were frequent. 3. Black spot-like pigmentations gathering in a zonal form 1-2 mm wide in the transitional part and oral mucosa of the upper lip were found. Prevalence rate of this sign was 14.3% in the workers exposed to vanadium. 4. The mean valus of total serum protein and the serum cholesterol in the exposed workers were lower than those in the controls. The difference in the values between both groups is statistically significant. 5. Both the mean values of vanadium concentrations in vurine and its creatinine ratios in the exposed workers were twice to three times those in the controls; however, these parameters decreased to about one third in two months by improving the health and environmental control-measures. 6. Draft items to be checked in special physical examinations of workers handling vanadium have been proposed.
...
PMID:[Results of the special physical examination of workers in a vanadium plant (author's transl)]. 47 Feb 10
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
Sera from 103 fasting individuals 3 to 76 years of age and free of clinical infectious disease and sera from 183 patients with infectious disease were assayed for serum total non-esterfied fatty acids (tNEFA) and compared. Data were also separated into five groups according to age of donor: 3--7, 8--19, 20--35, 36--60, and 61--76 years. The mean group serum levels of tNEFA increased with age. Among patients with infectious diseases sixty-five were diagnosed as having
hepatitis
, 41 with infectious mononucleosis, 18 with cellulitis, 12 with pulmonary tuberculosis, 11 with non-pneumococcal pneumonia, 9 with pneumococcal pneumonia, 8 with
pharyngitis
, 6 with pyelonephritis, 6 with aseptic meningitis, 4 with Gram-negative sepsis, and 3 with encephalitis. The sera from 23 non-fasting patients with gonorrhea were also tested. The serum tNEFA levels were found to be altered, in fact depressed from normal group values, only in patients with pneumonia or tuberculosis. This depression may be related to aberrant pulmonary metabolism during pneumonia.
...
PMID:Reduced level of non-esterified fatty acids in sera from patients with infectious respiratory disease. 69 41
Atypical measles syndrome has been reported extensively in the pediatric medical literature. However, the clinical picture in the adult is similar to that of many other diseases, making the diagnosis elusive. The case reported here was unusually morbid. The patient, a young man, had been in excellent health until the onset of a perplexing syndrome. When seen by the author, he had been ill for 1 week with chills,
pharyngitis
, and vomiting; later, a nonpruritic, maculopapular rash developed. Symptoms progressed to pneumonitis and
hepatitis
. A rubeola titer was obtained and was found to be considerably elevated. Because of the high titer and the fact that the patient had been immunized against measles in early childhood, the diagnosis was atypical measles syndrome. Two theories are offered to explain the pathogenesis of this disease.
...
PMID:Atypical measles: a diagnostic conundrum. 193 6
The authors report 16 cases of cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease in previously healthy adults. Constant features included pyrexia lasting 3 to 8 weeks and mononucleosis occurring 2-3 weeks after the onset of fever. Moderate hepatomegaly without jaundice, splenomegaly and morbilliform or petechial rush were observed in 30 to 50 p. 100 of cases. None had
pharyngitis
. Mild increase in serum transaminase activity (2 to 5 N) was present in 13 of the 16 patients, but increased alkaline phosphatase activity was observed in only 3 of them. Liver biopsy was obtained in 10 patients. Liver lesions were characterised by the association of intra lobular granuloma, abundant mononuclear cells in the sinusoids and hepatic peri-venous inflammation but hepatocellular necrosis was not prominent. Typical intracellular inclusions were not seen, either in hepatocytes or in cells of biliary ducts. The diagnosis was ascertained by positive viremia and or viruria and presence of IgM antibodies. The outcome was favourable although clinical and biological signs lasted for about 8 weeks. The authors conclude that adults with chronic pyrexia, no
pharyngitis
and sub-clinical
hepatitis
with mild increases in transaminase activity and histologic mononucleosis
hepatitis
showing mononuclear infiltrates and granuloma formation are likely to have CMV disease.
...
PMID:[Granulomatous hepatitis in cytomegalovirus infection in healthy adults]. 282 62
We describe a severe multisystem Coxsackie virus type B3 infection in a previously healthy 14-year-old girl who presented with a mononucleosis-like syndrome (MS). Initial observations included a prominent cervical lymphadenopathy, exudative
pharyngitis
and leucocytosis with atypical lymphocytosis. At the end of the 2nd week of illness the patient developed meningoencephalomyelitis and haemolytic anaemia. Subclinical myocarditis was also recorded. Prolonged
hepatitis
recrudescing at the time of recovery coincided with serological evidence of a reactivated Epstein-Barr virus infection. The diagnosis was based on a significant rise in serum antibody titres against Coxsackie virus type B3, using the neutralization test. Intrathecal synthesis of antibodies to Coxsackie virus type B3 was also demonstrated. Generalized Coxsackie virus infections in adolescence are rare and an MS has not, to our knowledge, been associated with Coxsackie virus type B3 infection.
...
PMID:Mononucleosis-like syndrome associated with a multisystem Coxsackie virus type B3 infection in adolescence. 284 Feb 91
The authors report the case of a patient treated by salazosulfapyridine and presenting with
hepatitis
and mononucleosis. The clinical pattern was similar to infectious mononucleosis including
pharyngitis
and lymphadenopathy but infection by Epstein Barr virus or cytomegalovirus has been ruled out by serological tests. Responsibility of salazosulfapyridine was highly suggested by the following facts: hepatocellular necrosis was sharply centrolobular, plasmocytosis was the main finding in the white blood cells count and all abnormalities rapidly improved after treatment withdrawal. The authors point out that salazosulfapyridine intolerance could mimic infectious mononucleosis and viral hepatitis. In such cases the drug must be rapidly withdrawn to avoid massive hepatic necrosis.
...
PMID:[Hepatitis and mononucleosis syndrome related to the ingestion of salazosulfapyridine]. 287 5
A 35-year-old woman developed
pharyngitis
with high fever and painful joint swellings. A severe cholestatic
hepatitis
occurred 40 days later with a rise of bilirubin to 32 mg/dl. "Nuclear dot" antibodies were demonstrated in the immunofluorescence test on cell cultures, confirming a diagnosis of primary biliary cirrhosis which had followed an atypical course. After nine days of cefotaxime administration, commenced because of persistent fever of 40 degrees C, an agranulocytosis was demonstrated, which regressed within a week of discontinuing the drug. The allergic genesis of the agranulocytosis was proven by repeated lymphocyte stimulation tests in the presence of cefotaxime. The autoimmune
hepatitis
was probably a predisposing factor in the genesis of the allergically induced agranulocytosis.
...
PMID:[Cefotaxime-induced allergic agranulocytosis in an acute attack of serologically atypical primary biliary cirrhosis]. 304 56
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