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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Liver injury was investigated in the course of
salmonellosis
evoked by Salmonella agona in experimental infection of rabbits. Histological and biochemical examination (proteinogram, the level of bilirubin, fibrinogen, cholesterol and its esters in blood, activity of asparine and alanine aminotransferases and alkaline phosphatase and guanase in blood) were carried out in 70 animals. Liver injury showing degeneration, steatosis and necrosis was found in the course of
salmonellosis
.
Hepatitis
gigantocellularis was sporadically observed. Biochemical parameters were not in correlation with the observed histological changes.
...
PMID:Injury of liver in experimental salmonellosis of rabbits infected by salmonella agona. 42 97
Serum IgG and IgD levels were determined in the following groups: professional blood donors, healthy smokers and patients with acute hepatitis, with acute
salmonellosis
, with hepatic cirrhosis, with cancer (prostate, lung and gastrointestinal tract) and with benign diseases of the same organs as the cancer patients. IgG was significantly increased in the groups of patients with
hepatitis
, hepatic cirrhosis and cancer. IgD values showed a wide dispersion in all the groups, which do not allow for comparisons among means. For that reason, linear regression analysis between IgG and IgD was done, the results being significant only in the two groups with infectious diseases (acute hepatitis and acute
salmonellosis
), which suggest that IgD could be involved in the immune response against their respective pathogenic agents.
...
PMID:Serum IgG and IgD and levels in some infectious and noninfectious diseases. 65 27
The clinical course of generalized Yersinia enterocolitica infection in 13 patients was observed. Two syndromes were apparent; seven patients had an acute septicemic picture, whereas the rest had a subacute localizing infection that usually produced hepatic or splenic abscesses. The latter form often resembled amebic
hepatitis
clinically, and five of the six patients died despite antibiotic treatment. The acute septicemic form of the disease resembled systemic
salmonellosis
, and most cases responded to therapy with the appropriate antibiotics.
...
PMID:Generalized Yersinia enterocolitica infection. 111 99
The contribution of serum adenosine deaminase (ADA) activity to the diagnosis of typhoid fever was assessed in 246 children and in 46 adults, by Giusti's original technique. Children included otherwise healthy patients admitted for elective surgical conditions or under follow up for epilepsy which were considered to be a control group (n: 81), presumptive viral diseases (n: 31), miscellaneous febrile diseases except for typhoid fever (n: 41), different kinds of bacteremia (n: 6), diarrhea due to Salmonella typhimurium (n: 14), viral hepatitis (n: 24), and culture proven typhoid fever (n: 49). Adult's group included 39 healthy controls and 7 patients with culture proven typhoid fever. Among children mean ADA activity was as follows: control group 28 +/- 7.8, viral disease 35.3 +/- 13.1, miscellaneous febrile disease 36.1 +/- 15.6, bacteremia group: 30.3 +/- 10.3,
salmonellosis
group 51.6 +/- 9,
hepatitis
group 68.3 +/- 34.5, typhoid fever group 124.4 +/- 40.8 U/I 37 degrees C. Among adults, values were 18.4 +/- 7.5 for controls and 112.8 +/- 19.2 U/I 37 degrees C in typhoid fever patients. In both adults and children ADA activity was significantly higher in the typhoid fever group (p < 0.0001). Untreated typhoid fever patients had their higher ADA activity between 10th and 15th day of illness. When ADA cut point was set at 80 U/I, sensitivity of the test was 91.8% and specificity was 91.4% as a preliminary clue to the recognition of typhoid fever.
...
PMID:[Adenosine deaminase in typhoid fever and other febrile diseases]. 184 20
The sensitivity of a medical center's inpatient and outpatient database to detect notifiable diseases was examined. Only 53 percent of inpatient and 7 percent of outpatient laboratory-confirmed cases of shigellosis,
salmonellosis
, giardiasis, and
hepatitis
were identified by an automated search for matching diagnosis codes. Reasons for lack of sensitivity include nonavailability of laboratory results at the time of diagnosis assignment, use of a standardized encounter form with limited preselected diagnosis codes, and pre-emptying of the infectious disease diagnosis by other diagnoses.
...
PMID:Use of a medical center's computerized health care database for notifiable disease surveillance. 201 68
This survey of occupationally acquired infections in clinical laboratory workers was made by questionnaires to 306 hospitals in which 698 doctors and 8654 technicians worked. There were 177 probable infections during the previous decade (1979-88). In both doctors and technicians annual incidence rate of infection was 0.2% on an average. These included 77 cases of tuberculosis, 59 cases of HBV
hepatitis
, 24 cases of non-A, non-B
hepatitis
, 6 cases of rubella, 5 cases of HAV
hepatitis
, 2 cases of mycoplasmal pneumonia, one case of campylobacter enteritis, one case of paratyphus, one case of
salmonellosis
and one case of chicken pox. There were no fatal cases. In the recent two years the occurrence of HBV
hepatitis
among the clinical laboratory workers apparently has decreased, but tuberculosis and non-A, non-B
hepatitis
occurred unchangedly. Tuberculosis occurred frequently among the staff of the pathology laboratory (40 cases) and in bacteriology (25 cases), but rarely in biochemistry (3 cases) and in hematology (one case). On the other hand, HBV
hepatitis
occurred frequently among the staff of the biochemistry laboratory (33 cases) and in hematology (11 cases), but rarely in bacteriology (one case). These differences showed the existence of occupational exposure, but only 20% of these cases were due to recognized accidents. According to these results infection control practices for diminishing laboratory-associated infection must be performed.
...
PMID:[Biohazard in clinical laboratories in Japan]. 206 4
During 1986-87 this continuing survey showed 15 specific infections in the staff of 235 laboratories, representing 28,524 person years of exposure. The community was the probable source of four of the five cases of tuberculosis and one of the five cases of
salmonellosis
. Occupational exposure was the probable cause of four infections by Shigella flexneri, three by Salmonella typhimurium, and one by S typhi, all affecting medical laboratory scientific officers (MLSOs) in microbiology. Occupational exposure was also the probable cause of one case of tuberculosis in a mortuary technician and one of probable non-A, non-B
hepatitis
in a medical laboratory scientific officer haematology worker. The overall incidence of reported infections was 52.6/100,000 person years (35/100,000 for infections of probable occupational origin). The highest rates of laboratory acquired infections related to MLSO microbiology workers and mortuary technicians. No additional infections were seen as a result of extending the survey to forensic laboratories.
...
PMID:Infections in British clinical laboratories, 1986-87. 250 46
A 16-year-old pony with signs of intermittent abdominal pain was treated with phenylbutazone in excess of the recommended dosage. Endoscopy revealed ulceration of the esophagus, stomach, and proximal portion of small intestine. The pony developed diarrhea. Salmonella typhimurium was isolated from the blood and feces. Treatment included fluids, trimethoprim-sulfadiazine, sucralfate, and ranitidine hydrochloride. The diarrhea resolved, as did the gastrointestinal ulceration. This case was unusual because septicemia with
salmonellosis
is an uncommon finding in adult equids. Also, complications commonly seen in neonatal septicemia (septic arthritis, nephritis, and
hepatitis
) were not observed. Phenylbutazone toxicosis and stress were considered possible causes for the gastrointestinal ulceration.
...
PMID:Septicemic salmonellosis and suspected phenylbutazone toxicosis in an aged pony. 337 3
Invasive pulmonary aspergillosis was identified in 19 horses. In 16 cases mycotic lesions were associated with enterocolitis; 14 cases appeared to result from
Salmonella infection
. Pulmonary lesions included multifocal areas of acute necrosis, leukocytoclastic vasculitis, and thrombosis with fibrinosuppurative inflammation surrounding mycelial masses. Thromboemboli with fungi were in the brain and kidneys of three cases. Factors which appeared to predispose to pulmonary aspergillosis included corticosteroid therapy, disseminated neoplasms,
hepatitis
, pleuritis, and peritonitis. This study suggests that immunocompromise and invasion of Aspergillus sp. from damaged intestine are more important in causing equine pulmonary aspergillosis than inhalation of spores.
...
PMID:Invasive pulmonary aspergillosis of horses: an association with acute enteritis. 340 97
Active surveillance techniques using routine telephone contacts with providers improved the reporting of measles, rubella,
salmonellosis
, and
hepatitis
by a factor of 4.6 among private physicians in Monroe County, New York, and increased reporting for these target diseases from all sources by 51 percent. The timeliness of reporting was not improved by active surveillance. Reporting patterns varied by disease and source of report, suggesting the desirability of various approaches to surveillance based on local resources and priorities. Although reporting rates were higher for diseases among persons from census tracts of low socioeconomic status, physicians providing care to persons living in low-income areas responded no differently to active reporting than did those providing care to patients from middle- and high-income areas.
...
PMID:A controlled trial of disease surveillance strategies. 345 1
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