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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hantaviruses, the causative agents of HFRS, have become more widely recognized. Epidemiologic evidence indicates that these pathogens are distributed worldwide. People who come into close contact with infected rodents in urban, rural and laboratory environments are at particular risk. Transmission to man occurs mainly via the respiratory tract. The epidemiology of the hantaviruses is intimately linked to the ecology of their principal vertebrate hosts. Four distinct viruses are now recognized within the hantavirus genus and that number is likely to increase to six very soon; however, further investigations are necessary. Much more work is still needed before we fully understand the wide spectrum of clinical signs and symptoms of HFRS as well as the pathogenicity of the different viruses in the hantavirus genus of the Bunyaviridae family. HFRS is difficult to diagnose on clinical grounds alone and serological evidence is often needed. A fourfold rise in IgG antibody titer in a 1-week interval, and the presence of the IgM type of antibodies against hantaviruses are good evidence for an acute hantavirus infection. Physicians should be alert for HFRS each time they deal with patients with acute febrile flu-like illness, renal failure of unknown origin and sometimes hepatic dysfunction. Especially the mild form of HFRS is difficult to diagnose. Acute onset, headache, fever, increased serum creatinine, proteinuria and polyuria are signs and symptoms compatible with a mild form of HFRS. Differential diagnosis should be considered for the following diseases in the endemic areas of HFRS: acute renal failure, hemorrhagic scarlet fever, acute abdomen, leptospirosis,
scrub typhus
, murine typhus, spotted fevers, non-A, non-B
hepatitis
, Colorado tick fever, septicemia, dengue, heartstroke and DIC. Treatment of HFRS is mainly supportive. Recently, however, treatment of HFRS patients with ribavirin in China and Korea, within 7 days after onset of fever, resulted in a reduced mortality as well as shortened course of illness.
...
PMID:Hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome. 257 14
Scrub typhus
is an acute febrile illness that generally causes non-specific symptoms and signs of which fever is the most common. It is one of the causes of "fevers of unknown origin" in the Asia-Pacific region. The relationship between hepatic dysfunction and
scrub typhus
has been given little attention in the literature. From 1982 to 1993, 47 patients diagnosed with
scrub typhus
at Tri-Service General Hospital, Taipei, were studied, with attention being given to hepatic dysfunction. The medical records of these patients were reviewed thoroughly. Hepatic dysfunction occurred in 77% (36/47) of patients. Among the liver function parameters, the percentage of abnormality was 74.5% for aspartate aminotransferase, 74.5% for alanine aminotransferase, 57.4% for alkaline phosphatase, 44.7% for lactate dehydrogenase and 44.7% for serum bilirubin. Six patients presented with a picture of true
hepatitis
similar to acute viral hepatitis. The results indicate that hepatocellular damage does occur in
scrub typhus
, and is perhaps, more common than previously realized. We recommend that the differential diagnosis of patients from high-risk groups and endemic areas who present with
hepatitis
-like symptoms should include examination for
scrub typhus
.
...
PMID:Hepatic dysfunction in scrub typhus. 761 39
A 56 year old patient with
scrub typhus
infection having unusual presentation of hepatic injury resembling acute hepatitis is described. The clinical features of fever, headache, eschar, lymphadenopathy, lymphocytosis and high Rickettsia tsutsugamushi immunofluorescence titres confirmed the diagnosis of
scrub typhus
. Acute hepatitis was proven by hepatic biochemical tests and liver biopsy. The patient had a complete recovery soon after antibiotic treatment. The presentation of this case suggests that
scrub typhus
infection should be included in the list of differential diagnosis of acute hepatitis or granulomatous
hepatitis
, at least in the Asian Pacific region where
scrub typhus
still prevails.
...
PMID:Granulomatous hepatitis associated with scrub typhus. 852 19
Tsutsugamushi disease
, one of the rickettsiosis, is known to be occasionally accompanied by elevation of hepatic enzyme levels. However, there are only a few reports on histopathological findings of the liver. We presented a case of
Tsutsugamushi disease
with liver involvement. A 51-year-old man suffered from eruptions and a high fever with a mild transaminasemia. He was diagnosed as
Tsutsugamushi disease
by detection of IgM class antibody against Rickettsia tsutsugamushi. Laparoscopic examination showed a dark-brown liver with diffuse whitish markings. Microscopic findings were consistent with the features of non-specific reactive
hepatitis
: sinusoidal small lymphocyte infiltrations, mild disarray of hepatocytes and aggregation of T lymphocytes and macrophages in the lobule.
...
PMID:Liver involvement in Tsutsugamushi disease. 888 10
A 33 year-old Thai woman was diagnosed with
scrub typhus
infection according to clinical symptoms, eschar lesions compatible with the disease, and specific antibody to Rickettsia tsutsugamushi detected by indirect immunoperoxidase. Percutaneous transhepatic needle biopsies were taken before and 7 days after treatment with tetracycline to study the pathology of the liver. The liver tissue was evaluated by light microscopy, using H & E and Pinkerton's stains, and by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Before treatment it showed reactive
hepatitis
. Rickettsia organisms within the hepatocytes and sinusoids detected by Pinkerton's stain appeared as tiny bright-red organisms. By TEM, the rod-shaped double-membrane Rickettsiae appeared intact in the cytoplasm of Kupffer's cells and hepatocytes. After tetracycline treatment, moderate levels of acidophilic and ballooning liver cells were observed. The degree of cytoplasmic organelle damage varied, including fatty metamorphosis, depletion of glycogen granules, loss of the mitochondrial cristae, dilatation of endoplasmic reticulum and cytoplasmic vacuolation. Rickettsia organisms cannot be visualized by Pinkerton's stain but were detected by TEM, in markedly vacuolated hepatocytes, in congested sinusoids and in Kupffer's cells. Intranuclear Rickettsia were discovered in the endothelial nucleus, showing various degrees of injury. Some were mildly degenerated, while others exhibited clumping of nucleoprotein at the cytoplasm periphery and large vacuolation centrally. Many indented organisms were found, and binary fission during Rickettsiae multiplication was always affected. Electron-microscopic examination of hepatic injury associated with
scrub typhus
is rare. This is the first ultrastructural localization of Rickettsiae in the infected human liver.
...
PMID:Electron-microscopic examination of Rickettsia tsutsugamushi-infected human liver. 959 64
There is little information on the diverse infectious causes of jaundice and
hepatitis
in the Asiatic tropics. Serology (hepatitis A, B, C and E, leptospirosis, dengue, rickettsia), antigen tests (dengue), PCR assays (hepatitis A, C and E) and blood cultures (septicaemia) were performed on samples from 392 patients admitted with jaundice or raised transaminases (> or =x3) to Mahosot Hospital, Vientiane, Laos over 3 years. Conservative definitions suggested diagnoses of dengue (8.4%), rickettsioses (7.3%), leptospirosis (6.8%), hepatitis B (4.9%), hepatitis C (4.9%), community-acquired septicaemia (3.3%) and hepatitis E (1.6%). Although anti-hepatitis A virus (HAV) IgM antibody results suggested that 35.8% of patients had acute HAV infections, anti-HAV IgG antibody avidity and HAV PCR suggested that 82% had polyclonal activation and not acute HAV infections.
Scrub typhus
, murine typhus or leptospirosis were present in 12.8% of patients and were associated with meningism and relatively low AST and ALT elevation. These patients would be expected to respond to empirical doxycycline therapy which, in the absence of virological diagnosis and treatment, may be an appropriate cost-effective intervention in Lao patients with jaundice/
hepatitis
.
...
PMID:The infective causes of hepatitis and jaundice amongst hospitalised patients in Vientiane, Laos. 2037 38
Scrub typhus
is an acute febrile disease caused by Orientia tsutsugamushi (O. tsutsugamushi). We report herein the case of a woman who presented with fever and elevated serum levels of liver enzymes and who was definitively diagnosed with
scrub typhus
by histopathological examination of liver biopsy specimens, serological tests and nested polymerase chain reaction. Immunohistochemical staining using a monoclonal anti-O. tsutsugamushi antibody showed focally scattered positive immunoreactions in the cytoplasm of some hepatocytes. This case suggests that
scrub typhus
hepatitis
causes mild focal inflammation due to direct liver damage without causing piecemeal necrosis or interface
hepatitis
. Thus,
scrub typhus
hepatitis
differs from acute viral hepatitis secondary to liver damage due to host immune responses, which causes severe lobular disarray with diffuse hepatocytic degeneration, necrosis and apoptosis as well as findings indicative of hepatic cholestasis, such as hepatic bile plugs or brown pigmentation of hepatocytes.
...
PMID:Scrub typhus hepatitis confirmed by immunohistochemical staining. 2304 27
To elucidate the epidemic status, clinical profile, and current diagnostic issues of
scrub typhus
in Shandong Province, we analyzed the surveillance data of
scrub typhus
from 2006 to 2011 and conducted a hospital-based disease survey in 2010.
Scrub typhus
was clustered in mountainous and coastal areas in Shandong Province, with an epidemic period from September to November. The most common manifestations were fever (100%), eschar or skin ulcer (86.3%), fatigue (71.6%), anorexia (71.6%), and rash (68.6%). Predominant complications included bronchopneumonia, toxic
hepatitis
, and acute cholecystitis in 21.6%, 3.9%, and 2.9% of the cases, respectively. Severe complications including toxic myocarditis, heart failure, pneumonedema, pleural effusion, and emphysema were first reported in Shandong. Missed and delayed diagnosis of
scrub typhus
was common in local medical institutions. Alarm should be raised for changes of clinical features and current diagnostic issues of
scrub typhus
in newly developed endemic areas.
...
PMID:Scrub typhus: surveillance, clinical profile and diagnostic issues in Shandong, China. 2309 Nov 93
Undifferentiated Acute Febrile Illness (AFI) is a common clinical syndrome among patients seeking hospital care. Detection of co-infections at the time of presentation is a diagnostic challenge, especially with limited laboratory support. Even if detected, early treatment and cure of these co-infections can be difficult for the clinicians. We are presenting a rare case of Hepatitis B and leptospirosis co-infection with high titres of Salmonella paratyphi A and
scrub typhus
. There are a few reports of leptospirosis in
Hepatitis
-B infected individuals but no generalization can be made due to limited data. Prompt and accurate serological diagnosis of multiple infectious agents have becomes mandatory in a healthcare set-up.
...
PMID:Co-Infection: Weil's Syndrome with Hepatitis B Infection- A Diagnostic and Therapeutic Hitch. 2429 95
Scrub typhus
is an important cause of acute febrile illness. This observational study describes the clinical features and complications of the patients diagnosed to have
scrub typhus
in Christian Medical College & Hospital, Ludhiana, Punjab, India. The diagnosis of
scrub typhus
was made by using Bioline SD
Tsutsugamushi
test kit which detects IgM, IgG or IgA antibodies to Orientia tsutsugamushi. Sixty-two patients of
scrub typhus
were seen during the study period of 1 year. The mean age of the study group was 39.9 years. All the patients presented with fever, and of these 31 (50%) had non-specific symptoms. All others had some complication, namely ARDS/ALI in 18 (29%), neurological involvement in 12 (19.4%), acute kidney injury (AKI) in 16 (25.8%), hypotension in eight (12.9%), thrombocytopenia in 23 (37.1%),
hepatitis
in 34 (54.8%) and MODS in 19 (30.7%). Eschar was present only in nine patients. Three patients expired due to multi-organ failure, hypotension and metabolic acidosis.
...
PMID:Scrub typhus in Punjab: an acute febrile illness with multisystem involvement. 2454 32
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