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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An automated immunoprecipitin system has been utilized to quantitate the concentration of 10 specific proteins in the plasma of man. Values obtained by this technique are in agreement with the published concentrations for these specific plasma proteins. This technique was utilized to determine the sequential change s in 10 individual plasma proteins of volunteers exposed to Salmonella typhi. In those volunteers who developed typical
typhoid fever
, plasma concentrations of the acute phase proteins, alpha1-acid glycoprotein, alpha1-antitrypsin, and haptoglobin, as well as C3 complement were significantly increased with the onset of febrile illness. In contrast, the concentration of plasma albumin and tranferrin were depressed while plasma IgM became elevated during early convalescence from this infection. No significant changes were observed in the plasma concentrations of alpha2-macroglobulin, IgG, or IgA. In the exposed volunteers who did not become ill, the only significant change was a brief depression of alpha1-antitrypsin. During
typhoid fever
the patterns of change for individual plasma acute-phase globulins were different from those reported for patients with
hepatitis
, myocaridal infarction, or surgery.
...
PMID:Sequential changes in the concentration of specific serum proteins during typhoid fever infection in man. 5 49
An etiologic study was made of 107 cases of granulomatous
hepatitis
which were observed in a Department of Internal Medicine between January, 1971 and December, 1977 (excluding the hepatobiliary diseases). The most common etiology was tuberculosis (30 cases, 28 percent) followed by sarcoidosis (19 cases, 17.7 percent), Mediterranean exanthematous fever (13 cases, 12.1 percent), brucellosis (8 cases, 7.4 percent)
typhoid fever
(7 cases, 6.5 percent) and the idiopathic forms (8 cases, 7.4 percent). A lower rate of incidence was among Hodgkin's disease, toxoplasmosis, adenocarcinomas, leprosy, and those of unknown etiology, classified in this way because the study and follow-up of the patients could not be completed. There were, moreover, individual cases caused by mononucleosis, BCG reaction, hypogammaglobulinemia, celiac disease, and temporal arteritis. From a clinical point of view 50 percent of the patients had hepatomegaly and moderate disturbance of the liver enzymes. The most important enzymatic increases were detected in the cases caused by brucellosis; in the cases which were secondary to sarcoidosis the liver enzymes were normal. A comparison is established between the etiologic incidence of the present series and of others published in the literature. The causes and diagnostic problems of this type of lesion are discussed.
...
PMID:[Granulomatous hepatitis. Etiologic study of 107 cases (author's transl)]. 45 94
Light and electron microscopy study of fourteen liver biopsies in
typhoid fever
disclosed a mild
hepatitis
in which there is marked reticulo-endothelial hyperplasia, with many lymphoid cells in the hepatic sinusoids. The hepatic cell lesion was non specific, manifested by reticulum endoplasmic dilatation, mitochondrial alteration and biliary canaliculus injury. Such findings were particularly evident in the jaundiced patients. Jaundice was, in our series, a more frequent complication of acute
typhoid fever
than commonly reported. Usually it is of short duration and the serum bilirubin was not markedly elevated. However, there were instances when the jaundice was so accentuated as to lead the clinician to a first diagnosis of virus
hepatitis
or leptospirosis. The pathogenesis of the intrahepatic cholestasis in
typhoid fever
is still obscure, but apparently it is, as has been described in other infectious diseases, due to an injury of the bile secretory apparatus brought out by the bacillary endotoxin.
...
PMID:Jaundice in typhoid hepatitis: a light and electron microscopy study based on liver biopsies. 60 18
The records of 104 patients with culture-proven enteric fever were reviewed and evaluated as to the clinical signs, laboratory findings, pathologic features and complications of the disease. One patient with fatal disseminated intravascular coagulation and enteric fever is also presented. Fever and bradycardia were the leading clinical signs followed by splenomegaly, hepatomegaly and rose spots. The principal complications of enteric fever included anemia,
typhoid
hepatitis
, relapse and bleeding. Evidence of
typhoid
hepatitis
was present in 30% of the patients tested. The pathology consisted of
typhoid
nodules of variable frequency and size depending upon the severity of the condition. The relationship of
typhoid
hepatitis
to relapse seems to be more than coincidental as four out of seven patients who had relapse had abnormal liver tests. The occurrence of disseminated intravascular coagulation in enteric fever is rare; however, awareness of such a potential complication may be life-saving to the patient.
...
PMID:Enteric fever: a clinicopathologic study of 104 cases. 64 89
The latest recommendations for immunization for overseas travel by British nationals as of June 1978 are summarized. Immunizations are divided into 2 groups, 1) those required by International Health Regulations, and 2) those medically recommended. The WHO requires vaccination for smallpox, cholera and yellow fever, recorded on official WHO forms. Yellow fever vaccinations are good for 10 years, and are only given at special locations. Live viral vaccines (smallpox, yellow fever and polio) should be given 3 weeks apart if possible. Contraindications against receiving these vaccines are listed, along with alternate procedures in such cases. Vaccines in the medically recommended group include
typhoid
-paratyphoid, tetanus, poliomyelitis, plague, typhus and immunoglobulin for infective
hepatitis
. A polyvalent vaccine for
typhoid
, paratyphoid A and B, and tetanus is available. The effectiveness of paratyphoid B vaccine is in dispute, and reactions are troublesome. Tetanus and polio immunizations are a must. Plague and typhus shots often produce reactions, and the immunity is not always good, but injections are highly recommended for those travelling in the interior of affected areas. Rabies vaccination is not recommended unless the traveller is to work as a veterinarian. Measles and BCG are suggested for children who are going to live in endemic areas.
...
PMID:Immunization for overseas travel. 68 32
The hepatic manifestations were studied in 65 patients having uncomplicated primary attacks of vivax and falciparum malaria. Hepatomegaly due to a "non-specific reactive hepatitis" occurred in 57% of cases. Jaundice occurred in 15% of patients and was invariably associated with hepatomegaly. The clinical syndromes of jaundice and hepatomegaly in uncomplicated primary attacks of malaria have to be distinguished from those related to disorders like viral hepatitis, hepatic amoebiasis,
typhoid
hepatitis
, infectious mononucleosis and Q fever. The causes for the jaundice and the pathogenesis for the hepatic lesions have been discussed.
...
PMID:Jaundice and hepatomegaly in primary malaria. 79 14
In the Tri-State Leukemia Survey, the history of diseases in 605 adult male leukemia cases 15 years and older and in 668 adult male population controls was examined. These diseases occurred at least 1 year before leukemia was diagnosed. The data were based on respondents' answers that the disease was diagnosed by a physician; the respondent was either the subject or his spouse. Of 30 diseases studied, 7 showed an excess among the patients with leukemia: infectious hepatitis, eczema, psoriasis, diabetes, arthritis and rheumatism, heart disease, and ankylosing spondylitis. Mumps had a lower reported occurrence among the cases, whereas pneumonia was less frequent in acute lymphatic cases than in population controls. Three diseases occurred significantly less in controls than in persons with specific histologic types of leukemia. Our data revealed a more frequent history of herpes zoster (shingles) in chronic lymphatic leukemia, more hives in acute chronic myeloid cases, and meningitis in acute myeloid leukemia. When we only considered the patients' responses, more of them admitted having had acne than did our controls. The remaining diseases--childhood viral diseases, infectious mononucleosis, smallpox,
typhoid fever
, dysentery, scarlet fever, tuberculosis, asthma, hay fever, and goiter did not occur more frequently in cases than in controls. The findings were consistent with evidence from previous laboratory and clinical studies. The increased occurrence of infectious hepatitis in our case series is consistent with the findings of other studies showing an increased frequency of Australia antigen in patients with
hepatitis
, leukemia, and Down's syndrome.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of diseases in adult males with leukemia. 99 1
In the course of a
typhoid
epidemic during the autumn of 1974 in the Heidelberg region 74 persons were treated in hospital. Chloramphenicol was give to 45, ampicillin to 19. The former, in daily doses of 2.0 g, gave worse results if given for only two instead of three weeks. In comparison, ampicillin was less effective. A second course of treatment became necessary in 13 patients, with trimethoprim-sulphamethoxazole (Bactrim) being succesful in all, although the follow-up period is still too short for definitive results. Three complications occurred: one case of massive bleeding from the gut requiring operation and followed some weeks later by a HBS-antigen-negative
hepatitis
; one case of typhoma (several weeks after the end of antibiotic treatment), requiring operative removal; a case of febrile abortion in the second month of pregnancy.
...
PMID:[Clinical course of typhoid in the Heidelberg region (author's transl)]. 108 Jul 5
One of the most important aspects of preparing travelers for destinations throughout the world is providing them with immunizations. Before administering any vaccines, however, a careful health and immunization history and travel itinerary should be obtained in order to determine vaccine indications and contraindications. There are three categories of immunizations for foreign travel. The first category includes immunizations which are routinely recommended whether or not the individual is traveling. Many travelers are due for primary vaccination or boosting against tetanus-diphtheria, measles-mumps-rubella, pneumococcal pneumonia, and influenza, for example, and the pre-travel visit is an ideal time to administer these. The second category are immunizations which might be required by a country as a condition for entry; these are yellow fever and cholera. The final category contains immunizations which are recommended because there is a risk of acquiring a particular disease during travel.
Typhoid fever
, meningococcal disease, rabies, and
hepatitis
are some examples. Travelers who are pregnant or who are infected with the human immunodeficiency virus require special consideration. Provision of appropriate immunizations for foreign travel is an important aspect of preventing illness in travelers.
...
PMID:Immunizations for foreign travel. 133 7
Hepatomegaly and deranged liver functions are common findings in reactive haemophagocytic syndrome (RHS). We report the findings of 12 fatal cases of RHS in which histological materials of the liver are available for study. The underlying diseases of these patients included lymphoma/leukaemia (6 cases), disseminated undifferentiated carcinoma of the ovary (1 case), disseminated nasopharyngeal carcinoma complicated by tuberculosis (1 case), adenovirus pneumonia (1 case), pneumococcal pneumonia (1 case),
typhoid fever
(1 case), and possible drug intoxication (1 case). Ten patients had involvement of the liver by the underlying disease process which contributed to the marked hepatic derangement. Non-specific reactive
hepatitis
, sinusoidal dilatation and steatosis resulting from systemic or local effects of the associated diseases and the haemophagocytosis also added to the high incidence of liver abnormalities. A diffuse Kupffer cell hyperplasia with haemophagocytosis is characteristic of the syndrome, as all the cases showed increased numbers of bland-looking histiocytes within the hepatic sinusoids and haemophagocytosis which was moderate to marked in 8 cases and mild in 4. Thus the finding of Kupffer cell hyperplasia with prominent haemophagocytosis in liver biopsy is indicative of an element of RHS and warrants clinical monitoring. Differential diagnoses of haemophagocytosis in liver are also discussed.
...
PMID:Liver changes in reactive haemophagocytic syndrome. 147 7
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