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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sampling variability of liver biopsy was determined in three consecutive biopsy specimens obtained from each of 118 patients immediately prior to autopsy. No sampling variability was found for fatty liver, alcoholic hepatitis, nonspecific
hepatitis
, fulminant
hepatitis
, leukemic infiltrate, and venous congestion. Cirrhosis was diagnosed in 80% of cases at the first biopsy but in all cases after three biopsies. Chronic aggressive and
chronic persistent hepatitis
were diagnosed correctly in two of three cases each at the first biopsy, and in all cases after three biopsies. Metastatic carcinoma was detected in 46% of cases at the first biopsy and in 69% after three biopsies. Granulomas were missed once on the first biopsy, but found on a subsequent biopsy. The amounts of fat and fibrosis in the biopsy specimens often were not representative of the amounts present at autopsy.
...
PMID:Sampling variability on percutaneous liver biopsy. 44 70
Twenty-six of 388 patients (6.7%) followed prospectively after open-heart surgery developed non-A, non-B
hepatitis
. Of these 26, 12 had an elevated (often fluctuating) serum alanine aminotransferase (SGPT) for greater than 1 year. Liver biopsy, done in eight of 12, showed chronic active hepatitis in six and
chronic persistent hepatitis
in two; one patient with chronic active hepatitis had early cirrhosis. Anicteric patients with peak SGPT greater then 300 IU/L were at greatest risk of developing chronic hepatitis. Chronic non-A, non-B
hepatitis
was symptomatically mild and unaccompanied by physical signs or laboratory evidence of autoimmune disease or severe chronic liver disease. In all 12 patients there was spontaneous improvement in serum transaminase over a period of 1 to 3 years, and four patients had sustained normalization of SGPT. Thus chronic active hepatitis is a common sequela of acute non-A, non-B
hepatitis
but may have a better prognosis than chronic active hepatitis of other causes.
...
PMID:The chronic sequelae of non-A, non-B hepatitis. 46 17
Immune complexes (IC) were investigated in sera from 208 individuals with various clinical types of viral hepatitis diagnosed by clinical and laboratory criteria, including liver biopsy. Immune complexes were assessed by platelet aggregation (PI A) and by radioimmunoassay (RIA). The data were related to autoimmune phenomena (especially rheumatoid factors) and to the role that the IgM class of hepatitis B (HB) antibody might have in IC formation. Although the highest frequency of P1 A was in the few sera from patients with cirrhosis or hepatoma, the next highest was in sera from acute hepatitis patients (71%), and the lowest in sera from chronic active (57%) and chronic persistent (46%)
hepatitis
patients. A proportional number of patients with IC's were positive for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBs). A parallel prevalence was noted between P1 A and autoantibodies, with anti-Ig's being found more frequently in sera from acute hepatitis and chronic active hepatitis patients. The relationship between RIA results for complexes and RIA results for anti-IgG was inverse, as though anti-IgG interfered with IC reactivity by RIA. Anti-IgM pre-incubated with sera increased the amount of P1 A in sera from patients with acute hepatitis as well as in those from patients with
chronic persistent hepatitis
, suggesting a more frequent IgM involvement in IC's in these diseases than in chronic active hepatitis. Whereas liver cell damage in acute and active
hepatitis
may reflect elevated autoantibodies, the IgM class of HBs antibody may be involved in acute as well as
chronic persistent hepatitis
.
...
PMID:Autoimmune implications of immune complexes in clinical variants of hepatitis B. 49 83
Eight patients with chronic hepatitis B infection (seven with chronic active hepatitis and one with
chronic persistent hepatitis
) were treated with daily intramuscular injections of human leucocyte interferon for periods of 5 to 8 weeks and in one case for 5 months. In one patient there was a marked fall in virus-associated DNA polymerase activity and in the number of DNA containing viral particles during each of two courses of interferon.
Hepatitis
Be antigen (HBeAg) also disappeared, the aspartate transaminase levels fell and liver histology improved. In the four other patients with detectable DNA polymerase activity there was an early fall but this was transient and in one of these patients there was a continuing rise in activity despite treatment. One other patient became HBeAg negative but hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) titres were mostly unaffected by treatment. A marked decrease in T-lymphocyte mediated cytotoxicity towards HBsAg coated target cells was demonstrated and raises the possibility that an immunosuppressant action of interferon may offsets its direct anti-viral action but may also account for the improvement in liver function which occurred in some patients.
...
PMID:Effects of human leucocyte interferon on hepatitis B virus replication and immune responses in patients with chronic hepatitis B infection. 50 26
Ten cases of hepatitis B virus infection were identified among asymptomatic male homosexuals. These patients shared a number of characteristics: A subclinical origin and course of infection; Persistence of HGsAg for periods exceeding six to 25 months; Persistent GPT elevation of two to five times upper normal limit; Morphological changes in the liver with portal and parenchymal inflammation (
chronic persistent hepatitis
, six cases; non-specific reactive
hepatitis
, 2 cases; cirrhosis and acute hepatitis with signs of chronicity, one case each). HBeAg was found in six cases, anti-HBe in none. These results indicate that screening for hepatitis B should be performed whenever these individuals come under medical attention in order to detect asymptomatic chronic liver diseases and to detect these silent vectors of an infection that presently shows an increased frequency among homosexuals.
...
PMID:Chronic hepatitis B infection in male homosexuals. 51 38
372 children with suspected liver disease were examined for serum HBsAg. Six (three boys, three girls) were found to be positive (1.6%). Further studies of these patients for up to three and a half years revealed elimination of HBsAg in one case only. Biopsies were performed in five patients. Three showed mild chronic hepatitis (two
chronic persistent hepatitis
, one unspecific reactive
hepatitis
). Chronic aggressive hepatitis was diagnosed in one patient. One child seemed to be normal on light microscopy, but the findings on electron microscopy were abnormal, the liver cell nuclei being filled with core particles. Two thirds of the family contacts of these children showed hepatitis B marker. Two pregnancies were observed in HBsAg-positive mothers. An infection of the babies was not demonstrable.
...
PMID:[Hepatitis B markers in paediatric patients (author's transl)]. 51 42
During the period between January 1975 and August 1976, 203 liver biopsies were received at the Singapore General Hospital from patients with a variety of liver diseases. A histological diagnosis of chronic hepatitis was made in 29 patients: 13 cases of Chronic Aggressive
Hepatitis
(C.A.H.). 10 cases
Chronic Persistent Hepatitis
(C.P.H.) and 6 of Chronic Lobular
Hepatitis
(C.L.H.). C.P.H. and C.L.H. were found mainly in the third and fourth decades. C.A.H. was more common in the fifth to seventh decades and occurred principally in females. Hepatitis B antigenaemia was detected in 48.3% of these cases using the immunoelectroosmophoresis (EOP) technique and showed an even scatter in all histological sub-types. Using the reverse passive haemagglutination (rPHA) method for detection by HBs antigen and the radioelectrocomplexing (REC) method for anti-HBs, an immune sub-group (HBs Ag+/anti-HBs+) was identified in greater proportions in C.A.H. and C.P.H. compared to normal controls. This was interpreted to mean that these patients suffered from a primary immunodeficiency characterized by failure of production of high avidity anti-HBs with resulting failure to clear HBsAg leading to perpetuation of liver damage due to circulating immune complexes. It is also suggested that patients with C.P.H. belonging to this immune sub-group may progress to C.A.H. with its more ominous prognosis.
...
PMID:Hepatitis B surface antigen and antibody status in biopsy proven chronic hepatitis in Singapore. 52 86
The accepted histological categories of chronic hepatitis are
chronic persistent hepatitis
(
CPH
) and chronic active or aggressive
hepatitis
(CAH). A third form, chronic lobular
hepatitis
(CLH), encompasses those cases in which the lesion is predominantly within the lobules and in which portal and periportal inflammation are mild. CLH has many synonyms. International agreement on a reproducible and rational nomenclature of chronic hepatitis is still far from complete.
CPH
is characterized by portal inflammation. Histological definition is simple, but there are diagnostic pitfalls. The category may need subdivision on the basis of immunological studies. CAH should be regarded as a complex rather than a single disease, and it is important to specify the aetiology and pathological components in each instance. The concept of CAH must be altered to incorporate the lesion of bridging hepatic necrosis (BHN). Piecemeal necrosis, accompanied by inflammatory infiltration, is considered to be the most important of the various pathogenetic factors in CAH, but BHN probably plays a significant part in accelerating the development of cirrhosis. An excessive portal and periportal inflammatory reaction with or without BHN, in a liver biopsy taken during the course of an acute hepatitis, helps to predict a possible chronic course.
...
PMID:Chronic hepatitis: a problem for the pathologist. 61 33
From 1971 to 1975, HBV-induced
hepatitis
was observed in 80 children. The diagnosis was based upon the detection in serum of HBsAg and/or the secondary occurrence of anti-HBs. Thirty-one patients presented with acute viral hepatitis, 16 with severe or fulminant
hepatitis
, 17 with
chronic persistent hepatitis
, 12 with chronic active hepatitis, and 4 were asymptomatic chronic carriers of HBsAg. Twenty-nine of 80 children were under one year of age (36%), the peak of frequency occurring from 2 to 5 months. The source of infection, determined in 27 of 29 infants, was administration of blood derivatives in 15 cases and contact with an HBsAg carrier mother in nine instances. In the latter type, the incubation time (103 days) was compartible with an oral route of infection, Persistent antigenemia occurred in only 3 of 29 patients. The overt type of disease developed by most infants, as well as the small number of patients who became HBsAg carriers, suggest that the carrier state, often encountered in neonatally infected infants in other countries, may be related to environmental or genetic factors rather than to immaturity of theimmune system.
...
PMID:Hepatitis B in children. I. Analysis of 80 cases of acute and chronic hepatitis B. 61 70
168 HBAg seropositive and 105 HBAg seronegative liver biopsies were studied for correlations between anti-HBc titers (indirect immunofluorescence method) and tissue expression of HBsAg and HBcAg (immunofluorescence), Dane particles in blood (immune electron microscopy) and inflammatory reaction. 98.8% of the HBAg seropositive patients were positive for anti-HBc. The mean titers showed statistically significant differences mainly between chronic aggressive
hepatitis
(1:2(11.3)) versus lobular
hepatitis
(1:2(10.1)),
chronic persistent hepatitis
(1:2(9.9)) and nonspecific reactive
hepatitis
(1:2(7.6)). Due to the considerable deviation of titers within the histological groups, however, titers below 1:2(11) are of low diagnostic relevance, whereas titers above 1:2(12) are mainly indicative of chronic aggressive
hepatitis
, although acute lobular
hepatitis
with signs of possible transition to chronicity or
chronic persistent hepatitis
with strong inflammatory activity may occur. Among HBAg seronegative patients 20% were positive for anti-HBc (mean titer = 1:2(7.7)). Among 78 patients also tested for anti-HBs, 10.2% were positive for both anti-HBc and anti-HBs. In an additional 12.8%, anti-HBc was the only marker of past hepatitis B virus infection. Anti-HBs was the only marker in a further 33%. In none of the HBAg seronegative patients and in only 59% of all HBAg seropositive patients, there was an association of anti-HBc with complete virus synthesis as measured by the demonstration of HBcAg in tissue or Dane particles in blood. It is concluded that anti-HBc is not a criterion of infectiosity but a specific, although non-characteristic, marker for HBAg seropositive acute and chronic hepatitis as well as for terminated HBV infection of all possible inflammatory and HBAg expression types.
...
PMID:[Anti-HBc within the framework of hepatitis B virus infection: correlation to the form of inflammation and to the viral expression]. 62 36
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