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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Autoimmune hepatitis
(AIH) has been defined as "an unresolving, predominantly periportal
hepatitis
, usually with hypergammaglobulinemia and tissue autoantibodies, which is responsive to immunosuppressive therapy in most cases." It is a relatively rare disorder, with a preponderance of female patients, that can present at any age (although onset in most cases is after 40 years of age). There are no features that are pathognomonic of the condition. Diagnosis requires careful exclusion of other causes of liver disease together with the finding of a suggestive pattern of clinical and laboratory abnormalities. The marked heterogeneity of AIH with respect to presenting features, severity of disease, and response to therapy has led to several proposals for classification of the disease according to (mainly) immunologic parameters. These schemata may assist in diagnosis, and some may define different pathogenetic subgroups of the disease, but their utility for assessing prognosis or planning treatment strategies for the individual patient is still uncertain.
...
PMID:Definition and classification of autoimmune hepatitis. 1244 4
Autoimmune hepatitis
is a well-established chronic liver disease. It primarily affects women, is characterized by circulating autoantibodies and elevated gammaglobulins and is associated with extrahepatic immune-mediated syndromes. Treatment regimens have remained unchanged for a number of years because of the high efficacy of steroid monotherapy, or combination therapy of azathioprine and steroids. In approximately 90% of patients remission of the disease is reached by medical therapy, which is usually administered lifelong because long-term remission after drug withdrawal is achieved in only 17% of patients. In 10% of patients treatment failure is observed. The challenge of remission induction involves the use of transplant immunosuppressants such as cyclosporine, mycophenolate moffetil, and tacrolimus. The challenge of maintenance therapy minimizing steroid side-effects involves the evaluation of topical steroids and the use of azathioprine monotherapy. Overlap syndromes occur in approximately 20% of autoimmune liver diseases. The diagnosis is broadly based on serological, biochemical, clinical and histological parameters. Most common are the overlap of autoimmune
hepatitis
and primary biliary cirrhosis, as well as autoimmune
hepatitis
with primary sclerosing cholangitis. These yet incompletely defined syndromes are an important differential diagnosis in the difficult-to-treat patient with autoimmune
hepatitis
.
...
PMID:Autoimmune hepatitis and overlap syndromes. 1247 69
Autoimmune hepatitis
is a chronic, progressive liver disease that responds well to immunosuppressive therapy, but has a poor prognosis if untreated. Possible triggering factors include viruses, other autoimmune disorders and drugs. The molecular mechanisms contributing to the pathogenesis include: reactions of autoantibodies against their corresponding autoantigens; aberrant expression of histocompatibility antigen class I and II molecules, cell adhesion molecules and cytokines; increased oxidative stress; and the occurrence of angiogenesis. The prevalence of the disease is highest in Caucasians, Europeans and women. The natural history of autoimmune
hepatitis
shows a poor prognosis, with frequent progression to cirrhosis and hepatic insufficiency in untreated patients. The occurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma is rare and is found only in long-standing cirrhosis. Corticosteroids as monotherapy or in combination with azathioprine are the treatments of choice; different therapeutic schedules and particularities of treatment for pregnant women and children have been established. To avoid treatment-associated adverse effects, alternative therapies have been proposed, including ciclosporin, budesonide, tacrolimus, mycophenolate mofetil, ursodeoxycholic acid, methotrexate, cyclophosphamide, mercaptopurine and free radical scavengers. Liver transplantation is indicated for patients refractory to or intolerant of immunosuppressive therapy.
...
PMID:Review article: immunopathogenetic and therapeutic aspects of autoimmune hepatitis. 1249 28
Autoimmune hepatitis
is a chronic immune-mediated disease characterized by a loss of tolerance against liver resident antigens. The genetic background of autoimmune
hepatitis
is considered to be polygenic. Here we analyzed the genetic association of the tyrosine phosphatase CD45 and autoimmune
hepatitis
. CD45 plays an important role in normal antigen receptor mediated signaling in T and B cells. A point mutation at nucleotide position 77 of the CD45 gene results in abnormal CD45 splicing. In this study a significantly higher frequency of the 77 C/G genotype was observed in 190 autoimmune
hepatitis
patients when compared to 210 healthy blood donors. Our data identify CD45 as a gene associated with AIH, and further substantiates the hypothesis that CD45 represents a modifier gene of human autoimmunity.
...
PMID:77 C/G mutation in the tyrosine phosphatase CD45 gene and autoimmune hepatitis: evidence for a genetic link. 1259 7
The pattern of some autoimmune
hepatitis
can be difficult to classify, sometimes due to the overlap of these with primary biliary cirrhosis, primary sclerosing cholangitis and chronic viral hepatitis. The etiology of these variant forms remains unclear. The distinction among the overlap syndromes poses different problems both of prognosis and therapeutic approach. Presently, the utility of the scoring system devised and revised by the International
Autoimmune Hepatitis
Group regarding these cases is under discussion. Histological examination seems to be an important tool, but often the result does not help in defining a correct diagnosis. To date, the overlap syndromes can be classified at an intermediate level between cholestatic forms of autoimmune
hepatitis
or hepatic forms of cholestatic syndromes, but it cannot be excluded that the syndromes represent independent disorders.
...
PMID:Overlap syndromes of autoimmune hepatitis: what is known so far. 1275 52
Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is increasingly diagnosed in children and adolescents, but its long-term prognosis remains uncertain. The aim of this longitudinal, cohort study was to determine the long-term outcome of children with PSC. Fifty-two children with cholangiography-proven PSC (34 boys and 18 girls; mean age 13.8 +/- 4.2 years; range, 1.5-19.6 years) who were seen at our institution over a 20-year period were followed-up for up to 16.7 years. Two thirds presented with symptoms and/or signs of PSC and 81% had concomitant inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Twenty-five percent had total alkaline phosphatase activity within the normal range for the age group, but all of them had elevated gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase levels.
Autoimmune hepatitis
overlapping with PSC was present in 35% of children. A positive but transient clinical and/or biochemical response occurred under therapy with ursodeoxycholic acid, alone or in combination with immunosuppressive medications. During follow-up, 11 children underwent liver transplantation for end-stage PSC and 1 child died. The median (50%) survival free of liver transplantation was 12.7 years. Compared with an age- and gender-matched U.S. population, survival was significantly shorter in children with PSC (P <.001). In a Cox regression model, lower platelet count, splenomegaly, and older age were associated with shorter survival. Presence of autoimmune
hepatitis
overlapping with PSC (P =.2) or medical therapy (P =.2) did not affect survival. In conclusion, PSC significantly decreases survival in this child population. Although pharmacologic therapy may improve symptoms and liver test results initially, it does not seem to impact the long-term outcome.
...
PMID:Primary sclerosing cholangitis in children: a long-term follow-up study. 1283 4
Autoimmune hepatitis
is a chronic inflammatory liver disease that responds well to prednisone alone or in combination with azathioprine. Combination therapy is preferred initially because of the lower rate of corticosteroid-induced adverse effects. Specific criteria for diagnosis include a wide range of biochemical, histologic, and immunologic features that define the disease.
Autoimmune hepatitis
is characterized by various autoantibodies, both traditional and nontraditional. Most of these autoantibodies are measured for diagnostic purposes and do not correlate with disease severity or activity. Sustained histologic remission is achievable in the majority of patients, although many patients require low-dose maintenance therapy. Drug therapy may be beneficial in patients with cirrhosis when considerable inflammation is noted on biopsy. Orthotopic liver transplantation should be considered for patients with decompensated cirrhosis due to autoimmune
hepatitis
or those with severe
hepatitis
in whom initial therapy is not successful.
...
PMID:Autoimmune hepatitis. Making sense of all those antibodies. 1287 57
Autoimmune hepatitis
(AIH) is a chronic necroinflammatory liver disease of unknown cause associated with circulating autoantibodies and high serum globulin level. Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a disease of unknown etiology in which tissues and cells are damaged by pathogenic autoantibodies and immune complex, affecting multiple organs including the liver, kidney, and CNS. The difference between the hepatic involvement of SLE and autoimmune
hepatitis
has not been clearly defined in the past due to similarities in clinical and biochemical features. A scoring system for the diagnosis of AIH has been established, and AIH and SLE-associated
hepatitis
have been defined as two different entities, although both have the same autoimmune features such as polyarthralgia, hypergammaglobulinemia and circulating autoantibodies. AIH has been considered to occur infrequently in SLE. We report two cases of AIH which simultaneously satisfied the criteria of SLE.
...
PMID:[Two cases of autoimmnune hepatitis associated with systemic lupus erythematosus]. 1451 41
Autoimmune hepatitis
is a disorder of unknown aetiology in which progressive destruction of the hepatic parenchyma occurs, often progressing to cirrhosis. Hepatitis A, Ebstein-Barr virus and measles virus have been identified as triggers for autoimmune
hepatitis
in susceptible individuals. There are also reports about herbal medicine and minocycline. A case with autoimmune
hepatitis
triggered by Brucella infection or doxycycline, or both, is presented. An 11-year-old female patient treated with six weeks of doxycycline and three weeks of streptomycine for brucellosis presented with histologically proven autoimmune
hepatitis
(AH) and responded to corticosteroid treatment. Since neither brucellosis nor doxcycyline as triggering factors for AH have been described so far, these two entities are discussed and the literature reviewed.
...
PMID:Autoimmune hepatitis triggered by Brucella infection or doxycycline or both. 1452 53
Autoimmune hepatitis
is an unresolving, hepatocellular inflammation of unknown cause that is characterized by the presence of periportal
hepatitis
on histologic examination, tissue autoantibodies in serum, and hypergammaglobulinemia. By international consensus, the designation autoimmune
hepatitis
has replaced alternative terms for the condition. Three types of autoimmune
hepatitis
have been proposed based on immunoserologic findings. Type 1 autoimmune
hepatitis
is characterized by the presence of antinuclear antibodies (ANA) or smooth muscle antibodies (SMA) (or both) in serum. Seventy percent of patients with type 1 of autoimmune
hepatitis
are women. This type is the most common form and accounts for at least 80% of cases. Type 2 is characterized by the presence of antibodies to liver-kidney microsome type 1 (anti-LKM1) in serum. Patients with this type of autoimmune
hepatitis
are predominantly children. Type 3 autoimmune
hepatitis
is characterized by the presence of antibodies to soluble liver antigen (anti-SLA) in serum. There are no individual features that are pathognomonic of autoimmune
hepatitis
, and its diagnosis requires the confident exclusion of other conditions. The large majority of patients show satisfactory response to corticosteroid (usually prednisone or prednisolone) therapy. For the past 30 years it has been customary to add azathioprine as a "steroid sparing" agent to allow lower doses of steroids to be used and remission, once achieved, can be sustained in many patients with azathioprine alone after steroid withdrawal. Patients with autoimmune
hepatitis
who have decompensated during or after corticosteroid therapy are candidates for liver transplantation.
...
PMID:[Autoimmune hepatitis]. 1458 66
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