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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This paper gives, in detail, the causes of either liver disease or hepatomegaly in 100 patients, mostly adults, admitted to the medical wards of Angau Memorial Hospital, Lae, during 1968 and 1969. The major findings included liver cell carcinoma, cirrhosis (often with
chronic active hepatitis
), tropical splenomegaly, pericholangitis and
hepatitis
. There were 27 with miscellaneous findings including ten with normal, or almost normal, livers despite the definite enlargement. Patients with liver cell carcinoma presented late in the course of their illness and had a poor prognosis. Others, with pericholangitis, had clinical features of portal hypertension indistinguishable from that complicated cirrhosis. There was an unexpected number with
chronic active hepatitis
and a liver biopsy is essential for such a diagnosis. Hepatic sinusoidal lymphocytosis is almost invariably found in patients with TS but may occasionally be found in those with a non-palpable spleen. Patients with right heart failure of chronic respiratory disease, and jaundice of acute pneumonia were excluded from the study.
...
PMID:Liver disease in Papua New Guinea. 19 19
The chief causes of liver disease in Ethiopia are reviewed, considering hospital data on admissions for
hepatitis
, cirrhosis, ascites and hepatoma. Liver diseases account for 11.4% of all medical admissions in 3 medical wards in Addis Ababa. The causes are viral hepatitis, post- hepatic and post necrotic and mixed cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Alcoholic cirrhosis is rare. Viral hepatitis with shivering, rigor and fever and elevated direct bilirubin levels are common in Ethiopians, especially in child-bearing women. The hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) is often associated with
hepatitis
. The disease may be transmitted by several species of mosquitoes, placental transmission, or feces, urine, saliva or semen. Blood products are not screened for hepatitis B. Cirrhosis is common, and causes significant mortality, usually from esophageal varices and hepatic coma.
Chronic active hepatitis
patients may live for a time, especially if they are near a hospital and are treated with steroids. In Ethiopia presenting symptoms for hepatoma are anorexia, weight loss, persistent, burning, right upper quadrant pain, and a hard, nodular, tender RUQ mass. Over 5% of malignancies seen are primary hepatocellular carcinomas. 50% have HBsAG, compared to 3.8% of controls. 65% have alpha-fetoglobulins. It is suggested that some viral hepatitis cases progress to cirrhosis, of which some go on to hepatocellular carcinoma. Herbal medicines, aflatoxins and other toxins may also contribute to liver disease.
...
PMID:Current views on liver diseases in Ethiopia. 20 62
Serum mitochondrial glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase activity was determined in 83 patients with various liver diseases and 10 healthy adults. 1) The average of mitochondrial glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase value was 1.2 mU in healthy adults, 8.3 mU in patients with acute hepatitis, 13.7 mU in patients with post-transfusion
hepatitis
, 5.0 mU in patients with persistent
hepatitis
, 4.5 mU in patients with chronic inactive
hepatitis
, 9.6 mU in patients with
chronic active hepatitis
, 5.6 mU in liver cirrhosis, and 295 mU in a patient with fulminant
hepatitis
. 2) While one patient with acute hepatitis showed the highest value in the group of 29 mU, one patient with fulminant
hepatitis
showed an extremely high value of 295 mU, revealing an obvious difference between them. 3) One patient with fresh myocardial infarction also showed an extremely high value of 110 mU.
...
PMID:Clinical significance of mitochondrial glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase in serum of patients with liver disease. 21 85
The serologic and tissue markers of hepatitis B virus (HBV) were studied in 50 patients in whom hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) was confirmed at autopsy. Serologic and tissue markers included serum hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), tissue HBsAg, tissue
hepatitis
core antigen (HBcAg), and serum antibody to HBcAg (anti-HBc). Twenty-two patients had HCC arising in alcoholic cirrhosis; 2 of the 22 (9.1%) had one or more of the HBV tissue and serologic markers. This infection rate is similar to the rate of 7.9% observed in 63 control alcoholic cirrhotic patients without HCC. In contrast, 15 of 20 (75.0%) patients with HCC in nonalcoholic chronic active liver disease showed evidence of active HBV infection. One of 8 patients with HCC in normal liver had serum HBV markers. This result indicates that there is an extremely high prevalence of HBV infection among HCC patients with nonalcoholic chronic liver disease in the U.S.A. The prevalence of HBV infection in these patients is as high as that observed in Asia and Africa. Thus, it can be concluded that the lower prevalence rate of active HBV infection in HCC patients in the U.S.A. is the result of statistical dilution of HCC-B-viral disease by the large numbers of the alcoholic cirrhotic patients with HCC, and that if
chronic active hepatitis
type B were as common in the United States as it is in Africa and Asia, the frequency of occurrence of HCC might also be as high.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma in the U.S.A., etiologic considerations. Localization of hepatitis B antigens. 21 88
Recent evidence indicates that viral hepatitis is sometimes associated with the production of extrahepatic tissue injury. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is most commonly incriminated but non-type B
hepatitis
may also be involved. Three types of syndromes have been recognized. First, a serum sickness-like prodrome consisting of skin eruptions, urticaria and polyarthralgias or arthritis may occur from one to six weeks prior to the onset of
hepatitis
in 15 to 20 per cent of patients and usually disappears by the time the patient becomes jaundiced. There is extensive evidence that circulating immune complexes are responsible for these symptoms. Second, about 30 to 40 per cent of patients with typical polyarteritis nodosa have persistent hepatitis B surface antigenemia (HBs Ag). Circulating immune complexes composed of HBs Ag, antibody, and complement have been demonstrated together with deposits of immune complexes at sites of vascular injury. Third, an immune complex type of glomerulonephritis may occur following hepatitis B virus infection, usually in association with
chronic active hepatitis
. Thus there is impressive evidence that
hepatitis
viruses, especially HBV, may produce a variety of extrahepatic manifestations in which the mechanism of pathogenesis involves an immunologic process rather than direct viral invasion and cytopathogenicity.
...
PMID:Extrahepatic manifestations of viral hepatitis. 24 19
Liver enzymes were followed in 99 patients treated with D-penicillamine for rheumatoid arthritis. In six abnormalities were found which consisted of elevated levels of lactic dehydrogenase. ALAT/ASAT, alkaline phosphatases or combinations of these. The changes were reversible on stopping the drug with one possible exception. No evidence of biliary cirrhosis,
chronic active hepatitis
or HBag-associated
hepatitis
was found. Liver biopsy was performed in 4 cases--one was taken 2 months after the treatment was discontinued, and was normal. One biopsy showed mild inflammatory changes, whereas in two histologic evidence of toxic liver necrosis was present. Liver damage should be included among possible complications of D-PA treatment.
...
PMID:Liver abnormalities in penicillamine treated rheumatoid arthritis. 28 88
Total lymphocyte counts, B-, T-, C'3 receptor-bearing lymphocytes, and K-cell activity were studied in peripheral blood in patients with Crohn's disease and inflammatory liver disease. Patients with active untreated Crohn's disease and acute virus B
hepatitis
exhibited a markedly increased K-cell activity measured in a plaque assay when compared with normal controls (P less than 0.01). Patients with immunosuppressive treated Crohn's disease, HBsAg-positive
chronic active hepatitis
, and cirrhosis of the liver showed only a slight increase of K-cell activity (P less than 0.01). In the postacute phase of
hepatitis
(four to 12 weeks from onset) K-cell activity fell to normal levels. The number of B-lymphocytes showed a relative and absolute decrease in all groups of patients. With the exception of patients with acute HBsAg-positive
hepatitis
and the post-acute phase of
hepatitis
all the other groups showed statistically decreased absolute numbers for C'3 receptor-bearing lymphocytes. The significant decrease in K-cell activity and the number of T-lymphocytes in Crohn's disease treated with immunosuppressive drugs was interpreted as an effect of azathioprine and prednisone on these lymphocyte subpopulations.
...
PMID:K-lymphocytes (killer-cells) in Crohn's disease and acute virus B-hepatitis. 30 25
In patients who have impaired hepatic reserve, the Warren shunt has been proposed as an effective operation because it decompresses the esophageal varices without disturbing portal perfusion of the liver. However, early reports of high operative mortality and technical difficulties have impeded acceptance of the procedure. The operation was done in a series of 17 patients. All patients in whom elective variceal decompression with a patent splenic vein was required and without clinical ascites were candidates for this operation. Follow-up ranged from 2 to 48 months. Six patients had alcoholic cirrhosis, two had primary biliary cirrhosis and seven had postnecrotic cirrhosis; in two the cause of the liver disease was unknown. Five patients were categorized as Child's class A, nine as class B and three as class C. No intraoperative or early postoperative deaths owing to hemorrhage occurred. However, there was one death two weeks postoperatively from pulmonary sepsis and one death five weeks postoperatively due to antigen-positive
hepatitis
. Two patients died from hepatic failure six weeks and five months after operation, respectively; in the first of these,
chronic active hepatitis
was diagnosed at the time of operation. In one patient hemorrhage recurred and transfusion was required. Although ascites, which eventually resolved, developed in eight patients after operation, the results in 76 percent of patients have been good without new episodes of hemorrhage or encephalopathy. We conclude that the Warren shunt is a safe and effective elective operation for the treatment of patients in whom hemorrhage from esophageal varices has occurred.
...
PMID:The Warren shunt in treating bleeding esophageal varices. 31 64
The characterisation of lymphocytes from liver biopsies indicates that 'activated' T lymphocytes are present in the liver in alcohol induced
hepatitis
,
chronic active hepatitis
(HBS+ve and -ve), and in primary biliary cirrhosis but not in inactive cirrhosis, chronic persistent hepatitis, extrahepatic and drug induced cholestasis. A greater percentage of lymphocytes bear Fc-receptors in
chronic active hepatitis
than in alcohol induced
hepatitis
or cholestatic liver disease. The concentration of 'activated' T cells in the peripheral blood in all groups studied was within the normal range, suggesting that the 'activated' T cells found in the liver were reacting to either native or foreign antigens within the liver. The data on Fc-receptor bearing cells are consistent with the involvement of antibody assisted K cell mediated cytotoxicity in
chronic active hepatitis
.
...
PMID:Lymphocyte populations in liver biopsy specimens from patients with chronic liver disease. 32 39
Circulating immune complexes were measured by a radioimmunoassay specific for HB complexes in different clinical situations related to hepatitis B virus infection. The leukocyte migration inhibition test (LMIT) was performed simultaneously. Comparison with the clinical situation suggests that immune complexes are not responsible for the lesions, but that these lesions might be produced by the immunity demonstrated by the LMIT. A deficiency of this immunity is responsible for the persistence of infection. However, in
chronic active hepatitis
, LMIT is as deficient as in carriers and in this form of
hepatitis
the frequency and quantity of complexes are the highest: it is thus possible that in this case the lesions are nevertheless produced by the complexes.
...
PMID:[Comparison between the presence of specific circulating immune complexes and the leukocyte migration inhibition test in different clinical forms of hepatitis B]. 33 69
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