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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Using a sensitive infant mouse bioassay to detect infectious virus, the pattern of mouse hepatitis virus (MHV) JHM dissemination in blood and other tissues was examined during the first 5 days following intranasal inoculation. MHV replicated in nasal turbinates of both susceptible BALB and resistant SJL mice from days 1 through 5, but BALB mice had higher titers on days 1 and 2. Viremia was detectable on days 1 through 5 in BALB mice, but only on days 3 and 5 in SJL mice. Transient virus replication occurred in the lungs of both mouse genotypes at 1 and 2 days, then ceased. This correlated with more consistently demonstrable virus in blood collected from the left atrium of the heart, compared to jugular vein, portal vein and right atrial blood. Virus was associated equally with the plasma and cellular fractions of blood on day 3, but was primarily in the buffy coat of the cellular fraction on day 5. Interferon-alpha/beta was detected in serum and spleen, but not liver or brain of BALB mice or in any tissue of SJL mice. BALB serum and spleen interferon was first detected at 36 h, peaked between 48 and 72 h, and was undetectable by 108 h. The distribution of virus in nose, cervical, axillary and mesenteric lymph nodes, spleen, Peyer's patch, thymus, bone marrow and liver was examined at 1, 2, and 3 days. The resulting pattern suggested lymphatic spread of virus to cervical lymph node and mesenteric lymph node as pathways of dissemination in addition to viremia.
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PMID:Viremic dissemination of mouse hepatitis virus-JHM following intranasal inoculation of mice. 130 44

Interferon therapy is useful for decreasing the serum ALT level and improving liver histology in patients with chronic non-A, non-B hepatitis. This study examined the effect of interferon therapy in acute cases of posttransfusion hepatitis C. We report on three cases in which interferon alpha was administered at 100-220.5 million units. HCV RNA became undetectable during interferon administration and the ALT level declined to the normal range. However, after the cessation of the therapy, the ALT level began to fluctuate and HCV RNA reappeared in two patients. We concluded that interferon therapy for the acute phase of posttransfusion hepatitis is useful for suppressing viral replication and quickly improving the ALT level, but it can not always prevent the development of chronic hepatitis. Furthermore, there was a close correlation between the profile of HCV RNA and that of the ALT level, indicating that the replication of HCV plays an important role in liver injury.
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PMID:Three cases of posttransfusion hepatitis C treated with interferon-alpha. Confirmation of a carrier state by detection of hepatitis C virus RNA after interferon therapy. 131 23

We reanalyzed the results of a pilot study of recombinant alpha-interferon therapy for chronic non-A, non-B hepatitis in light of the recent discovery of the hepatitis C virus and the development of diagnostic assays for this agent. Stored serum samples from 10 patients treated between 1984 and 1986 were tested for antibody to hepatitis C virus and hepatitis C virus RNA before, during and after therapy. In addition, the current clinical, serum biochemical and virological statuses of these patients were evaluated to determine the long-term effects of interferon therapy. All patients had evidence of hepatitis C virus infection, with hepatitis C viral RNA, antibody to hepatitis C virus or both markers detectable in serum. Serum hepatitis C virus RNA was found to disappear in seven of eight patients whose aminotransferase levels became normal with interferon therapy but remained present in two patients who did not respond to therapy. Levels of hepatitis C virus RNA decreased and disappeared when serum aminotransferases fell to normal levels but rose with subsequent elevation of aminotransferase levels in two patients who had relapses in disease when interferon was stopped. During a follow-up of 3 to 6 yr, hepatitis C virus RNA remained undetectable in the six patients whose serum aminotransferase levels remained normal after interferon therapy. However, neither initial titers of hepatitis C virus RNA nor disappearance of viral RNA from serum during treatment predicted a sustained response. Thus long-term beneficial responses to alpha-interferon can occur in patients with chronic hepatitis C and are associated with sustained loss of hepatitis C virus RNA from serum.
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PMID:Long-term follow-up of patients with chronic hepatitis C treated with alpha-interferon. 131 38

Twelve children with chronic non-A, non-B hepatitis were entered in a pilot trial of recombinant interferon-alpha. Although all the children had hepatitis C virus RNA in serum, only five had antibodies against this virus. Children received 3 MU/m2 body surface area interferon-alpha 3 times/wk for 6 mo; they were followed for 24 mo, including the therapy period. One child was dropped from the study, so the results are from the 11 children who completed the study. At the end of the therapy period, 36% of the children had normal ALT levels; this percentage increased to 90% at mo 15 of follow-up. Thereafter, relapse occurred in five children; thus ALT normalization was observed in 5 of 11 children at the 24th month. Moreover, two different ALT patterns were found: HCV antibody-negative children had significant peaks of ALT levels with respect to the basal samples (p less than 0.05) until the third month of the therapy; these levels later decreased. In contrast, HCV antibody-positive children had slight fluctuations of ALT until normal levels were reached. At the end of treatment, three children had HCV RNA; one demonstrated a rebound in ALT levels. Finally, histological activity had decreased significantly in the second liver biopsy specimen in all children. In summary, interferon treatment in children with chronic hepatitis C may be helpful, although these results should be confirmed in controlled trials.
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PMID:Treatment of children with chronic hepatitis C with recombinant interferon-alpha: a pilot study. 132 9

Since the amount of hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA might be correlated with the degree of severity of hepatitis and response to treatment, quantitation of HCV RNA in serum was established using competitive polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Known amounts of a plasmid containing HCV-cDNA were co-amplified with a standard dilution series of a competitive template which shared the primers' sequences but differed from the wild type cDNA in having a deletion. Accurate quantitation was obtained by comparing the amount of both products. Quantitation of serum HCV RNA was carried out in two patients' serum samples which were also used to infect chimpanzees. The concentration of HCV RNA in these two sera was calculated to be 1 pg/ml (non-infectious at 10(-3) dilution) and 1-10 pg/ml (infectious at 10(-5) dilution). The procedure was subsequently used to analyze serial changes in serum HCV RNA in three patients who were treated with alpha-interferon. During treatment, the levels of alanine aminotransferase showed a significant decrease in all patients and the amount of HCV RNA fell from 1 fg/ml, 1 pg/ml, and greater than 10 pg/ml to 0.1 fg/ml, 100 fg/ml, and 1 pg/ml, respectively. The decrease in the amount of HCV RNA after treatment was related to the initial amount of serum HCV RNA. These results suggest that quantitation of HCV RNA may be useful not only for understanding the course of HCV infection but also for evaluating treatment for HCV infection.
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PMID:Quantitation of hepatitis C virus RNA by competitive polymerase chain reaction. 132 2

Since 1989, a prospective, multicentric and collaborative study, named European Acute Transfusion Hepatitis Interferon Study (EATHIS), involving 16 blood centres in France is coordinated by a task force in collaboration with the Viral Hepatitis and Recipients working groups of the French National Society of Blood Transfusion. A phase of recipient screening may be completed by a therapeutic interferon protocol. Among 1,476 transfused recipients receiving an average of 4.4 blood components, 1,011 were followed up at least four months. The incidence of non-A, non-B post-transfusion hepatitis (PTH) was varying from 0.1 to 6% at the different locations. Out of 15 hepatitis cases, 10 were diagnosed as post-transfusional. These preliminary data indicate a reduced incidence of PTH, with a mean of 1% for the period 1989-1991. It emphasises the importance of a transfusion vigilance program including follow up and testing for transaminases and specific viral markers.
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PMID:[European Acute Transfusion Hepatitis Interferon Study (EATHIS)]. 132 92

The identification of hepatitis C virus, based on DNA amplification, gives a precise estimation of the prevalence of the most frequent agent of NANB hepatitis. The first ELISA allowing the detection of anti-HCV antibodies, had too many false positive results and required the development of more sensitive and specific assays to confirm its results. PCR, allowing the hepatitis C virus diagnosis by showing directly HCV RNA sequences, offers a complementary approach to immunoserological tests. In blood donors with anti-HCV antibodies and with indeterminate or negative confirmatory tests, the finding of HCV RNA sequences reveals serum infectivity. During acute hepatitis, the delay in the appearance of anti HCV hampers acute phase diagnosis. The early detection of HCV RNA in peripheral blood, confirms the diagnosis and opens up therapeutic possibilities. In chronic hepatitis, the diagnosis of seronegative forms may only be resolved by PCR. Moreover, the presence of HCV RNA in peripheral blood represents the only marker of on-going viral replication and coincides with the severity of liver damage. During treatment with interferon, the follow up of HCV RNA sequences makes it possible to monitor its efficacy. The search for HCV RNA sequences directly in liver tissue shows that HCV may replicate in the liver in the absence of viremia. The presence of HCV RNA in the liver and the serum of liver transplanted patients is essential for the etiological diagnosis and management of hepatitis and bone marrow failure occurring after transplantation. Epidemiological study using PCR is a major tool in documenting vertical transmission between mother and child. Finally, PCR is important for the analysis of the HCV genome. Thus, in France there are at least three main strains, one close to the US prototype, the other close to the Japanese strain, possibly responsible for a more severe illness and a third one distinct from the previous two. However, its limits and constraints imply that PCR must not be considered as a routine assay. This emphasizes the need for more simple and rapid diagnostic tests, allowing the detection of HCV antigens and, as in hepatitis B, the progressive unravelling of the life cycle of HCV.
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PMID:[Importance of PCR in the diagnosis of hepatitis C]. 132 94

We treated four cases of acute unresolving non-A, non-B hepatitis, and eleven cases of chronic non-A, non-B hepatitis with recombinant interferon alpha-2a for up to one year. The dose of interferon was initially 3 million units daily, and was gradually decreased to 1 million units three times weekly. The overall response rate was 80 percent (twelve out of fifteen cases) at the end of treatment. Relapse occurred after the cessation of treatment in seven of the eight cases of chronic disease responding to interferon therapy. In contrast, three of the four cases of acute unresolving hepatitis became (sero)negative for antibody to hepatitis C virus, and in three completely normal serum aminotransferase levels persisted for more than one year after therapy. It is urged that early recognition of non-A, non-B hepatitis should be striven for, because interferon therapy may lead to an improved prognosis of the disease, particularly in cases of possible transitional phase from acute to chronic disease.
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PMID:Interferon therapy for non-A, non-B hepatitis: a pilot study and review of the literature. 133 37

To evaluate the effect of interferon-alpha treatment on the levels of serum aminotransferase (sALT) and of hepatitis C virus (HCV)-RNA, we studied 19 patients with chronic non-A, non-B (NANB) hepatitis. Before therapy, 14 patients were positive by nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with primers deduced from the 5'-non-coding region of the HCV genome. Serum HCV-RNA had disappeared in 12 (85.7%) of them by the end of therapy, but then reappeared 6 months later in 4 of these 12 patients. A marked improvement in sALT was seen in 5 of the 8 patients with sustained HCV-RNA disappearance, but not in the 4 patients with only transient HCV-RNA negativity. Pre-treatment levels of hepatitis C viremia, analyzed by single PCR and dot blot hybridization, ranged from 2 x 10(3) to 2 x 10(8) copies/ml, and were below 2 x 10(5) copies/ml in patients with a complete response to interferon therapy. These results suggest that this HCV-RNA assay, combined with sALT testing, may be useful for estimation of the long-term efficacy of interferon therapy in hepatitis C.
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PMID:Detection of hepatitis C virus RNA by nested polymerase chain reaction in sera of patients with chronic non-A, non-B hepatitis treated with interferon. 133 4

Seroconversion from eAg to anti-e is frequently seen in the course of chronic hepatitis B infection. This phenomenon is closely related to mutation of the precore region; a G-to-A substitution of nucleotide position 1986 replaces tryptophan to translational stop codon. This mutant is responsible for the fulminant hepatitis or acute exacerbation of chronic hepatitis B. The hepatitis C virus shows a high rate of genome variations, especially at the envelope (E and NS1) region, where a neutralizing epitope is believed to exist. According to the sequence identity, the hepatitis C virus is divided into four subtypes. The virus appears to evolve separately in geographically different areas and the subtyping may have some clinical implications, such as in interferon treatment. Hepatitis E virus has three open reading frames and share the high nucleotide identity among strains isolated from Myanmar and China. Hepatitis E is endemic in the developing world and is not present in industrialized countries.
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PMID:[Current status in hepatitis virus research]. 133 64


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