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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Carbenicillin disodium was temporally associated with eight episodes of a mild reversible anicteric
hepatitis
characterized by nausea, vomiting, and a tender, somewhat
enlarged liver
. Serum glutamic and oxaloacetic transaminase as well as alkaline phosphatase levels rose, but serum bilirubin values remained normal. There usually were no signs of concomitant allergy to penicillin, and other penicillins could be given subsequently without ill effects. Biopsy specimens of the liver showed spotty liver cell necrosis with no cholestasis.
...
PMID:Anicteric carbenicillin hepatitis. Eight episodes in four patients. 117 85
In a study of fifty patients subjected to cardiac surgery nine (18%) had immediate post-operative liver complications. These included persistente jaundice, an increase in
hepatomegaly
and elevation of the alkaline phosphatase. In these and the rest of the cases there were extra-hepatic complications such as hyposystole, infarct, the post-pericardiotomy syndrome as related to the heart. Pulmonary complications were of infectious nature and a general complication was sepsis. These complications were sufficiently important to relate them etiologically to the hepatic disorder. Especially important is right hyposystole and it or tricuspid insufficiency can be blamed for the hepatic disorder in some of these patient. Nonetheless, these hepatic complications are seen less frequently now that we are giving effective treatment to the tricuspid insufficiency during the surgical intervention. We observed the clinical picture known as "benign postoperative cholestasis" in only two patients.
Hepatitis
with jaundice was seen in four patients during one to three months postoperatively. This was HB
hepatitis
and its course was more prolonged than that usually seen in Mexico, and it turned into chronic hepatitis in four patients. Biopsies done in one case a six months and in the other at nine months post-operatively showed the picture of chronic aggresive
hepatitis
. In those patients who did not have hepatic complications a late liver evaluation showed an improvement as compared to the pre-operative condition which was parallel to the hemodynamic improvement.
...
PMID:[Hepatic complications in the postoperative of cardiac surgery]. 123 73
Investigations included 52 drug-addicts with asymptomatic HIV virus infection. 8 of them suffered some years ago, from virus
hepatitis
of type B. Physical examinations did not reveal in examined persons any deviations from normal condition except for
hepatomegaly
. Results of liver biochemical investigations remained within normal limits. In each of them one confirmed presence of serological markers of HBV infection and in 35 of them of HCV and in 5 of them in parallel HDV. In all the examined persons one carried out liver biopsy and routine morphological examinations. In every case one disclosed a liver injury of drug-induced type. Further, in 31 examined persons one detected a coexistence of chronic, active inflammatory process of liver
hepatitis
minimal--17
hepatitis
chronica persistent--12
hepatitis
chronica aggressivE--1 cirrhosis hepatis--1 and in four of them changes of the type fibrosis periportal. In HIV infected drug-addicts it comes about to clinically asymptomatic, chronic hepatitis coexisting with morphological changes of drug-induced type liver.
...
PMID:[Results of liver examination in drug addicts infected with HIV virus]. 129 40
Four infants with Lues connata, three with the early stage of the disease (patients 1-3), are reported. Diagnosis was made after exclusion of other diseases. Initially an infectious disease was expected, since anemia, leucocytosis, thrombocytopenia,
hepatomegaly
and/or splenomegaly and a bad condition were found. In two patients bone structure was abnormal. Elevated serum concentrations of liver enzymes (ALAT, ASAT) were the indication for liver biopsy in one patient, in whom an accompanying
hepatitis
was diagnosed. Treatment was performed with penicillin, no JARISCH-HERXHEIMER reaction was observed. The Lues tests were negative during pregnancy but a displacental transfer of pathogenic agents could be assumed. Patient 4 was diagnosed at 9 months of age. Infection of the mother probably occurred in the last 6 weeks of pregnancy. It can not be decided if the baby has a connatal or acquired Lues. The titer decrease of the CMT-test after the end of the penicillin therapy is a marker for a successful treatment. If treatment was started at 2 years of age a total clinical recovery can be expected. The case reports demonstrate that negative Lues test during pregnancy do not exclude Lues connata in newborns. The Lues diagnosis should be considered if an infectious disease in a newborn can not be diagnosed. A general Lues serodiagnostic test is recommended in all newborns before they leave the obstetrics department.
...
PMID:[Congenital syphilis]. 130 79
Fifty infants with obstructive jaundice were reviewed. Other than jaundice,
hepatomegaly
and splenomegaly were the other common presentations. The mean age of referral was 9.4 weeks. This was unsatisfactory as the prognosis depends on the age of corrective surgery. Majority of the non surgical cholestasis were due to idiopathic
hepatitis
. These patients did well as all of them were asymptomic and had no evidence of liver disease at 2 years of age.
...
PMID:A clinical study of obstructive jaundice among Singapore infants. 130 62
Hepatitis A is an acute, necroinflammatory disease of the liver which results from infection by the hepatitis A virus (HAV). The mean incubation period is approximately 30 days. Although the disease is usually self-limited, the severity of illness is age-dependent. In children, hepatitis A is usually asymptomatic, while in adults, symptomatic infection is characteristic and jaundice is common. Fulminant hepatitis A is rare and is also age-dependent. The onset of hepatitis A is often abrupt and characteristic prodromal symptoms are followed, within a few days to a week, by dark urine and jaundice. Mild to moderate tenderness over an
enlarged liver
is usually detected. Serum alanine and aspartate aminotransferase levels usually both rise rapidly during the prodromal period, reach peak levels and then decrease by approximately 75% per week. Serum bilirubin concentrations reach peak levels later and decline less rapidly than serum aminotransferases. Nonetheless, the period of jaundice persists for < 2 weeks in approximately 85% of cases. Nearly all adult patients with clinically apparent disease experience complete clinical recovery with restoration of normal serum bilirubin and aminotransferase values by 6 months. Relapses and prolonged cholestasis are unusual manifestations of hepatitis A, and even in these circumstances, recovery is the rule and chronic hepatitis is not seen. The diagnosis of hepatitis A requires the detection of immunoglobulin M antibody to HAV in a patient who presents with, or has recently had, clinical features of
hepatitis
(icteric or anicteric disease) or in an individual with inapparent, asymptomatic infection in whom serum aminotransferase elevations may be detected.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Clinical manifestations and diagnosis of hepatitis A virus infection. 133 49
Authors have performed an anatomo-clinico-biological comparison of two groups of
hepatitis
with lobular inflammation: group I with a simple lobular inflammation, called lobular
hepatitis
, and group II with a lobular inflammation associated with portal and periportal
hepatitis
, called chronic active hepatitis (CHA) with lobular
hepatitis
. Furthermore, a comparative study of these forms with a group of CHA without lobular inflammation was performed. Both forms of lobular inflammation appeared in young patients, the large majority of whom were infected with the hepatitis B virus; in 5 cases of CHA with lobular
hepatitis
the presence of the delta agent in the liver, possibly responsible of the lobular inflammation, was detected. The two forms of lobular
hepatitis
are differentiated by: the fivefold increase of ALAT over the normal value, with usually normal gamma-globulins and albumin, in the first group; in the lobular
hepatitis
, HBsAg was present in 33% of cases in the first group and in none of the patients of the second group, suggesting the integration of HBsAg within the hepatocytic genome; the clinical picture was generally asymptomatic in the first group and noisier, with
hepatomegaly
, in the second group; the period elapsed since the acute hepatitis was shorter in the first group (4-11 months) in 8 of 15 patients and longer in the second group. The clinical course of these forms of
hepatitis
if unforeseeable and the diagnosis is established on the basis of the morphological examination.
...
PMID:[The significance of lobular inflammation in chronic active hepatitis]. 134 56
The signs that may arise after perinatal infection with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) have been classified by the Centers for Disease Control, but the clinical usefulness of the classification system and the prognostic importance of each disease pattern have not been established. We sought to address these issues by analysing data from the Italian Register for HIV infection in children. We studied 1887 children born to HIV-1-seropositive mothers. 1045 were identified at birth and the others were registered later (median age 4.8 [range 0.4-72] months). HIV-1-associated signs developed in 433 (81.8%) of 529 seropositive infected children at a median age of 5 (0.03-84) months. These signs appeared significantly earlier in the 102 children who died of HIV-1-related illness than in those who are still alive (median 3 [0.03-55] vs 6 [0.03-84] months; p less than 0.001). The cumulative proportion surviving at age 9 years was 49.5% (95% confidence interval 27-65%) and the median survival time was 96.2 months. Separate analysis of the 112 seropositive infected children followed from birth and older than 15 months gave similar results.
Hepatomegaly
, splenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, parotitis, skin diseases, and recurrent respiratory tract infections formed the mildest disease pattern. Lymphoid interstitial pneumonitis and thrombocytopenia were signs of intermediate disease. By contrast, in multivariate analysis specific secondary infectious diseases, severe bacterial infections, progressive neurological disease, anaemia, and fever were significant and independent negative predictors of survival. Growth failure, persistent oral candidosis,
hepatitis
, and cardiopathy were associated in univariate analysis with significantly shorter survival. Our findings suggest that the outlook for children with perinatal HIV-1 infection is better than previously thought and that a new clinical staging system of single disease patterns is needed.
...
PMID:Prognostic factors and survival in children with perinatal HIV-1 infection. The Italian Register for HIV Infections in Children. 134 67
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
A fatal case of acute fulminant
hepatitis
following exposure to dichloropropanols is reported. A 59-year-old male worker in a chemical plant developed general malaise, nausea and vomiting several hours after cleaning a tank that had contained dichloropropanols. He had no previous history of hepatic dysfunction. On admission,
hepatomegaly
was prominent. Because of highly elevated levels of GOT and GPT in the serum, reduced prothrombin time and a lowered consciousness level, a diagnosis of fulminant
hepatitis
was made. Significant decreases of leukocytes and platelets were also observed. Serum creatinine and BUN were slightly elevated. Although plasma exchanges were conducted on the third and fourth day, the liver functions continued to deteriorate. The patient died on the fifth day. Because dichloropropanols could be detected in the blood specimens obtained at the time of admission, we considered that fulminant
hepatitis
in this case was attributed to dichloropropanols exposure. To our knowledge, this is the first case of fulminant
hepatitis
after dichloropropanols-exposure.
...
PMID:[Fulminant hepatitis after the inhalation of dichloropropanols]. 150 13
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