Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of phenytoin-induced hepatitis with mononucleosis is reported, and syndromes associated with phenytoin hypersensitivity reactions are discussed. A 23-year-old black woman with a two-month history of seizure disorder was admitted to a hospital with nausea, vomiting, fever, lymphadenopathy, diffuse maculopapular rash, left-upper-quadrant tenderness, and hepatomegaly. She was receiving phenytoin sodium 300 mg/day; carbamazepine 200 mg four times daily had been discontinued four days before admission because of leukopenia. Phenytoin was discontinued after admission; however, phenytoin 1 g i.v. was given for a tonic-clonic seizure two days after admission, after which swelling of the face and legs and pruritus developed. Over the next few days, signs and symptoms of hepatotoxicity progressed, and she became comatose. Seizures were treated with diazepam. She began to recover after 10 days of supportive therapy and was discharged several weeks later on primidone therapy. Serious phenytoin hypersensitivity reactions may appear as dermatologic, lymphoid, or hepatic syndromes. Fever, rash, and lymphadenopathy often accompany hepatic injury. Encephalopathy and death may occur. Proposed mechanisms for phenytoin hypersensitivity include antigen-antibody reactions, alteration of lymphocyte function, and an enzyme abnormality causing the production of toxic metabolites. Treatment is supportive; phenobarbital and carbamazepine may be used with caution as alternate anticonvulsant therapy. The possibility of phenytoin hypersensitivity reactions should be considered when patients receiving phenytoin have unusual symptoms, particularly fever, rash, and lymphadenopathy.
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PMID:Phenytoin-induced hypersensitivity reactions. 367 71

Primary varicella-zoster virus infection (chickenpox) in immunocompromised children is frequently associated with visceral dissemination and attendant high mortality. Eight children with malignant neoplasms and chickenpox with visceral involvement (seven with hepatitis, three with pneumonitis, two with encephalitis, and two with coagulopathy) were initially treated with intravenously (IV) administered vidarabine but demonstrated progressive visceral involvement. After three days of vidarabine treatment (two days for two patients), seven had rising serum SGPT levels, all eight had pneumonitis, seven had deteriorating mental status and/or seizure activity, and six had worsening coagulopathy. Vidarabine was replaced by IV administered acyclovir, with subsequent improvement in all but the most severely ill patient who died. Seven of eight patients recovered completely; no side effects of acyclovir were observed. This clinical experience suggests that acyclovir may be more effective than vidarabine in disseminated varicella infection; however, controlled clinical trials will be necessary to establish this.
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PMID:Acyclovir treatment of disseminated varicella in childhood malignant neoplasms. 385 82

From 1974 through 1982, fulminant hepatitis was diagnosed in 34 patients at our institution. Of these patients, only two survived (survival rate, 6%). This syndrome was caused by viruses (B and non-B hepatitis and herpes simplex) in 23 patients, hepatotoxic drug in 6, Wilson's disease (hepatolenticular degeneration) in 3, and industrial poisons in 2. Most of the patients died within 10 days after the onset of encephalopathy. The poor prognosis in our group of patients was probably related to the preponderance of older patients and cases caused by non-B hepatitis virus. In our patients, the clinical course was complicated by renal failure, ascites, bleeding, sepsis, pancreatitis, and seizures. The major cause of death was hepatic failure.
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PMID:Fulminant hepatitis: Mayo Clinic experience with 34 cases. 392 80

Despite the frequency with which theophylline is administered to premature infants, there are few reported cases of neurotoxicity. We describe a theophylline-treated premature infant with chronic bronchopulmonary dysplasia and hepatitis who displayed a focal seizure and irritability followed by other systemic signs of theophylline intoxication, at a postnatal age of 5 months. An unrecognized accidental drug overdose combined with a prolonged elimination half-life were responsible for clinical intoxication. The potential mechanisms of theophylline's neurotoxicity are discussed briefly.
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PMID:Neonatal theophylline neurotoxicity. 397 45

In an uncontrolled trial, 29 patients with chronic hepatitis B virus infection were treated with 93 courses of adenine arabinoside at doses ranging from 2.5 to 15 mg/kg per day. Most patients were treated concomitantly with human leukocyte interferon. Significant, but transient, neurotoxicity was seen with adenine arabinoside therapy in 44% of all courses. Manifestations of toxicity were mainly neurological and ranged from pain syndromes to tremors and, rarely, seizures. Suppression of numbers of lymphocytes was also noted. All effects were reversible with time. The extent of toxicity was dependent upon the dosage of adenine arabinoside. Treatment with interferon appeared to potentiate the occurrence of toxicity with adenine arabinoside. Arabinofuranosylhypoxanthine serum levels increased in a dose-dependent manner and tended to accumulate in interferon-treated hepatitis patients during a course of therapy. Elevated blood levels and drug accumulation were associated with toxicity in a significant fashion. Human leukocyte interferon was administered to 38 patients in 113 separate courses. Interferon side effects were rapidly reversible upon cessation of therapy. These included initial fever, myalgias, and hair loss as well as suppression of granulocytes, platelets, and lymphocytes in the blood.
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PMID:Antiviral treatment of chronic hepatitis B virus infection: pharmacokinetics and side effects of interferon and adenine arabinoside alone and in combination. 617 85

A retrospective record study of six cases of meningitis caused by group A beta-hemolytic Streptococcus is presented. Associated findings included otitis media, pharyngitis, and erysipelas. All patients survived their infections despite major complications including seizures, shock, coma, renal failure, and hepatitis. Two patients had neurologic sequelae. Group A Streptococcus causes a severe form of bacterial meningitis in apparently healthy children.
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PMID:Group A streptococcal meningitis. 633 34

Sixty-one newly diagnosed epileptic patients with generalized tonic-clonic, clonic, or tonic seizures were randomly allocated to treatment with valproate (VPA) and phenytoin (PHT). After 6 months, both drugs had been effective in preventing recurrence of seizures. Seventy-three percent of patients receiving VPA and 47% of patients receiving PHT had no recurrences. Side effects of either drug were mild. Laboratory abnormalities were similar for both drugs. Except for one PHT patient with toxic hepatitis, therapy was not discontinued.
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PMID:Comparison of valproic acid and phenytoin in newly diagnosed tonic-clonic seizures. 641 11

Carbamazepine is one of the drugs most widely prescribed for the treatment of trigeminal neuralgia and psychomotor seizures. Coincidentally with its use, hypersensitivity reactions to this agent have ben reported with increasing frequency. This report documents our recent encounter with 2 patients who developed hepatitis within one month of beginning carbamazepine therapy for temporal-lobe epilepsy. The occurrence of fever, skin rash and arthralgias suggest immunologic hypersensitivity as does eosinophilia and raised level of IgE, as seen in our patients. After withdrawal of the drug, symptoms and signs disappeared rapidly. We also describe a patient with psychomotor seizures who had ingested carbamazepine for less than 2 months before presenting with a febrile illness characterized by rash, arthritis, lymphadenopathy, epatosplenomegaly and diffuse pulmonary infiltrates with eosinophilia. The reaction cleared on cessation of the drug. Besides showing antinuclear antibody without DNA-precipitating antibody, this patient had an increased helper-T-cell count as well as a decreased number of T lymphocytes with suppressor activity. Taken together, these observations make it reasonable to speculate that carbamazepine may have interfered with lymphocyte triggering, thereby favouring the emergence of B cells with autoimmune propensities.
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PMID:[Immuno-allergic side effects induced by the administration of carbamazepine. Case contribution]. 646 8

Altogether 98 puncture liver biopsies taken from patients with a syndrome of nonconjugated hyperbilirubinemia are examined in light and electron microscope. It is established that this syndrome frequently develops in inflammatory liver diseases, notably in primary (viral, alcoholic, medicinal) and secondary (nonspecific reactive) hepatitis. Both light and electron-microscopic investigation of liver puncture biopsies allows determining the type of a pathological process in the liver, to specify its etiology and to study the structural basis of bilirubin metabolic disorders in the liver. The mechanism of these metabolic disorders is complex and includes alteration of the bilirubin seizure by a sinusoidal hepatocyte pole, its conjugation and formation of ultimate metabolites.
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PMID:[Clinico-morphological characteristics of liver diseases associated with nonconjugated hyperbilirubinemia syndrome]. 671 10

The mounting problems of drug addiction now also confront the obstetrician and pediatrician. 1/3 of the 60,000 addicts to opiates in the Federal Republic of Germany are women. Of these 80% are in the reproductive age group. Despite endocrine problems pregnancies do occur and are high risk pregnancies because of hepatitis, venereal disease, malnutrition, phlebitis, abscesses, premature deliveries, premature rupture of the membranes, malpresentations, dysmaturity, pre-eclampsia, and numerous other social and psychological problems. Because of the varying content of heroin on the black market the fetus runs the risk of acute overdose or withdrawal. Withdrawal results in extremely marked fetal movements, with increased oxygen consumption and a danger of intra-uterine asphyxia sometimes resulting in intra-uterine fetal death. Most newborns develop a withdrawal syndrome with irritability, high pitched cries, shivering, tachycardia, perspirations, fever and generalized seizures. The experience of the Department for Women for the Free University in Berlin-Charlottenburg are presented and compared to a review of the literature. The medical, social, and psychological aspects of the problem are discussed.
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PMID:[Pregnancy, labour, and puerperium in heroin addicted women, with reference to experience and the present state of knowledge (author's transl)]. 692 Nov 11


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