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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A long-term follow-up of at least 10 years or until death of 44 patients taking part in a controlled prospective trial of prednisolone therapy in hepatitis B antigen negative chronic active hepatitis (lupoid
hepatitis
) has been performed at the Royal Free Hospital, London. Patients presenting between 1963 and 1967 were randomly allocated into control and treatment groups. Ten year life table survival curves showed a significantly improved survival in the treatment group where 63% of patients were alive at 10 years compared with only 27% in the control group (log rank test, P = 0.03). The median survival in the treatment group was 12.2 years compared with 3.3 years in the control group. The mean duration of treatment was 4.5 years. Age, presence of antinuclear factor, cirrhosis, or level of serum transaminases at presentation did not appear to affect survival. Male patients if untreated had a poorer prognosis than females (P = 0.02). The natural history of chronic active hepatitis appeared from clinical, biochemical, and histological findings to be from an active
hepatitis
or cirrhosis to inactive macronodular cirrhosis.
Prednisolone
therapy significantly improved survival by reducing mortality in the early active phase of the disease.
...
PMID:Late results of the Royal Free Hospital prospective controlled trial of prednisolone therapy in hepatitis B surface antigen negative chronic active hepatitis. 698 4
A retrospective study on 247 cases of chronic hepatitis was made. 177 patients with chronic aggressive
hepatitis
(CAH) were treated with prednisolone, azathioprine, the combination of prednisolone and azathioprine, or D-penicillamine.
Prednisolone
and the combined therapy was significantly more effective than azathioprine or D-penicillamine. It seems questionable, however, whether the addition of azathioprine to prednisolone is of real advantage.
...
PMID:Medical treatment of chronic hepatitis. Results of a retrospective study. 722 26
A 69-year-old Japanese female was admitted because of general fatigue. Laboratory data showed elevation of serum total bilirubin, transaminase, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, and creatinine levels. An immunological study revealed hypergammaglobulinemia, low titer of complement, and high titers of antinuclear antibody, anti-DNA antibody, and circulating immune complexes. Antibodies to parainfluenza virus 3 were positive. Histology of the liver disclosed numerous giant cell hepatocyte transformations with the lobular architecture being slightly distorted by portal inflammation and fibrosis. These findings led us to make a diagnosis of giant cell
hepatitis
associated with systemic lupus erythematosus.
Prednisolone
was effective in improving the anemia and the serum immunoglobulin, immune complex, and antinuclear antibody levels. The addition of cyclosporine to the initial corticosteroid therapy was also beneficial in decreasing the transaminase level and in improving liver histology. The patient died of acute pneumonitis and renal failure on the 166th day after admission. Parainfluenza virus 3 and autoimmune mechanisms were thus considered to be the causes of the giant cell
hepatitis
.
...
PMID:Post-infantile giant cell hepatitis in an elderly female patient with systemic lupus erythematosus. 806 7
The effect of corticosteroid pretreatment on interferon alfa treatment of chronic non-A, non-B or C
hepatitis
was evaluated in an open, randomized, controlled study. Normalization of the serum alanine aminotransferase level, which suggested complete response, was recorded in 14 (56%) of 25 patients at the end of a 6-month treatment with 3 million units of interferon alfa three times weekly alone.
Prednisolone
withdrawal followed by the same interferon alfa treatment resulted in complete response in 14 (61%) of another 23 patients. Both of these rates are significantly higher than the spontaneous ALT normalization rate of 9% observed in 2 of 22 patients during the same period (p < 0.01). ALT normalized within 2 months of interferon therapy in most (89%) of the complete responders. Of the patients pretreated with prednisolone, 43% showed a "rebound" following prednisolone withdrawal and 89% of the patients with "rebound" responded to subsequent interferon therapy. The cumulative probability of sustained remission in patients with and without prednisolone pretreatment in a 24-month period of follow-up after the end of therapy was 79% and 30%, respectively (p < 0.05). Clinical relapse mostly (85%) occurred within 3 months after the end of therapy. No obvious factor could be identified as a predictor of response or relapse. The results of this study suggest that prednisolone withdrawal tends to enhance the durability of the beneficial effects of interferon alfa therapy in patients with chronic non-A, non-B or C
hepatitis
.
...
PMID:Effects of prednisolone pretreatment in interferon alfa therapy for patients with chronic non-A, non-B (C) hepatitis. 845 24
To determine whether "autoimmune
hepatitis
type IIb" should be categorized as a subgroup of autoimmune
hepatitis
, we conducted a clinicopathological study of 25 adult Japanese patients who were positive for anti-liver/kidney microsome-1 (anti-LKM-1) anti-body and infected with the hepatitis C virus (HCV). Anti-LKM-1 was determined by indirect immunofluorescence and by the double immunodiffusion assays we have developed. Twenty-two patients did not present any unusual symptoms or any associated diseases during the course of their chronic HCV infection. The spectrum of HCV genotypes of these patients did not significantly differ from that of anti-LKM-1-negative Japanese patients with chronic hepatitis C. Histological examination of liver biopsy specimens showed the usual characteristics of chronic hepatitis C and lack of characteristics of autoimmune
hepatitis
type I. No disease-specific HLA haplotypes were noted, and HLA-DR4, which is detectable in 88.7% of Japanese patients with autoimmune
hepatitis
type I, was detected in only 50.0% of our group, the same rate as the background frequency.
Prednisolone
was effective in none of the six patients treated, but interferon was effective in six of ten treated patients (60%). From these results, we conclude that "autoimmune
hepatitis
type IIb" should not be categorized as autoimmune
hepatitis
, and that this subgroup is essentially chronic hepatitis C in which an autoantibody has been produced during the course of chronic HCV infection.
...
PMID:Chronic hepatitis C associated with anti-liver/kidney microsome-1 antibody is not a subgroup of autoimmune hepatitis. 943 15
Lupus erythematosus panniculitis (profundus), a rare variant of chronic panniculitis, sometimes develops during the course of discoid lupus erythematosus or systemic lupus erythematosus. A 61-year-old woman had suffered from autoimmune
hepatitis
type I for 5 years.
Prednisolone
had been administered as maintenance therapy and her
hepatitis
had been well controlled. However, asymptomatic erythematous indurated nodules developed symmetrically in both pre-auricular regions, and skin biopsy revealed lupus erythematosus panniculitis (profundus). Increase in dosage of prednisolone resolved the skin lesion, leaving depressed atrophic scars. This is the first report of lupus erythematosus panniculitis complicating autoimmune
hepatitis
.
...
PMID:Lupus erythematosus panniculitis in a patient with autoimmune hepatitis. 1120 Aug 38
Serum haptoglobin levels have been measured in 115 cases of widely differing liver disease. Although low levels were found in some cases of cirrhosis and a number of patients with obstructive jaundice had increased levels, 70% of the values fell within the normal range. The estimation was of no help in distinguishing between intra- and extrahepatic obstructive jaundice. A characteristic pattern was observed in infective
hepatitis
, and a falling serum haptoglobin in the presence of increasing jaundice is diagnostic of the latter condition. The cause of these changes is uncertain. Low levels could not be accounted for by increased red cell breakdown and there was no correlation with the serum albumin level.
Prednisolone
therapy produced a rise in serum haptoglobin level in cirrhosis, which was accompanied by an improvement in liver function. Temporary rises in level were observed in intrahepatic obstructive jaundice and were probably due to a non-specific effect of prednisolone. In the latter condition norethandrolone therapy was often associated with high levels.
...
PMID:Serum haptoglobin in liver disease. 1400 14
We report a case of primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC)-autoimmune
hepatitis
(AIH) overlap syndrome with concurrent idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) and Hashimoto's disease with positivity for anticentromere antibody. The patient was a 64-year-old woman with symptoms of jaundice and general fatigue. About 30 years earlier, she had been diagnosed as having ITP and had undergone splenectomy. As part of her present history, she had exhibited liver dysfunction in 1995, during the follow-up of Hashimoto's disease, and a liver biopsy led to the diagnosis of PBC. In March 2000, she was admitted to hospital because of general fatigue and jaundice. Blood tests revealed: total protein (TP), 6.6 g/dl; gamma-globulin (glb), 35.9%; total bilirubin (T-bil), 9.41 mg/dl; direct bilirubin (D-bil), 7.52 mg/dl; aspartate aminotransferase (AST), 957 U/l; alanine aminotransferase (ALT), 651 U/l; alkaline phosphatase (ALP), 595 U/l; gamma-guanosine triphosphate (GTP), 129 U/l; IgG, 2620 mg/dl; IgM, 223 mg/dl; hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), negative; anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV), negative; antinuclear antibody, positive; antimitchondrial antibody (AMA), negative (by the immunofluorescence [IF] method); and anti-pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC)-E2 antibody, positive (by Western blotting). Anticentromere antibody (ACA), which is an alternative diagnostic marker for PBC, was detected in this patient.
Prednisolone
was administered after admission and liver function test results improved markedly. The liver biopsy in 1995 had revealed infiltration of lymphocytes and plasma cells in the portal areas with fibrous expansion and periportal necrosis. Destructive cholangitis was observed, as well as scattered epitheloid cell granulomas in some portal areas. Liver biopsy after the steroid treatment revealed alleviated necrotic inflammatory responses of hepatocytes, while the destructive cholangitis persisted. This is a very rare case of PBC-AIH overlap syndrome accompanied by ITP and Hashimoto's disease which provides a possible insight into the mechanisms and interplay of autoimmune diseases.
...
PMID:PBC-AIH overlap syndrome with concomitant ITP and Hashimoto's disease with positivity for anti-centromere antibody. 1517 50
Rapamycin (Rapa), one of the newer immunosuppressants has been found to control and prevent autoimmune features in animal models. This is the first report describing the successful control of post-transplant autoimmune
hepatitis
(AIH) with Rapa. Post-transplant AIH is diagnosed in the presence of raised transaminases, elevated immunoglobulin G, presence of autoantibodies and histologic changes consistent with AIH on liver biopsy. It may represent a recurrence of the original AIH that led to transplantation or present as a de novo AIH after liver transplant. Post-transplant AIH has conventionally been treated with
Prednisolone
(Pred) and Azathioprine (AZA). In this report, tailoring of immunosuppression after diagnosis of post-transplant AIH is described with special emphasis on those treated successfully with Rapa. Fifteen of 21 patients responded to treatment with an increase in dose of Pred and addition of AZA or Mycophenolate Mofetil (MMF) to calcineurin inhibitor. Five non-responders and one other patient with post-transplant AIH were treated with addition of Rapa. All six responded to treatment but drug was withdrawn in one patient. Adverse events were minimal. Rapa may prove to be an important addition in the control of autoimmune liver disease.
...
PMID:Rapamycin successfully treats post-transplant autoimmune hepatitis. 1581 90
A 37-year old woman presented with a 9-year history of
hepatitis
of unknown origin and aminotransferases within a 3-fold upper limit of normal. Autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) was diagnosed on the basis of elevated aminotransferases, soluble liver antigen/liver pancreas (SLA/LP) autoantibodies and characteristic histology. Immunosuppressive therapy led to rapid normalization of aminotransferases. Two years later, the patient developed left sided hemisensory deficits under maintenance therapy of prednisolone and azathioprine (AZT). Later she developed right foot drop and paraesthesia in the ulnar innervation territory on both sides. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and cerebral panangiography suggested cerebral vasculitis. Neurological investigation and electromyography disclosed multiplex neuritis (MN) probably due to vasculitis. Consistent with this diagnosis, autoantibodies to extractable nuclear antigens were detectable in serum. Immunosuppression was changed to oral 150 mg cyclophosphamide (CPM0) per day.
Prednisolone
was increased to 40 mg/d and then gradually tapered to 5 mg. Oral CPM was administered up to a total dose of 40 g and then substituted by 6 times of an intervall infusion therapy of CPM (600 mg/m(2)). Almost complete motoric remission was achieved after 3 mo of CPM. Sensibility remained reduced in the right peroneal innervation territory. Follow-up of cranial MRI provided stable findings without any new or progressive lesions. This is the first report of multiplex neuritis in a patient with autoimmune
hepatitis
.
...
PMID:Multiplex neuritis in a patient with autoimmune hepatitis: a case report. 1698 Dec 76
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