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)

Q fever is a zoonosis caused by Coxiella burnetii, an obligate intracellular bacterium. Domestic ungulates and parturient cats are the primary reservoirs of infection. The animals excrete the bacterium in urine, faeces, milk and amniotic fluid. After desiccation the micro-organism spreads via aerosols. After inhalation or ingestion and an incubation period of 2-6 weeks acute Q fever may develop with atypical pneumonia and hepatitis as major clinical symptoms. The infection also may present as a flu-like illness or remain asymptomatic. Generally, the prognosis is favourable. However, endocarditis or another chronic form of Q fever occasionally develops with possibly fatal outcome. Diagnosis relies upon serologic testing with an indirect immunofluorescence method. Doxycycline is the antibiotic of choice in the treatment of Q fever. Endocarditis needs therapy for years with the addition of rifampin or hydroxychloroquine. Q fever is poorly recognised due to the variety of clinical presentations.
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PMID:[Acute and chronic Q fever; epidemiology, symptoms, diagnosis and therapy of infection caused by Coxiella burnetii]. 1091 6

Brucella infection is a systemic disease, but the microorganism rarely causes infections in the gastrointestinal system such as hepatitis, cholecystitis, colitis and pancreatitis. Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis due to Brucella is extremely rare. Herein, we report a case of cirrhosis complicated with nongranulomatous hepatitis and peritonitis, both due to Brucella. A 63 year-old man with diabetes mellitus was admitted to hospital with complaints of weakness, backache, abdominal pain and abdominal swelling. On the basis of physical examination and laboratory findings, cryptogenic cirrhosis and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis were diagnosed. Due to persistent fever and backache, serum Brucella agglutination test was performed and found to be positive. Brucella melitensis was isolated from ascitic fluid culture. Liver biopsy findings revealed cirrhosis and a nongranulomatous hepatitis which was thought might be due to Brucella infection. Doxycycline and rifampicin, in addition to diuretics were administered for spontaneous ascites infection due to Brucella. A week later, the patient's condition improved and he became afebrile. After two months of therapy, the ascites had almost disappeared.
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PMID:Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis due to Brucella infection. 1461 44

To show that brucellosis may trigger autoimmune hepatitis (AIH), in addition to nonspecific liver involvement and toxic hepatitis, due to a class effect of tetracycline family used for treatment. We present a female patient admitted to our hospital due to partially improved fatigue and elevated liver enzymes following doxycycline and streptomycin usage for brucellosis. Brucellosis is endemic in our country, Turkey. It may involve any organ in the body. Liver is frequently involved. Doxycycline used for treatment occasionally may lead to hepatotoxicity. AIH is a necroinflammatory disease of the liver. Certain drugs (e.g. minocycline), toxins, and viruses (hepatitis B, hepatitis C, EBV, etc.) can trigger AIH. Only one case of AIH probably caused by doxycycline and brucellosis was reported. We discuss the relationship between brucellosis, AIH, and hepatotoxicity of doxycycline. Brucellosis may trigger AIH.
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PMID:Etiological role of brucellosis in autoimmune hepatitis. 1581 94

Bartonella henselae has not only been identified as the causative agent of cat scratch disease, but it is also associated with other significant infectious syndromes in the immunocompromised population. We describe two cases of B. henselae associated diseases in liver transplant recipients who both had contact with cats. The first recipient developed localized skin manifestation of bacillary angiomatosis in association with granulomatous hepatitis. He tested positive for Immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies against B. henselae. The second patient developed axillary lymphadenopathy, with biopsy showing necrotizing granulomatous inflammation and polymerase chain reaction studies were positive for B. henselae DNA. Her serology for bartonellosis showed a fourfold rise in antibody titers during her hospitalization. Both patients responded to treatment with Azithromycin in combination with Doxycycline. These were the only cases within a series of 467 consecutive liver transplants performed in 402 patients performed during a 4-year period. Although bartonellosis is a rare infection in liver transplantation recipients, it should always be included in the differential diagnosis of patients presenting with fever, central nervous system (CNS) symptoms, skin lesions, lymphadenopathy, and hepatitis especially if prior contact with cats is reported.
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PMID:Disseminated Bartonella infection following liver transplantation. 1682 86

An autoregulated tetracycline-inducible recombinant adeno-associated viral vector (rAAV-pTet(bidi)ON) utilizing the rtTAM2 reverse tetracycline transactivator (rAAV-rtTAM2) was used to conditionally express the human GDNF cDNA. Doxycycline, a tetracycline analog, induced a time- and dose-dependent release of GDNF in vitro in human glioma cells infected with rAAV-rtTAM2 serotype 2 virus. Introducing the Woodchuck hepatitis virus posttranscriptional regulatory element (WPRE) downstream to the rtTAM2 coding sequence, resulted in a more rapid induction and a higher basal expression level. In vivo, 8 weeks after a single injection of the rAAV-rtTAM2-GDNF vector encapsidated into AAV serotype 1 capsids in the rat striatum, the GDNF protein level was 60 pg/mg tissue in doxycycline-treated animals whereas in untreated animals, it was undistinguishable from the endogenous level ( approximately 4 pg/mg tissue). However, a residual GDNF expression in the uninduced animals was evidenced by a sensitive immunohistochemical staining. As compared to rAAV1-rtTAM2-GDNF, the rAAV1-rtTAM2-WPRE-GDNF vector expressed a similar concentration of GDNF in the induced state (with doxycycline) but a basal level (without doxycycline) approximately 2.5-fold higher than the endogenous striatal level. As a proof for biological activity, for both vectors, downregulation of tyrosine hydroxylase was evidenced in dopaminergic terminals of doxycycline-treated but not untreated animals. In conclusion, the rAAV1-rtTAM2 vector which expressed biologically relevant doses of GDNF in the striatum in response to doxycycline with a basal level undistinguishable from the endogenous striatal level, as measured by quantitative ELISA assay, constitutes an interesting tool for local conditional transgenesis.
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PMID:Controlled delivery of glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor by a single tetracycline-inducible AAV vector. 1722 6

Doxycycline is a commonly prescribed medication for the management of acne vulgaris. Severe adverse reactions to this medication are uncommon. We describe an unusual case of a 20-year-old female who experienced a life-threatening hypersensitivity reaction, including fever, lymphadenopathy, hepatitis, nephritis and severe pneumonitis with respiratory failure following oral administration of doxycycline for facial acne.
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PMID:Severe drug hypersensitivity reaction in a young woman treated with doxycycline. 1833 31

An HIV-infected male patient who had sex with men and with a penicillin allergy presented with liver dysfunction due to secondary syphilis and was successfully treated with doxycycline. This case highlights that syphilitic hepatitis may be overlooked in this particular population, and health care providers should be attuned to this diagnosis. Doxycycline may be an acceptable alternative to penicillin for treatment of this clinical syndrome.
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PMID:Syphilitic hepatitis treated with doxycycline in an HIV-infected patient and review of the literature. 2501 80

The brucellosis with multi-organ involvement in a patient with a history of the composite aortic graft (Bentall procedure) and Hepatitis B infection is rare. A 35-year-old man presented to us with fever and loss of consciousness. Four years ago, he was IDU and underwent cardiac surgery because of endocarditis. Recently lumbar spondylodiscitis was diagnosed. The Wright (1/320) and Coombs Wright tests (1/640) were positive. After CNS imaging, lumbar puncture was done. The CSF pleocytosis was lymphocyte dominant. In cardiac echocardiography, large vegetation on prosthetic aortic valve leaflets was seen. The brain MRI was reported abnormal. Treatment of brucellosis started with Ceftriaxone, Doxycycline, Rifampin and Gentamycin. After 4 days, he became oriented, and fever was disappeared then we continued the treatment for 16 days. The patient discharged and followed by daily phone calls. As symptoms of abdominal pain and jaundice were presented on the fifth day, he re-admitted. The patient expired because of hepatorenal and cardiac insufficiency. Drug side effects, activation of Hepatitis B and embolism of cardiac vegetation to other organs were suspected causes of death. We do not suggest medical therapy without cardiac surgery in such cases. When combination therapy is necessary for brucellosis in an HBsAg-positive patient, hepatitis virus activity should be assess by HBV-DNA PCR and the dose of drugs with known hepatotoxic effects such as rifampin and co-trimoxazole should be adjust. Combination therapy with quinolones instead of hepatoxic drugs is one of our suggustions.
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PMID:Brucellosis With Multi-Organ Involvement in a Patient With History of Composite Aortic Graft and Hepatitis B. 2803

Doxycycline and minocycline are tetracyclines with the potential to cause hepatoxicity. Although autoimmune-like hepatitis from minocycline is well-described, doxycycline-induced autoimmune hepatitis (DIAH) has only been described once. We report a rare case of DIAH with elevated liver enzymes over 5 times the normal upper limit, elevated immunoglobulin G, and high titers of antismooth muscle antibody and antinuclear antibody. By stopping doxycycline, our patient's liver enzymes normalized and immunoglobulin G and autoantibody titers rapidly downtrended. As long-term doxycycline therapy becomes more prevalent to treat acne vulgaris and other skin conditions, DIAH may become more prevalent and recognized.
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PMID:Doxycycline-Induced Autoimmune Hepatitis. 3282 68