Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twenty-four children and adolescents who have been receiving home treatment for haemophilia A and B, and were followed up for a median period of five years, have been assessed for physical activity, social adjustment, range of joint movement and infection with
hepatitis
viruses. They were treated with cryoprecipitate from 1972 to 1977, and since then with factor-VIII concentrates. The average dose of factor VIII was 20 units/kg body mass. It was found that there was near normal range of physical activity and school performance, and, in virtually all families, near normal family function could be preserved. Approximately one-third of the patients showed impairment of the normal range of joint movement in flexion and extension. Although there was no clinical evidence of liver disease, elevated
aspartate aminotransferase
(
AST
) levels were found in 14 patients. Evidence of past, or present, infection with hepatitis B was found in 19 patients, and of infection with hepatitis A in seven patients. Home treatment is associated with a reduced level of disability from haemophilia, but transfusion therapy continues to be associated with a high rate of liver function abnormalities, probably of infectious origin.
...
PMID:Home treatment of haemophilia. A follow-up study. 679 76
Twelve serologically proven cases of non-A, non-B (NANB)
hepatitis
have been described. The clinical course was mild in 11 patients. One patient, however, presented in portal systemic encephalopathy and required steroid treatment. Nine of the 12 patients continued to exhibit raised transaminase (
AST
) activities six or more months after the onset of the acute hepatitis. In these immunoglobulin concentrations were normal and autoantibodies were not present in significant titre. Four patients had evidence of previous hepatitis B infection, suggesting that the route of transmission of NANB might be similar to that of hepatitis B virus. A further four patients gave a history which suggests a possible parenteral mode of transmission. Liver biopsies were carried out both in the acute (8 cases) and chronic (6 cases) phases of the disease. Histological findings in liver biopsies covered the whole spectrum of acute and chronic hepatitis and 1 patient had cirrhosis. One notable feature in these biopsies was the presence of fatty changes.
...
PMID:Clinical and histological features of a group of patients with sporadic non-A, non-B hepatitis. 679 15
In this study maximum urinary iron elimination with continuous desferrioxamine subcutaneous infusion was obtained in thalassemia major patients with chronic persistent or active
hepatitis
with lower doses (60 mg/kg) than those necessary in patients without
hepatitis
(80 mg/kg). Since dose-response curves were highly variable the treatment schedule should be tailored to the individual needs of each patient. Both groups may achieve iron balance but chronic hepatitis patients have more frequently a net urinary iron excretion. In patients with chronic hepatitis no correlation was found between serum ferritin levels or serum ferritin/
aspartate aminotransferase
ratios and transfusional iron overload while serum ferritin/
aspartate aminotransferase
ratios were seen to be correlated with liver iron stores.
...
PMID:Iron chelation in transfusion-dependent thalassemia with chronic hepatitis. 680 Feb 2
Lyme disease, caused by a tick-transmitted spirochete, typically begins with a unique skin lesion, erythema chronicum migrans. Of 314 patients with this skin lesion, almost half developed multiple annular secondary lesions; some patients had evanescent red blotches or circles, malar or urticarial rash, conjunctivitis, periorbital edema, or diffuse erythema. Skin manifestations were often accompanied by malaise and fatigue, headache, fever and chills, generalized achiness, and regional lymphadenopathy. In addition, patients sometimes had evidence of meningeal irritation, mild encephalopathy, migratory musculoskeletal pain,
hepatitis
, generalized lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly, sore throat, nonproductive cough, or testicular swelling. These signs and symptoms were typically intermittent and changing during a period of several weeks. The commonest nonspecific laboratory abnormalities were a high sedimentation rate, an elevated serum IgM level, or an increased
aspartate transaminase
level. Early Lyme disease can be diagnosed by its dermatologic manifestations, rapidly changing system involvement, and if necessary, by serologic testing.
...
PMID:The early clinical manifestations of Lyme disease. 685 26
In a one-year prospective study we assessed the incidence of Reye's syndrome in children presenting with the acute onset of vomiting after a prodromal upper-respiratory-tract infection or varicella, and with serum alanine or
aspartate aminotransferase
levels at least three times higher than normal, and a paucity of neurologic findings. Of 25 patients meeting the above criteria, 19 had liver biopsies yielding adequate tissue for diagnostic purposes. Biopsy specimens from 14 of these 19 patients (74 per cent) were diagnostic of Reye's syndrome, according to rigorous light-microscopical, histochemical, and ultrastructural criteria. None of the biopsy specimens contained evidence of other acute pathologic processes, including
hepatitis
. A wide spectrum of mitochondrial alterations existed at the ultrastructural level, ranging from mild to severe lesions that were indistinguishable from those seen in comatose patients with Reye's syndrome. Our findings suggest that the clinical complex of vomiting, hepatic dysfunction, and minimal neurologic impairment after varicella or an upper-respiratory-tract infection usually represents Reye's syndrome. This syndrome occurs more frequently than previously recognized.
...
PMID:Grade I Reye's syndrome. A frequent cause of vomiting and liver dysfunction after varicella and upper-respiratory-tract infection. 686 12
We postulated that three tests could be used to advantage in the prognosis of patients with alcoholic liver disease. Ninety-eight patients who entered the hospital in hepatic failure, and who survived that illness, were observed for an average of 3.5 years after discharge. At the time of entry, most had jaundice, ascites, edema, and hepatosplenomegaly. Biopsy of the liver disclosed both cirrhosis and
hepatitis
in 75-80%. Neither clinical features nor laboratory tests could differentiate these patients at the time of entry. However, as early as 3 months after hospitalization, the clinical course and laboratory tests served to distinguish two groups: group 1 comprised 46 patients in whom the serum bilirubin was less than 2 mg/dl; the
aspartate aminotransferase
less than 55 mU/ml; and the alkaline phosphatase less than 125 mU/ml. In 40 (87%) of these 46 patients, clinical findings improved concomitantly with laboratory tests. Group 2 comprised 52 patients in whom one or more of these three tests showed persistent abnormality; only 12 (23%) of the 52 patients in this group improved clinically and three subsequently died. Although the majority of patients (76%) in group 1 reported abstinence on follow-up, 44% of group 2 patients also claimed abstinence. Complications of liver disease, shunt surgery, and continuing alcoholism contributed to liver failure. Early identification of such patients should aid in the management of alcoholic liver disease.
...
PMID:Predicting clinical recovery from alcoholic liver disease. 688 50
The two categories of anti-albumin antibodies (AAA), namely precipitins (AA-P) and agglutinins (AA-Aggl), were investigated in 260 patients with morphologically diagnosed chronic liver diseases (CLD). A parallelism was observed between AA-P titre and the severity of chronic hepatitis as revealed by clinical diagnosis. Thus, significant differences in AA-P titre were noticed between chronic persistent hepatitis (CPH) and chronic aggressive
hepatitis
(CAH) and between CAH and liver cirrhosis (LC). No correlation was found between AA-P positivity and either HBsAg presence or disease activity, maximum AA-P values being registered in decompensated, inactive LC. AA-P positivity was found associated with a higher degree of liver cell dysfunction. In every category of CLD a striking association was also observed between AA-P positivity and raised serum
aspartate transaminase
and bilirubin levels, thus suggesting a common pathogenic substrate, namely liver cell membrane damage. These correlations were also observed after immunosuppressive therapy which would argue for the maintenance of AA-P diagnostic value. AA-Aggl showed raised incidences and titres in CAH patients, the values decreasing in LC. Therefore, the main diagnostic value is attributed to AA-P.
...
PMID:Anti-albumin antibodies in chronic liver diseases: diagnostic significance of these antibodies in patients with conventional or immunosuppressive therapy. 697 71
A systemic BCG infection in mice induced multiple small granulomas located mainly in the periportal areas of the liver. Following systemic challenge of such mice with purified protein derivative of tuberculin (PPD), a rapidly developing
hepatitis
with diffuse intralobular mononuclear cell infiltration was precipitated, accompanied by high levels of
aspartate transaminase
in peripheral blood, hypoglycemia, focal hepatocyte necrosis, and accumulation of fibrinogen in liver. Bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) also provoked acute hepatic damage both in BCG-infected mice and in mice pretreated with Corynebacterium parvum. PPD was not active in the latter. There were also lymphoid cell destruction and fibrinogen accumulation in the spleen of BCG-PPD-treated mice. Possible involvement of inflammatory and hepatotoxic mediators is suggested, and a T-lymphocyte-macrophage regulatory role in the pathogenesis of
hepatitis
is discussed.
...
PMID:Tuberculin hypersensitivity hepatitis in mice infected with Mycobacterium bovis (BCG). 702 5
Quadratic multiple discriminant analysis of 25 commonly ordered laboratory tests resulted in correct classification of 100% of nonalcoholics without overt liver disease, 98% of alcoholism treatment program patients with presumed mild liver involvement, 96% of alcoholics with liver disease, and 89% of nonalcoholics with liver disease. Direct comparison of the biopsy-verified alcoholic and nonalcoholic liver disease groups resulted in 100% discrimination, and removal of traditionally evaluated liver tests from the battery of 25 tests did not substantially alter the original classification accuracy. Alcoholic and nonalcoholic liver disease was still 100% differentiable when equated for number of patients with cirrhosis,
hepatitis
, and
hepatitis
combined with cirrhosis or fibrosis. Additional utility of the quadratic discriminant approach was demonstrated when 83% alcoholic and 83% nonalcoholic liver disease cases were diagnosed correctly in a prospective manner. In contrast, use of
aspartate aminotransferase
to alanine aminotransferase ratios (ie, SGOT to SGPT) identified correctly 75% and 33% of patients, respectively.
...
PMID:Biochemical and hematologic correlates of alcoholism and liver disease. 713 77
Cobalt-activated acylase (Co-A) and transaminase activity were determined in the serum of A/Jax, DBA/2 and C3H mice several days after an intraperitoneal injection of 1,000 lethal doses of murine
hepatitis
virus type 3 (MHV3). A significant rise in the enzyme activity was observed 1 day after the injection, followed by a decrease on day 2. In the case of the genetically resistant A/Jax strain, the Co-A level regularly decreased to reach normal values on days 7-8. On the contrary, among the fully susceptible DBA/2 strain mice (all dead on day 5), a second rise in acylase (Co-A) level was observed on days 3 and 4, much higher than the day-1 values. Among the mice of C3H strain, which is recorded as 'semi-susceptible', some individuals behaved like the susceptible DBA/2. The comparison of serum acylase activity with other liver function tests showed a correlation between Co-A and transaminases (ALT and
AST
) with C3H and DBA/2 strains, but no correlation with A/JAX resistant strain. gamma-Glutamyltransferase was not detectable in the serum of different strains during the time of experimentations. Our results suggest that Co-A activity correlates with the clinical course, and that Co-A is a sensitive indicator enzyme in the early phase of viral hepatitis.
...
PMID:A genetic study of serum levels of cobalt-activated acylase among susceptible, resistant and semiresistant strains of mice with experimental viral hepatitis. 715 76
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10