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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Iron metabolites were measured in liver homogenates and leukocytes of patients with hereditary hemochromatosis (HHC), chronic viral hepatitis, and secondary iron overloading. Iron and ferritin levels in the liver are increased HHC, while in hepatitis only ferritin level is increased. In the leukocytes ferritin concentrations are increased both in HHC and secondary iron loading and less so in viral hepatitis. The leukocytic ferritin level decreased after a course of bleeding sessions and during maintenance therapy for HHC, which can serve as a diagnostically significant sign for evaluating the treatment efficiency.
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PMID:[Indices of iron metabolism in liver homogenates and leukocytes]. 1087 39

The clinical expressions, courses and consequences of hepatitis caused by different viruses (A,B,C,D,E,G) are different. Diagnosis of hepatitis is incomplete unless its etiology is specified and for chronic hepatitis, the etiology is apparent in almost all cases when autoimmune and metabolic diseases are also included. Hence, the classification based only on histology is not adequate and emphasis should also be on the etiology. The prognostic indices governing a response to interferon therapy in patients with chronic viral hepatitis have advanced with the knowledge of role played by viral genotypes, serum ferritin, hepatic iron concentration, viral quantification, and severity of histology. There have been recent changes in the definition and classification of autoimmune hepatitis as well as there is availability of newer immunosuppressive agents with encouraging results.
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PMID:Chronic hepatitis--changing trends. 1127 90

We report the case of a patient with corticosteroid-responsive giant cell hepatitis associated with typical manifestations and changes of polyarteritis nodosa from the kidney and central nervous system. Initially, the patient presented with transient right hemiparesis, followed by spontaneous remission without any abnormalities on computed tomography scan, magnetic resonance imaging and cerebrospinal fluid examination. A few months later he was admitted to our clinic because of icterus, peripheral oedema and abdominal distension. He was found to have clinical signs of active cirrhosis. Serological tests for hepatitis B, C and HIV virus were negative. Serum ceruloplasmin. a1-AT and ferritin levels were within normal limits. Antinuclear antibodies were positive (1: 160). Liver biopsy showed micronodular cirrhosis with many eosinophils in the portal tracts and giant hepatocytes with multiple nucleoli in the lobule. Fulfilling the diagnostic criteria for autoimmune hepatitis, he was started on treatment with prednisolone and azathioprine, resulting in both clinical and biochemical responses. Four years later he presented with severe pain at the right costovertebral angle. Ultrasonography revealed a haematoma at the right kidney, and selective angiography of the abdominal aorta, renal arteries and hepatic artery documented microaneurysms in both kidney and liver arteries. Because of severe haemorrhage, right nephrectomy was performed. Histology of kidney specimen showed characteristic lesions of polyarteritis nodosa. Several months later, while on treatment with prednisolone and cyclophosphamide, the patient experienced a fatal episode of brain haemorrhage. An association between autoimmune hepatitis, polyarteritis nodosa and postinfantile giant cell hepatitis has not been reported previously.
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PMID:Post-infantile giant cell hepatitis associated with autoimmune hepatitis and polyarteritis nodosa. 1184 28

We investigated the prevalence of positive viral hepatitis titres in sickle cell disease (SCD) and the relationship of abnormal liver function tests (LFTs) to transfusions and ferritin levels. Charts from 141 patients with SCD were reviewed and recent laboratory data on serum ferritin, hepatitis serology, units of packed red blood cells transfused and LFTs were collected. Hepatitis B core antibodies were positive in 14% of patients (12/86) and Hepatitis C viral antibody titres were positive in 16.5% (15/91). There was a relationship of positive serologies to transfusion for hepatitis C virus (HCV), but not for hepatitis B virus (HBV). Hepatitis C antibody negative (HCVAb-) patients had fewer packed red blood cells (pRBC) transfused than Hepatitis C antibody positive (HCVAb+) (6.4 vs. 20.3, P=0.08). Patients with ferritins < 500 ng/ml compared to those with > 1000 ng/ml also showed a difference in units transfused (P < 0.003). Steady state LFTs, with the exception of alkaline phosphatase, had no relationship to serum ferritin or hepatitis serologies. Males were twice as likely to have positive serology as females but more females had elevated ferritin levels. Paired analysis of LFTs in steady state and crisis failed to demonstrate deterioration during crisis. We conclude that: (1) there is a relationship of positive Hepatitis C serology, but not Hepatitis B serology, to transfusion; (2) ferritin levels correlate with transfusion number but not with LFTs; (3) in our population, LFTs in SCD are usually normal and do not increase in vaso-occlusive crises.
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PMID:Liver function tests in sickle cell disease. 1184 94

The role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in liver disease is controversial. This mostly reflects the difficulties to quantify ROS in vivo, particularly in humans. We aimed to measure the presence of ROS in diseased human liver and identify possible relations between ROS levels and etiology, histology and hepatocyte proliferation. Liver biopsy specimens from 102 individuals: 18 healthy controls and 84 patients (42 HCV chronic hepatitis (CHC), 19 HBV chronic hepatitis (CHB), 7 PBC, 4 PSC, 4 HCV relapsing hepatitis after liver transplantation, 3 autoimmune hepatitis, 3 hepatocellular carcinoma, 2 alcoholic hepatitis) underwent analysis by radical-probe electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR). ROS in patients (median = 5 x 10(-6) mmol/mg) were higher than in controls (median = 3 x 10(-11) mmol/mg) (p < 0.001). Progressively increasing levels of ROS were recorded passing from control values to CHB (median = 4 x 10(-7) mmol/mg), CHC (median = 3 x 10(-6) mmol/mg) and PBC (median = 2 x 10(-5) mmol/mg), the differences being significant (p < 0.001). ROS in CHC positively correlated with histological disease activity (r = 0.92; p < 0.001). No correlation was found between ROS and hepatocyte proliferation rate, presence/degree of steatosis, serum ferritin levels and aminotransferases. ROS overproduction in liver appears to be a common thread linking different pathologic conditions and seems to be influenced by diseases' etiologies.
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PMID:Oxidative stress EPR measurement in human liver by radical-probe technique. Correlation with etiology, histology and cell proliferation. 1244 19

The clinical presentation of adult coeliac disease is often uncharacteristic, with extraintestinal symptoms being the main findings. We report a 48-year-old woman who presented with type II, hepatitis-C-negative cryoglobulinaemia, elevated liver enzymes, and iron deficiency. Antinuclear antibodies were positive, and immunoglobulin G (IgG) levels were elevated. On liver biopsy, a diagnosis of type I autoimmune hepatitis with a possible autoimmune cholangitis overlap syndrome was made. Immunosuppressive treatment led to a normalization of transaminase levels and resolved the cryoglobulinaemic vasculitis. In addition, the patient exhibited low ferritin and iron levels, which led to the diagnosis of coeliac disease. Long-standing, untreated coeliac disease is recognized to be a trigger for autoimmune disorders and is known to be associated with other autoimmune diseases, but the association with autoimmune hepatitis or autoimmune cholangitis is reported rarely. We conclude that in patients with autoimmune liver disease and unspecific clinical signs, such as iron deficiency, coeliac disease must be ruled out.
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PMID:Autoimmune hepatitis, cryoglobulinaemia and untreated coeliac disease: a case report. 1265 65

Non-A-E hepatitis and acute cryptogenic hepatitis are the names given to the disease of patients with clinical hepatitis, but in whom serologic evidence of A-E hepatitis has not been found. Over a period of 8 years, we evaluated in Brazil 32 patients who fulfilled the criteria for this diagnosis in order to determine patterns of the clinical illness, laboratory parameters, or histologic features. Each patient was subjected to virologic tests to exclude A-E hepatitis and cytomegalovirus/Epstein-Barr virus infection. Drug-induced hepatitis and autoimmune disease were also excluded. Wilson's disease was excluded in young patients. The course of the disease was clinical/biochemical recovery in 3 months in 25 patients and persistent alanine aminotransferase (ALT) elevation in 7 patients. Three of these had chronic hepatitis, and one had severe fibrosis on liver biopsy. During the acute illness, mean peak ALT was 1267 IU/L, bilirubin was 4.0 mg/dL, and ferritin was 1393 IU/mL. GB virus type C (GBV-C) was found in six patients, and TT virus (TTV) in five patients. We conclude that, in Brazil, non-A-E hepatitis probably originates from still unidentified viruses. The course of the disease and the histologic patterns are similar to those recorded for known viruses. Continuous survey for the specific etiologic agents is needed.
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PMID:Clinical, histologic and serologic evaluation of patients with acute non-A-E hepatitis in north-eastern Brazil: is it an infectious disease? 1456 27

A TRIAD OF FEATURES: Adult onset Still's disease (ASD) is an uncommon disorder usually associating high spiking fever, evanescent skin rash constituted of small salmon pink macules, and arthritis. NUMEROUS SYSTEMIC MANIFESTATIONS: A sore throat is common and often misleading. More than 60% of the patients develop mobile and indolent lymph nodes, usually in the cervical area. Liver involvement is common and usually limited to a mild or moderate cytolysis. However, several observations of severe hepatitis have been reported justifying strict monitoring of the liver biology in these patients. Amongst the other numerous systemic manifestations that have been reported, pericarditis is common and sometimes responsible for tamponade, the pulmonary involvement may lead to an acute respiratory distress, and the rare neurological manifestations include aseptic meningitis or cranial nerve palsy. FROM A BIOLOGICAL POINT OF VIEW: The sedimentation rate is consistently elevated and there is usually a marked elevation in the polymorphonuclears. The bacteriological survey is negative as are the immunological tests. An increase in the serum level of IL-18 might be both diagnostic and prognostic. It is the increase of the serum level of ferritin and the marked decrease in its glycosylated fraction below 20% that seem to be of more potent diagnostic value.
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PMID:[Clinical and biological manifestations of adult-onset Still's disease]. 1552 51

A 54-year-old man with a 24-year history of androgenetic alopecia was referred to the Department of Dermatological Sciences with follicular inflammatory lesions leading to scleroatrophy in the vertex region (Figure 1) of 1-year duration. These lesions appeared a year ago. There was no previous history of this condition. On examination, the patient showed confluent infiltrative follicular lesions on the frontoparietal and occipital scalp (Figure 2). Some lesions evolved into erosions that developed in ivory white scleroatrophy within weeks. These lesions were localized both in and outside of are as affected by alopecia androgenetica and were associated with mild pruritus. Histopathologic examination, performed on an early lesion of the vertex, documented a mild thinning of follicular epithelium associated with an intense lymphohistiocytic perifollicular infiltrate. The damage of the basal cell layer was limited to the follicle, while epidermis was intact. In particular, follicular keratinocytes under the isthmus showed a very intense degeneration exactly where the infiltrate was the most prominent. The damage of the hair sheath was under the isthmus and involved the lower portions of the follicles (including the hair bulbs). The inflammatory infiltrate was exclusively represented by perifollicular lymphohistiocytes. Finally, a connective fibrotic shell with numerous fibroblasts formed a sheath around the atrophic follicle (Figure 3). Results of laboratory investigations (including complete blood cell counts, basal thyroid-stimulating hormone, C-reactive protein, serum ferritin levels, B and C hepatitis markers, antinuclear antibodies, and cultural examinations) were negative.We diagnosed the patient with fibrosing alopecia in a pattern distribution.
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PMID:Case study: fibrosing alopecia in a pattern distribution localized on alopecia androgenetica areas and unaffected scalp. 1553 92

Urinary 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosin(8-OHdG) has been reported as sensitive biomarker of oxidative DNA damage and also of oxidative stress. We measured the urinary 8-OHdG in patients with chronic liver diseases by competitive ELISA, and analyzed the relationship with clinical characteristics. Fifty patients (male/female: 22/28) with chronic liver disease were enrolled this study. The mean concentration of urinary 8-OHdG in healthy control and patients with liver cirrhosis, chronic hepatitis C, chronic hepatitis B, and autoimmune hepatitis were 10.40+/-3.14, 10.14+/-4.19, 11.79+/-5.58, 14.99+/-4.46, and 13.64+/-3.84 microg/gCr, respectively. There were no significant differences among the five group. The mean concentration of urinary 8-OHdG in inveterate drinker was significantly higher than that in non-drinker (16.67+/-4.29 vs. 11.19+/-4.80 microg/gCr, p<0.05). The smoking enhanced the elevation of urinary 8-OHdG in drinkers. In clinical characteristics, serum y-GTP, a marker of alcoholic liver disease, had significant positive correlation with urinary 8-OHdG on the drinker with chronic hepatitis. In addition, there was a positive correlation between serum ferritin levels and urinary 8-OHdG levels. Iron in the liver suggested oxidative damage of hepatocytes through the fenton reaction in patients with chronic liver disease. In conclusion, drinking and smoking induced liver damage by oxidative stress, and urinary 8-OHdG may be reliable marker of oxidative stress in patients with chronic liver disease.
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PMID:[Urinary 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosin (8-OHdG) in patients with chronic liver diseases]. 1555 32


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