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:C0019163 (
hepatitis B
)
38,309
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Liver transplantation (LT) is a therapeutic method in many, otherwise infaust diseases of the liver. During the recent decade the experimental therapeutic procedure has become a routine therapeutical method. The stage of clinical experiment was ultimated by the Washington Conference held on the consensus in LT indications (1983). Large centries (USA, England, Germany) yield 80-100 liver transplantations per year. The recent years have recorded a change in some principal opinions on LT. It is possible to state that liver transplantation is being abstained from cases with more extensive primary neoplamatic affliction of the liver. Conservative therapy in primary biliary cirrhosis of the liver by means of ursodeoxycholic acid has shifted the LT indication into the later stages of the disease. The opinions on the meaning of LT in alcoholic cirrhosis remain still unsettled. LT remains unambiquously indicated in life-endangering fulminant and subfulminant liver failures. Among the viral diseases, attention is paid to liver cirrhosis caused by infection by the hepatitis C virus. Cirrhosis due to
hepatitis B
has a better prognosis, owing to the complex antiviral therapy. Liver transplantation represents, beside the main indications, the therapy of first selection, e.g. also in Wilson's disease, alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency, alveolar
echinococcosis
etc. (Tab. 1, Fig. 2, Ref. 54.)
...
PMID:[Indications and contraindications for liver transplantation]. 868 95
The System of Infectious Disease Notification (I.D.N.) encompasses the notification of 41 infectious transmissible diseases to which are added epidemic outbreaks of any etiology or cause. In Navarra, the I.D.N.'s are reported to the Section of Vigilance and Epidemiological Control of the Public Health Institute. A sharp increase of alimentary toxic-infections is observed due to two community outbreaks produced by Salmonella enteritidis that affected 410 persons. The incidence of pulmonary tuberculosis, 15.37 cases per 100,000 inhabitants has remained at the same levels as previous years and with lower rates than those published in neighbouring Autonomous Communities such as La Rioja and the Autonomous Community of the Basque Country. In the group of Exanthematic Diseases, an outbreak of German measles is noteworthy that affected males between the ages of 16 and 20. During the year 1996 there were 17 cases of Meningococcal Disease that meant a rate of 3.27 per 100,000 inhabitants, the second lowest rate in the last 25 years after the rate of 2.29 of 1994. With respect to the causative serogroup, serogroup C was isolated on 7 occasions, serogroup B on four occasions and on 6 it could not be grouped.
Hydatidosis
through reports of I.D.N.'s and active search in the hospitals remained steady, with 26 cases, remaining within the regular values of recent years. An important decline with respect to recent years was observed in cases of hepatitis A,
hepatitis B
and brucellosis.
...
PMID:[State of infectious disease notification (I.D.N.'s) in Navarra. 1996]. 1289 35
Since 1990, Mongolia's health system has been in transition. Impressive gains have been accomplished through a national immunization program, which was instituted in 1991. Nevertheless, the country continues to confront four major chronic infections:
hepatitis B
and C, brucellosis, tuberculosis, and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). As of 2001, only two cases of HIV infections had been detected in Mongolia, but concern grows that the rate will increase along with the rising rates of STDs and increase in tourism. Other infectious diseases of importance in Mongolia include
echinococcosis
, plague, tularemia, anthrax, foot-and-mouth, and rabies.
...
PMID:Emerging infectious diseases in Mongolia. 1472 Mar 88
Infectious diseases of immigrants may differ from patients born and resident in the same country, especially if immigrants from Africa or Asia live in Europe or North America. Because the available information is limited published reports of infections of Afghan immigrants in the United States and other countries were analysed. Four reports from the US and 15 reports from other countries were identified [7, (46.7%) Pakistan, 5 (33.3%) Iran, 1 (6.7%) United Kingdom, 1 (6.7%) Germany, 1 (6.7%) Israel)]. Reports from the US were case reports or case series of infections with gastro-intestinal parasites and Mycobacterium tuberculosis (1, 25%),
Echinococcus
species (2, 50%), and Plasmodium vivax (1, 25%). Reports from other countries were case reports, case series, or surveys and investigated infections with
Echinococcus
species (2, 13%),
Hepatitis B
virus (HBV) (1, 6.7%), M. tuberculosis (6, 40%), P. falciparum (1, 6.7%), Leishmania tropica (3, 20%), Fasciola hepatica (1, 6.7%), and M. leprae (1, 6.7%). The reports suggest that
Echinococcus
species and L. tropica infections can be encountered in Afghan immigrants in the US, and the frequency of a positive PPD (purified protein derivative) response or HBsAg test was increased. An infectious diseases database specific for the country of residence readily available to clinicians treating Afghan patients outside of Afghanistan may be useful.
...
PMID:Infectious diseases of Afghan immigrants in the United States: review of published reports. 2283 Jan 74
Our work represents the first case report of polycystic
echinococcosis
co-infection with HIV, hepatitis C virus (HCV), and
hepatitis B
virus (HBV). Structural liver alterations were found to be related to parasitic structures and necroinflammatory foci (karyopyknosis, karyorrhexis, and karyolysis), consistent with
Echinococcus
vogeli. Visceral adipose tissue and intrahepatic triglyceride droplets (macrovesicular and microvesicular steatosis) indicated abnormal fat anabolism, which probably resulted from both viral-induced hepatopathy and drug-related toxicity. In summary, our results suggest that the observed liver abnormalities reflected the coincident exposure to hepatotropic viruses and parasites causing polycystic
echinococcosis
and were not indicative of opportunistic relationships among these pathogens.
...
PMID:Histopathological findings of an uncommon co-infection: Echinococcus vogeli, HIV, hepatitis C virus, and hepatitis B virus. 2373 63
Turkey remains an intermediate area for prevalence of
hepatitis B
virus (HBV) surface antigenemia. The sheep-raising areas of Turkey also pose a high risk for cystic
hydatid disease
(CHD). Both HBV infection and CHD are major public health issues particularly in eastern parts of Turkey; however, there is no data regarding HBV infection in patients who have had CHD. The aims of this study were to evaluate the association between HBV infection and CHD and suggest ways to reduce HBV infection which is still widespread in Turkey. A retrospective study was conducted with 94 adult patients with active CHD referred to the hepatology department, Yuzuncuyil University School of Medicine from December 2010 to December 2012. All subjects came from rural areas of the region and underwent ultrasonography of abdomen which detected CHD of the liver. All the patients were serologically positive for
Echinococcus
granulosus. The control group consisted of 500 patients (300 men and 200 women) referred to the internal medicine clinics for other reasons. The patients with CHD and in the control group were tested for the existence of HBs antigen according to the standard procedures. The seroprevalence of HBs antigen was significantly higher in patients with active CHD than those in the control group (12.7% vs 5.2%; P=0.0017). Our data indicate that there is significant association between HBV infection and CHD. All patients with CHD should be screened for HBV infection.
...
PMID:Higher seroprevalence of hepatitis B virus antigen in patients with cystic hydatid disease than in patients referred to internal medicine clinics in Turkey. 2462 81
To establish strategic priorities for the Public Health Agency of Sweden we prioritized pathogens according to their public health relevance in Sweden in order to guide resource allocation. We then compared the outcome to ongoing surveillance. We used a modified prioritization method developed at the Robert Koch Institute in Germany. In a Delphi process experts scored pathogens according to ten variables. We ranked the pathogens according to the total score and divided them into four priority groups. We then compared the priority groups to self-reported time spent on surveillance by epidemiologists and ongoing programmes for surveillance through mandatory and/or voluntary notifications and for surveillance of typing results. 106 pathogens were scored. The result of the prioritization process was similar to the outcome of the prioritization in Germany. Common pathogens such as calicivirus and Influenza virus as well as blood-borne pathogens such as human immunodeficiency virus,
hepatitis B
and C virus, gastro-intestinal infections such as Campylobacter and Salmonella and vector-borne pathogens such as Borrelia were all in the highest priority group. 63% of time spent by epidemiologists on surveillance was spent on pathogens in the highest priority group and all pathogens in the highest priority group, except for Borrelia and varicella-zoster virus, were under surveillance through notifications. Ten pathogens in the highest priority group (Borrelia, calicivirus, Campylobacter,
Echinococcus
multilocularis, hepatitis C virus, HIV, respiratory syncytial virus, SARS- and MERS coronavirus, tick-borne encephalitis virus and varicella-zoster virus) did not have any surveillance of typing results. We will evaluate the possibilities of surveillance for the pathogens in the highest priority group where we currently do not have any ongoing surveillance and evaluate the need of surveillance for the pathogens from the low priority group where there is ongoing surveillance in order to focus our work on the pathogens with the highest relevance.
...
PMID:Communicable Diseases Prioritized According to Their Public Health Relevance, Sweden, 2013. 2830 1
We have read the case report of Nihon-Yanagi et al. The patient they described developed hepatic granuloma two times and the granulomatous lesion was surrounding metal staples/clips suggesting that the granuloma was due to surgical staples/clips. Hepatic granulomas (HGs) are reported in around 5% of patient who undergo a liver biopsy and caused by several diseases including sarcoidosis, tuberculosis,
hydatid cyst
, brucellosis, typhoid fever, chronic hepatitis B and C and primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC). Chronic hepatitis B and C infections are the most common and serious causes of liver damage in patient with renal failure. Their prevalence is a higher than people without renal failure. We have previously reported that the prevalences of HGs in patients with chronic hepatitis B and C are 1.5 and 1.3% respectively. The described patient was on hemodialysis for 12 years. The other causes of HG seem excluded; however
hepatitis B
and C infections and PBC should have been tested and excluded before ascribing the HGs to surgical staples/clipping material.
...
PMID:More on hepatic granulomas. 2615 56