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)
We have developed an adjuvant formulation (SAF) consisting of a synthetic muramyl dipeptide analogue (N-acetylmuramyl-L-threonyl-D-isoglutamine) in a squalane-Pluronic polymer emulsion. Used with a variety of antigens SAF elicits cell-mediated immunity and antibodies of protective isotypes (IgG2a in the mouse). SAF augments responses to influenza virus haemagglutinin and
hepatitis B
virus surface antigen. Vaccines using SAF have protected guinea pigs against genital herpes simplex virus infections and subhuman primates against
Epstein
-Barr virus and simian immunodeficiency virus infections. Properties of SAF are compared with those of other adjuvants, including lipopolysaccharide analogs, ISCOMs and liposomes.
...
PMID:Adjuvant formulations and their mode of action. 196 59
CD4 antigen levels in sera from asymptomatic intravenous drug users and homosexuals and patients with lymphadenopathy, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-related complex, or acquired immunodeficiency syndrome were quantitated. Like soluble CD8, CD4 antigen levels were elevated in human immunodeficiency virus-seronegative asymptomatic intravenous drug users and homosexuals, probably reflecting infections such as cytomegalovirus,
Epstein
-Barr virus, and
hepatitis B
virus infections. The sera from human immunodeficiency virus-seropositive groups of patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection also had elevated levels of CD4 antigen, presumably reflecting infections like cytomegalovirus and human immunodeficiency virus infections.
...
PMID:Elevated levels of CD4 antigen in sera of human immunodeficiency virus-infected populations. 197 94
The aim of the study was to examine the frequency, severity, persistence and etiology of relapses occurring during the hepatitis A viral infection. Therefore, a prospective study of 910 patients suffering from hepatitis A (HA) was carried out. The clinical examination and determination of glutamyl pyruvic transaminase (GPT) in the serum every 7-14 days till recovery (usually during 6--8 months) were performed. HAV infection was confirmed by detecting anti-HAV IgM in the blood of all the examined by radioimmunoassay. In 876 (93.3%) patients HA had typical clinical features and a monophasic course. All cases made a rapid clinical recovery and liver function tests improved strikingly between 1 and 4 months after the onset of illness. However, in 34 (3.7%) of 910 patients, after an asymptomatic interval of 4--8 weeks, relapsing hepatitis occurred. Mild clinical symptoms: fatigue, myalgia, nausea, epigastric discomfort accompanied by the elevated levels of GPT in the serum were noticed in 11 patients, while 3 of them redeveloped jaundice. In 23 remaining patients relapses of hepatitis were asymptomatic, except for the reappearance of icterus in six cases. The only way to establish the exacerbation of the disease was through the pathological findings of GPT in the serum, which increased 10--60 times above the upper limit of the normal value. While 25 patients had one relapse, in 9 there were two or more relapses, so that hepatitis had a biphasic or polyphasic course. The second relapse was registered 3--6 weeks after the first one disappeared. Through biochemical tests the average values of the GPT were established: 1566 U/L in the acute stage, 107 U/L during the early stage of convalescence and 1016 U/L during the first relapse of hepatitis. After the first relapse and during remission, in 9 patients the average values of GPT in the serum were 84 U/L, while during the second relapse 518 U/L. Clinical signs of relapsing hepatitis disappeared approximately in 4 days, but liver function tests decreased slowly and persisted elevated between 5 and 12 months. A possibility of establishing the etiology of relapsing hepatitis, which has yet remained unknown, is discussed. Anti-HAV IgM were present in all 34 patients during the initial and relapsing phase of hepatitis and in 26 cases in the latter phase of convalescence between 9 and 11 months after the beginning of the disease. Serological tests excluded infection with
hepatitis B
, cytomegalovirus and
Epstein
-Barr virus. With a great probability other infections and toxic agents damaging the liver could have been excluded.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Recurrences of viral hepatitis A]. 207 29
Hepatitis may be caused by hepatitis A virus,
hepatitis B
virus, hepatitis C virus (classic non-A non-B viral hepatitis), hepatitis D virus (delta agent), and hepatitis E virus (epidemic non-A non-B viral hepatitis). Cytomegalovirus,
Epstein
-Barr virus, and herpes simplex virus may also occasionally cause hepatitis. Some forms of hepatitis carry the risks of chronic infection, cirrhosis, or hepatocellular carcinoma. Treatment options for viral hepatitis are limited and, in many cases, still under investigation. Prophylaxis is available for many forms of hepatitis and should be offered to those at risk.
...
PMID:Viral hepatitis. The new ABC's. 212 Jun 86
Over the past 10 years, 12,146 cases of hepatitis were diagnosed in the Virology Department of Vienna University. 30.3% were hepatitis A, 39.2%
hepatitis B
, 3.0% cytomegalovirus and 1.5%
Epstein
-Barr virus infections. The remaining 25.8% were diagnosed as non-A, non-B hepatitis (NANB). Therefrom, a sample of 167 sera from acute and 78 from chronic hepatitis NANB were tested for hepatitis C. 9.6% of the acute and 44.9% of the chronic cases were positive. We conclude from these data that about 12% of all hepatitis cases in Austria are caused by the hepatitis C virus. In addition, risk groups for hepatitis C were tested. The highest prevalence (80%) was found in drug addicts. Polytransfused (organ transplanted) patients had antibodies in 44.8% of cases. Of 78 dialysis patients, 7 were positive but nearly all positives came from one single dialysis unit, thus indicating a prevalence of 30% there.
...
PMID:[Testing for hepatitis C]. 215 82
A 50-year-old male without relevant past history was admitted because of fever lasting for 23 days. Physical examination showed hepatomegaly and splenomegaly without other findings. Laboratory studies only revealed mildly abnormal hepatic enzymes. The remaining investigations (markers, serologies, antinuclear antibodies, blood and urine cultures) were negative. Chest and abdomen X-ray films were normal. In abdominal echogram a homogeneous liver without space occupying lesions was seen, and computed tomography disclosed enlarged liver, spleen and lymph nodes. Needle hepatic biopsy was reported as showing reactive hepatitis. Although clinically meningeal antibody seroconversions were not found, DNA chains of cytomegalovirus,
Epstein
-Barr virus,
hepatitis B
virus and herpes virus simplex were investigated with the in situ hybridisation technique. Its result was a strongly positive hybridisation for herpes virus and negative for the other investigated viruses.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis of acute hepatitis caused by herpes simplex virus using in situ hybridization]. 215 6
Because of the various neoplastic manifestations of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and the variable period between HIV infection and the development of tumors related to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), it is possible that certain behaviors, toxins, genes, or infectious agents--particularly viruses--may act as cofactors in the pathogenesis of AIDS-related neoplasms. Most epidemiologic and laboratory investigations of possible cofactors have been directed toward Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), by far the most common AIDS-related tumor and one closely associated with male homosexual lifestyle in the U.S. Nonetheless, epidemiologic investigations of putative associations have not demonstrated any clear association between KS and particular viruses. Furthermore, laboratory investigations, both serologic and molecular/genetic, have failed to definitively implicate as cofactors for KS these viruses: cytomegalovirus,
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV), herpes simplex viruses, pathogenic human papillomaviruses, or human herpes virus type 6. Investigations of a suggested association between EBV and AIDS-associated non-Hodgkin's (B cell) lymphomas (NHLs) have also been inconclusive. However, HIV may act as a cofactor in accelerating the development of
hepatitis B
-associated hepatocellular carcinoma. In summary, viral or other cofactors have not been definitely identified as cofactors in AIDS-related tumors.
...
PMID:Possible cofactors for the development of AIDS-related neoplasms. 216 69
A new anti-B19 IgM ELISA was developed using the antibody-capture principle. Biotinylated fusion protein was used as antigen. The specificity of the test was analysed using sera IgM positive to rubella,
hepatitis B
core antigen, cytomegalovirus and
Epstein
Barr virus as well with sera positive for rheumatoid factors, antinuclear antibodies and with sera from normal blood donors. The specificity of the test was 96.18%. One hundred serum samples were tested by the new ELISA and the standard MACRIA tests for the presence of B19 IgM. Eighty-eight sera gave the same results with both tests. Fifty-three were negative and 35 were positive. Six sera were ELISA negative MACRIA positive and six MACRIA negative ELISA positive. In a clinical study with 725 sera from suspected B19 infections, 161 (22%) were recorded as positive by the ELISA test. The positive sera were from patients suffering from arthritis (35%), rash (35%), acute or chronic erythroblastopenia (21%), pancytopenia (5%), vascular purpura (2%) and lymphadenopathy (2%).
...
PMID:Development of an IgM antibody capture test using labelled fusion protein as antigen for diagnosis of B19 human parvovirus infections. 217 82
For 9 months, 38 transfusion-dependent patients with beta-thalassemia, ranging in age from 3.4 to 19.1 years, were observed for serologic evidence of viral infections, by the collection of serial serum samples. Seventy-six age-matched healthy subjects, two for each patient, were followed as controls. Samples taken at the beginning, middle, and end of the study were tested against 18 viral antigens by complement fixation (CF). In addition, tests for antibodies to HIV,
Epstein
-Barr virus, hepatitis A virus, and markers for
hepatitis B
virus were performed. When changes in the antibody titer on CF tests (greater than or equal to 2-fold increase or decrease) or persistently high titers (greater than or equal to 64) were revealed, specific enzyme immunoassays (EIAs) for IgM and IgA antibodies were performed concomitant with CF tests in all sera. When symptomatic infections occurred, viral cultures and/or direct detection of antigens were carried out by immunofluorescence methods, EIA, or latex agglutination tests. Thalassemic patients and controls had similar (p greater than 0.05) overall rates of serologically confirmed viral infections (53 versus 132), but the former group had a higher (p less than 0.01) incidence of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infections (9 versus 4). CMV infections were associated in the thalassemic patients with hepatitis (2 cases), lymphadenitis (2 cases), and upper respiratory tract infection (1 case), while the remaining cases of CMV had a subclinical course. Moreover, the thalassemic patients had a lower (p less than 0.01) incidence of symptomatic infections (27 versus 110) than controls. Therefore, this study showed that both symptomatic and subclinical CMV infections may occur often in thalassemic patients, who otherwise have subclinical viral infections at an overall rate similar to that in healthy subjects.
...
PMID:Viral infections in transfusion-dependent patients with beta-thalassemia major: the predominant role of cytomegalovirus. 217 79
A 71-yr-old male presented with a 2-month history of fever, malaise, and weight loss. Physical exam revealed chorioretinitis. Laboratory studies were notable for elevated levels of alkaline phosphatase, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, aspartate transaminase, and alanine transaminase. Immunoglobulin G antibody to Toxoplasma gondii was positive to a dilution of 1:4096, whereas serologic studies for hepatitis A virus,
hepatitis B
virus, cytomegalovirus,
Epstein
-Barr virus, human immunodeficiency virus, Brucella, and Tularemia were negative. A percutaneous biopsy of the liver revealed hepatic granulomas. Culture of the biopsy specimen was negative for growth of mycobacteria or fungi. Spontaneous improvement in clinical and laboratory parameters occurred over a 4-month period.
...
PMID:Toxoplasmic chorioretinitis and hepatic granulomas. 222 Jul 41
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>