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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The prevalence of hepatitis B
viral infection
has been evaluated by means of a questionnaire. Contributions were made by 160 institutions from 39 countries and involved more than 400 collaborators. HBsAg was identified by a variety of test kits which were available at the time of the questionnaire. Data are presented for the prevalence of HBsAg in acute viral hepatitis, chronic hepatitis,
cirrhosis of the liver
and primary liver cancer. Wide variations in antigenaemia were identified in different countries and between the various forms of liver disease. HBsAg is positive more often in chronic hepatitis than
cirrhosis
. More data using sensitive tests are needed but it appears as if at least one-fifth of the world population has had a previous hepatitis B
virus infection
.
...
PMID:OMGE--Study on prevalence of hepatitis B surface antigen in different liver diseases. 9 55
Liver dysfunction was observed in 33% of patients treated by hemodialysis and kidney transplantation. Fifty-eight percent of these cases of hepatitis occurred in patients with past or present HBs antigenemia, and 77% of HBsAg-positive patients showed evidence of LD. However, during the course of a program conducted from 1969 to 1976 and involving 267 patients, the decrease in the prevalence of HBs antigenemia observed during the last two years did not lead to any reduction in LD incidence. In a small number of patients, potentially hepatotoxic drugs could be incriminated, but in our experience azathioprine never appeared to be involved. In a few patients, LD was due to granulomatous disease of the liver, such as tuberculosis and schistosomiasis. Twenty-one (7%) of the 267 patients at risk developed chronic hepatitis, which contributed to death in nine patients. In 12 cases (three deaths), this form of hepatitis occurred in HBsAg-positive patients, and in nine cases (six deaths), in HBsAg-negative patients. In three of these latter individuals, cytomegalovirus could be incriminated. Routine monthly screening for CMV in kidney recipients confirmed the high incidence of this
viral infection
in such patients. Studies on murine CMV infection have demonstrated that this infection can be enhanced by histoincompatible graft or by cyclophosphamide in a model that is very close to the kidney recipient. As in mice, CMV infection in kidney recipients apparently results from reactivation of a latent infection. It seems to play a major role in the LD observed and could apparently lead to chronic hepatitis and even to
cirrhosis of the liver
. Finally, the occurrence of LD in HBsAg-, anti-HBs- and antiCMV-negative patients would suggest the responsibility of other viruses for the pathogenesis of liver disease in patients treated by hemodialysis and kidney transplantation. Besides Epstein-Barr virus, other viruses, such as hepatitis C virus, should be thoroughly scrutinized.
...
PMID:Liver disease in patients undergoing hemodialysis and kidney transplantation. 11 44
Postmortem diagnosis of
liver cirrhosis
was made over a one-year period in 43 cases, 18 of which also exhibited hepatocellular carcinoma. Blood samples taken from these and 120 other patients who died from other diseases were tested for hepatitis-B antigen (HB-Ag) and its antibodies (HB-AB) by counter-electrophoresis. The types of
cirrhosis
found were classified on the basis of morphological characteristics and available etiological data. The greater part of controls had had cardiovascular diseases and 32 had had non-hepatic carcinoma. Age limits were similar in the cirrhotic and control groups. HB-Ag was detected in 5 of the 25 subjects with macronodular
cirrhosis
and in one alcoholic patient among 18 subjects with other types of
cirrhosis
. The possibility of a coincidental HB
virus infection
existed in the alcoholic case and in one case of macronodular
cirrhosis
. Only one patient with liver carcinoma had HB-Ag. Among the 120 controls, HB-Ag and HB-AB were found in a one case. Microscopic lesions did not seem to be related specifically to the presence of HB-Ag in the cirrhotic livers.
...
PMID:Hepatitis B antigen in liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. 17 69
Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), anti-HBs, and anti-HB core (HBc) were measured in 124 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in comparison with 299 control subjects of comparable ages, and in 48 cases of chronic hepatitis and 52 cases of
hepatic cirrhosis
. It was found that 72.6% of the HCC patients were positive for anti-HBc, and 80.6% were positive for at least one test, whereas in the control, anti-HBc was positive in 30.1% and 34.1% were positive for at least one test, the differences between the two groups being significant (P less than 0.01). The frequencies of positive tests for HBsAg and anti-HBc were the highest in HCC followed in decreasing order by
cirrhosis
, chronic hepatitis and the control group. A possible role of HB
virus infection
in hepatocellular carcinoma is discussed in relation to other factors.
...
PMID:Antibody to hepatitis B core antigen in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. 19 26
Necropsy and clinical data show that primary hepatocellular carcinoma (PHC) is the commonest cancer among the Senoi (a Malaysian aboringine group). The other aboringine tribes do not appear to have this high predilection for liver cancer. In the necropsy series, PHS was present in 10 out of 22 Senoi patients with
cirrhosis
. All the 22 livers contained hepatocytes that stained with Shikata's orcein stain and specific immunoperoxidase and immunofluorescent stains for hepatitis B antigen (HBAg). This observation raises the strong possibility that hepatitis B may be an important etiologic factor in the development of
cirrhosis
and PHC in the Senoi. The reason for the high susceptibility of the Senoi for HB
virus infection
is not clear, and the role of aflatoxin in the pathogenesis of PHC in the Senoi has yet to be determined. That the Senoi are a numerically small community, maintaining their own unique dietary and social customs and living in readily accessible areas in the Malaysian jungle, makes them an ideal population for the study of factors in the etiology of liver cancer.
...
PMID:HBAg-positive chronic liver disease associated with cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma in the Senoi. 19
Aleutian disease is a chronic persistent
viral infection
of mink characterized by hypergammaglobulinema, generalized plasmacytosis, sclerosing glomerulonephritis, polyarteritis, and plasma cell hepatitis with bile duct proliferation. The development of hepatic lesions was studied both light- and electron-microscopically in mink experimentally infected with Aleutian disease virus. Fifteen normal and 99 mink experimentally infected with Aleutian disease virus were used. Experimental mink were killed in intervals from 3 weeks to 23 months after infection, and liver sections were processed for both light- and electron-microscopic studies. Experimentally infected mink developed portal and intralobular lymphocytic and plasmacytic infiltrates in the liver 3 weeks after infection. Four to five weeks after infection there was evidence of early bile duct proliferation that began as an outgrowth of the portal bile ducts. Three to five months after infection a marked bile duct proliferation was present in some of the portal triads and adjacent liver lobules; but there was no tendency of these lesions to progress into biliary
cirrhosis
. Ultrastructural characteristics of proliferating bile duct cells were marked deformation, formation of multiple cell layers, reduction in the number of microvilli and desmosomes, and infiltration of the epithelial cells by lymphoid cells and plasmacytes. The hepatic lesions either develop by direct virus stimulation or by the deposition of virus-antibody complexes.
...
PMID:[Pathogenesis of aleutian mink disease. VII. Chronic hepatitis with bile duct proliferation]. 24 13
Single liver biopsies from 102 clinically diagnosed hepatitis patients were examined by immunofluorescence for the presence of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) and hepatitis B core antigen (HBcAg), complement and immunoglobulin deposition, and for their capacity to fix human complement in vitro. Of the sixty-five HBsAg positive livers, fifty-three were histologically diagnosed as chronic hepatitis, three as acute hepatitis, five as acute hepatitis with signs of transition to chronicity, and four as 'near normal liver'. In the group with chronic hepatitis, HGcAg was observed in thirty-nine livers, all of which also had HBsAg. Thirty-five of these thirty-nine cases also had the ability to fix complement in vitro in the hepatocyte nuclei and/or cytoplasm. Of these thirty-five cases, twenty-nine were positive for immunoglobulin deposition on the nuclei. All of these cases had antibody to HBcAg in the blood, but only five had anti-HBs. The frequency of in vitro complement fixation and immunoglobulin deposition was higher in active forms of the disease, such as chronic aggressive hepatitis and active
cirrhosis
, than in non-active disease such as chronic persistent hepatitis and mild
cirrhosis
. By the application of double fluorescent staining techniques, complement fixation was observed in some HBcAg-positive nuclei. In the 'near normal liver' cases there was no intrahepatic accumulation of HBcAg, and despite the presence of anti-HBc in the blood, in vitro complement fixation and immunoglobulin deposition were both absent. The group of three HBsAg ositive 'acute hepatitis with signs of transition to chronicity' cases behaved similarly to those with chronic aggressive hepatitis and had circulating anti-HBc, in vitro complement fixation and immunoglobulin deposition in the hepatocytes. None had circulating anti-HBs. In the group sith HBs-positive acute hepatitis, anti-HGc in the blood was the only other evidence of hepatitis B
virus infection
.
...
PMID:Hepatitis B core antigen immune complexes in the liver of hepatitis B patients. 38 86
Ten cases of hepatitis B
virus infection
were identified among asymptomatic male homosexuals. These patients shared a number of characteristics: A subclinical origin and course of infection; Persistence of HGsAg for periods exceeding six to 25 months; Persistent GPT elevation of two to five times upper normal limit; Morphological changes in the liver with portal and parenchymal inflammation (chronic persistent hepatitis, six cases; non-specific reactive hepatitis, 2 cases;
cirrhosis
and acute hepatitis with signs of chronicity, one case each). HBeAg was found in six cases, anti-HBe in none. These results indicate that screening for hepatitis B should be performed whenever these individuals come under medical attention in order to detect asymptomatic chronic liver diseases and to detect these silent vectors of an infection that presently shows an increased frequency among homosexuals.
...
PMID:Chronic hepatitis B infection in male homosexuals. 51 38
Sera from patients with chronic liver disease were tested for antibody against hepatitis B surface antigen by radioimmunoassay. The antibody was found in 25% of patients with alcoholic cirrhosis and in 52% when alcoholic cirrhosis was associated with portal hypertension, these results being significantly higher than in a matched control population. Other forms of chronic liver disease did not differ from the control population. Hepatitis B
virus infection
might be a factor in determining which alcoholic patients go on to develop chronic liver disease and
cirrhosis
.
...
PMID:Hepatitis Bs antibody in alcoholic cirrhosis. 51 37
Five patients with
cirrhosis
proved by biopsy had clinical, biochemical, and serological evidence of an acute hepatitis B infection. In two the illness was fulminant and led to death. Only one patient completely recovered. Serological markers for the hepatitis B virus were absent before the onset of the acute illness in four patients, which suggested that a de novo infection had been acquired as a result of recent transfusions of blood or blood products. The fifth patient, who had Goodpasture's syndrome, had antibody to the core of hepatitis B virus, indicating previous exposure to the virus; his acute hepatitis may have been related to immunosuppressive drug treatment, which may have reactivated a dormant
virus infection
. Thus an acute type B viral hepatitis due to either a de novo or a reactivated infection may be superimposed on
cirrhosis
.
...
PMID:De novo acute infection and reactivation of hepatitis B virus in established cirrhosis. 51 21
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