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Query: UNIPROT:P17174 (
aspartate aminotransferase
)
14,872
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The impact of dengue on liver function was studied by biochemical tests on 125 male and 145 female patients diagnosed with this disease during an outbreak that extended from November 1987 to December 1988. Abnormal levels of
aspartate aminotransferase
(
AST
), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (G-GT) were observed in 93.3%, 82.2%, 7.2%, 16.3% and 83.0% of the patients, respectively. The elevation of transaminases was mild to moderate in most cases, but was 10-fold greater than the normal upper limit for
AST
and ALT in 11.1% and 7.4% of the patients, respectively. Initially, the level of
AST
was greater than that of ALT, increasing to maximum levels nine days after the onset of symptoms, then decreasing to normal levels within two weeks. Results of the biochemical tests did not differ significantly between the cases with and without hepatitis B or hepatitis C
virus infection
, but significantly higher elevations of
AST
, ALT, and G-GT were observed in patients with episodes of bleeding. Liver biopsies of two patients showed features of lobular hepatitis. Of the five fatal cases, three died of hepatic failure. It is concluded that dengue fever may cause hepatic injury and transaminase elevation similar to that in patients with conventional viral hepatitis. In epidemic or endemic areas, dengue fever infection should be considered in the differential diagnosis of hepatitis.
...
PMID:Liver biochemical tests and dengue fever. 135 50
As part of a study of the pathology and pathogenesis of bovine ephemeral fever
virus infection
44 cattle were infected by the intravenous injection of virulent virus. Thirty-eight animals responded clinically and detailed haematological and serological data were obtained from 10 of them. Inappetence was the only clinical sign observed before the onset of fever. The temperature response was characteristically biphasic, with the second peak occurring 12 to 24 hours after the first. The only consistent haematological response was an increase in the numbers of circulating neutrophils with a concurrent decline in the numbers of mononuclear leucocytes. There were no detectable changes in plasma or blood volume, packed cell volume, red cell count, haemoglobin concentration, serum calcium, magnesium, phosphorus and creatinine concentrations, or
aspartate aminotransferase
activity. Viraemia was demonstrated on either the first or second day of clinical disease and lasted for at most 48 hours. Low levels of neutralising antibody could be detected within one or two days after the cessation of viraemia. Six antibody-free animals did not respond clinically to injection with virulent virus, and did not develop detectable viraemia or a serum neutralising antibody response.
...
PMID:Clinical response of cattle to experimental infection with bovine ephemeral fever virus. 230 90
The effect of PG on patients with fulminant and subfulminant viral hepatitis (FHF) was studied. 17 patients presented with FHF secondary to hepatitis A (n = 3), hepatitis B (n = 6), and non-A, non-B (NANB) hepatitis (n = 8). 14 of the 17 patients had stage III or IV hepatic encephalopathy (HE). At presentation the mean
aspartate transaminase
(
AST
) was 1,844 +/- 1,246 U/liter, bilirubin 232 +/- 135 mumol/liter, prothrombin time (PT) 34 +/- 18, partial thromboplastin time (PTT) 73 +/- 26 s, and coagulation Factors V and VII 8 +/- 4 and 9 +/- 5%, respectively. Intravenous PGE1 was initiated 24-48 h later after a rise in
AST
(2,195 +/- 1,810), bilirubin (341 +/- 148), PT (36 +/- 15), and PTT (75 +/- 18). 12 of 17 responded rapidly with a decrease in
AST
from 1,540 +/- 833 to 188 +/- 324 U/liter. Improvement in hepatic synthetic function was indicated by a decrease in PT from 27 +/- 7 to 12 +/- 1 s and PTT from 61 +/- 10 to 31 +/- 2 s, and an increase in Factor V from 9 +/- 4 to 69 +/- 18% and Factor VII from 11 +/- 5 to 71 +/- 20%. Five responders with NANB hepatitis relapsed upon discontinuation of therapy, with recurrence of HE and increases in
AST
and PT, and improvement was observed upon retreatment. After 4 wk of intravenous therapy oral PGE2 was substituted. Two patients with NANB hepatitis recovered completely and remained in remission 6 and 12 mo after cessation of therapy. Two additional patients continued in remission after 2 and 6 mo of PGE2. No relapses were seen in the patients with hepatitis A virus and hepatitis B
virus infection
. Liver biopsies in all 12 surviving patients returned to normal. In the five nonresponders an improvement in hepatic function was indicated by a fall in
AST
(3,767 +/- 2,611 to 2,142 +/- 2,040 U/liter), PT (52 +/- 25 to 33 +/- 18 s), and PTT (103 +/- 29 to 77 +/- 44 s), but all deteriorated and died of cerebral edema (n = 3) or underwent liver transplantation (n = 2). These results suggest efficacy of PGE for FHF, and further investigation is warranted.
...
PMID:Biochemical and clinical response of fulminant viral hepatitis to administration of prostaglandin E. A preliminary report. 279 44
Ten yearling white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) were inoculated with bluetongue virus serotype 17. Two yearling white-tailed deer were inoculated with sonicated heparinized noninfected blood and served as controls. Clinical signs of bluetongue
virus infection
included increased rectal temperature, erythema, facial edema, coronitis, and stomatitis. By postinoculation day (PID) 8, excessive bleeding and hematoma formation at venipuncture sites, dehydration, and diarrhea developed. At necropsy, the most consistent findings were oral lesions and widespread hemorrhage, which ranged from petechia to massive hematoma formation. Bluetongue virus caused progressive prolongation of activated partial thromboplastin time and prothrombin time, and progressive reduction of Factors VIII and XII plasma activities beginning on PID 6. A progressive decrease in platelet numbers also developed on PID 6. Changes in platelet size were not detected. Mean thrombin time was shortened, but prolongation developed in 1 deer. Mean fibrinogen concentration and Factor V plasma activity initially increased and then decreased, but remained above preinoculation values. Factor V activity was low in a few deer. Results of screening tests for inhibitors of the intrinsic coagulation system were positive in 2 deer. High concentrations of fibrin(ogen) degradation products were first detected between PID 3 and 6. Hematologic changes included leukopenia, lymphopenia, neutrophilia, and low total plasma protein concentration. Differences in PCV, hemoglobin concentration, or RBC counts were not detected between infected and control deer. Serum total bilirubin concentration increased by PID 6, primarily because of increased unconjugated bilirubin concentration. Mild to severe increases in serum
aspartate transaminase
activity were accompanied by more marked increases in creatine kinase activity. Indirect Coombs test results were negative in all deer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Experimentally induced bluetongue virus infection in white-tailed deer: coagulation, clinical pathologic, and gross pathologic changes. 285 9
The term chronic active hepatitis covers aetiologically different conditions with similar histological features. Autoimmune chronic active hepatitis - the type that was described originally - is the only type which responds well to prednisolone therapy. Autoimmune chronic active hepatitis can be differentiated from other types by serological and other markers. Treatment with prednisolone should be given for at least two years, with adjustment of dosage according to the serum levels of
aspartate transaminase
; maintenance does should be 8-12 mg a day. Azathioprine (50-100 mg a day) may be given concurrently as a corticosteroid-sparing agent. Prednisolone therapy in patients with autoimmune chronic active hepatitis enhances the quality of life and survival is prolonged greatly; currently the survival rate after 10 years for prednisolone-treated cases is at least 70%. Prednisolone is not effective in hepatitis B-associated chronic active hepatitis and may be deleterious. In cryptogenic chronic active hepatitis, in which markers of autoimmunity or hepatitis B
viral infection
are lacking, a trial of prednisolone therapy may be given for three months, and continued only if the indices of disease activity indicate a response. Corticosteroid agents have not proved of benefit in other liver diseases, including alcoholic hepatitis and acute liver failure, and a beneficial effect in primary biliary cirrhosis is yet to be established.
...
PMID:Treatment of chronic active hepatitis and other liver diseases with corticosteroid agents. 356 Dec 94
We measured levels of virus in sequential specimens from 137 patients with Lassa fever. The probability of fatal disease increased significantly with the level of viremia measured either on admission or during the course of illness. The odds ratio of death in patients with viremia greater than 10 TCID50/ml was 3.7 (90% confidence interval, 1.9-7.2). The same ratio in patients with viremia greater than 10 TCID50/ml and with levels of
aspartate aminotransferase
greater than or equal to 150 IU/liter was 21.5 (95% confidence interval, 5.2-99.0). Virus was found in throat cultures from 39% of viremic patients, compared with 14% of nonviremic patients (P less than .002); however, the level of virus was usually less than or equal to TCID50/ml. Fewer than 3% of patients were viruric during acute illness, and virus was isolated from three of three samples of cerebrospinal fluid. On admission, 53% of patients had IgG antibodies, and 67% had IgM antibodies. Recovery was not associated with the presence of either IgG or IgM. Virus was isolated from greater than 100 serum specimens that also contained high titers of IgG. Clinical Lassa fever was shown to be a disseminated systemic, primary
viral infection
, with an outcome highly associated with viremia but not with development of antibody.
...
PMID:Clinical virology of Lassa fever in hospitalized patients. 380 73
Heroin abusers are frequently found to have abnormal liver function tests and hepatic histology. Hepatitis viruses A, B, and NANB, other drugs or drug contaminants and excessive alcohol consumption are factors thought to contribute. One hundred and sixteen heroin abusers attending a London treatment centre were studied. Sixty two (53%) had a raised
aspartate transaminase
. This was not explained by current infection with hepatitis A and B, cytomegalo or Epstein-Barr viruses, excessive alcohol consumption (greater than 80 g/day) or concomitant drug taking. Abnormal liver function tests were as frequent in those with markers of current or past HBV infection as those without and there was evidence that both HBV infection and the cause of the abnormal liver function tests were acquired in the first few years of intravenous drug abuse. Liver biopsies from eight patients showed chronic hepatitis with a mild lobular and portal inflammatory infiltrate, fatty change and prominent sinusoidal cells. Electron microscopy showed cytoplasmic trilaminar tubular structures and dense fused membranes in dilated endoplasmic reticulum. These clinical, biochemical, serological, and histological features would suggest a major role for NANB
virus infection
in the aetiology of hepatitis in heroin abusers.
...
PMID:Clinical, biochemical, serological, histological and ultrastructural features of liver disease in drug abusers. 642 58
Extreme elevation of the serum
aspartate aminotransferase
level typically suggests acute hepatocellular necrosis and may militate against the diagnosis of chronic active hepatitis. However, we found that 26 of 160 patients (16%) with chronic active hepatitis had aminotransferase elevations of more than 1,000 IU/liter. These patients were younger and more often jaundiced than the others, but they exhibited signs of chronic liver disease as often. In only 2 of 26 patients with extreme aminotransferase abnormality were features of chronic disease absent. Patients with extreme enzyme elevation had histologic findings of confluent necrosis (P greater than 0.005) and features associated with acute
viral infection
(P greater than 0.005) more often than others, but they as often had cirrhosis on biopsy specimens. Virologic markers did not distinguish the patients or correlate with viral features in liver tissue. Corticosteroids improved immediate survival (P greater than 0.005) and the likelihood of remission (P greater than 0.005). Although chronic active hepatitis may present with extreme aminotransferase elevation and histologic features associated with acute
viral infection
, ancillary features of chronic disease facilitate the correct diagnosis and the initiation of appropriate therapy.
...
PMID:Prognostic and therapeutic implications of extreme serum aminotransferase elevation in chronic active hepatitis. 704 6
In order to evaluate the persistence of antibodies against hepatitis C virus (HCV) in a chronic hemodialysis population, we studied 151 HBsAg-negative patients. Anti-HCV titers were evaluated every 3 months over 1 year, and the serum alanine aminotransferase/serum
aspartate aminotransferase
ratio monthly from the start of hemodialysis. The anti-HCV titers (ELISA C100-3) remained stable in 127 patients and fluctuated in 24, without an evident correlation with hepatic function. Using our criteria, we found 85 patients with non-A, non-B hepatitis, 57 of them with biochemical criteria of chronic hepatic disease. There was a strong correlation between antibodies to HCV and non-A, non-B hepatitis (chi 2; p < 0.05) which was more marked in those patients with biochemical criteria of chronic hepatic disease (chi 2; p < 0.001). We concluded that the anti-HCV titer is reliable as a long-term marker of hepatitis C
virus infection
.
...
PMID:Persistence of antibodies to hepatitis C virus in a chronic hemodialysis population. 752 4
We have evaluated the histological progression of liver disease in 29 untreated patients with chronic hepatitis C. All patients were positive to antibodies to hepatitis C virus by ELISA2 and RIBA2. Two liver biopsies were carried out for each patient, with an interval ranging between 12 and 126 months (mean 50.2 +/- 30.7). In all cases the usual histological classification was applied and the histological activity index scoring system according to Knodell et al. was determined. Fifteen cases worsened (51.7%), 12 cases showed no histological changes (41.4%) and two patients improved (6.9%). Cirrhosis was found in five patients (18.5%) in the second liver biopsy. Epidemiological, clinical, biochemical and histological progression and the group with impairment in liver histology. Factors related to histological worsening were: more advanced age (p = 0.002), high levels of
aspartate aminotransferase
(p = 0.04), high global histological activity index (p = 0.03) and piecemeal necrosis and bridging necrosis scores (p = 0.02) at first biopsy. The histological activity index can be applied to assess the natural history of chronic viral hepatitis, and is a good tool to evaluate the prognosis. Thus chronic hepatitis C
virus infection
is a histologically progressive disease in at least half the cases.
...
PMID:Histological evolution of chronic hepatitis C. Factors related to progression. 752 89
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