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1.
OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinical picture of arthritis in patients with chronic infection by hepatitis C virus (HCV). METHODS: Two patient populations were studied. Patients with arthritis and evidence of serum elevation of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) at the consultation were checked for HCV infection. A second group of 303 consecutive patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) were also checked for the presence of HCV antibodies. All patients attended the outpatient rheumatology unit of a tertiary care teaching hospital. Chronic HCV infection was determined by the presence of viral RNA in serum. A group of 315 first-time blood donors served as controls. RESULTS: Twenty-eight patients with arthritis and chronic HCV infection were identified. Seven fulfilled criteria for RA, psoriatic arthritis was found in one patient, systemic lupus erythematosus in one, gout in 2, chondrocalcinosis in 2, osteoarthritis in 7, and tenosynovitis in one. In 7 patients with a clinical picture of intermittent arthritis, a definitive diagnosis could not be made. In these patients, mixed cryoglobulinemia was present in 6/7 (86%), whereas mixed cryoglobulinemia was found in 6/21 (28%) of the other patients. Among patients with RA, 23 (7.6%) had HCV antibodies, and active infection by HCV was found in 7 (2.3%) patients. The prevalence of HCV antibodies in a blood donor population was 0.95%, significantly different (p<0.001; 95% CI 0.03, 0.10) compared to patients with RA. The distribution of antibodies determined by recombinant immunoblot analysis was similar (p = NS) between RA patients and blood donors with HCV antibodies. CONCLUSION: There is not a single clinical picture of arthritis in patients with chronic HCV infection. There is a well defined picture of arthritis associated with the presence of mixed cryoglobulinemia that consists of an intermittent, mono or oligoarticular, nondestructive arthritis affecting large and medium size joints. Although a high prevalence of HCV antibodies is suspected in patients with RA, its occurrence may be coincidental and its interpretation is difficult to determine from the data in this study.  相似文献   

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Forty five blood donors with increased serum aminotransferases levels had liver histologic assessment and were tested for antibodies to hepatitis C virus (anti-HCV) with second and third generation ELISAs and RIBAs, and for HCV RNA with polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in serum and liver tissue. Twenty-nine of these 45 donors (65%) had steatosis without chronic hepatitis. Sixteen (35%) had chronic hepatitis. Twelve had evidence of HCV infection. Four had no evidence of HCV infection demonstrable by ELISA, RIBA or PCR. These four patients had no known cause of chronic hepatitis and no risk factor for parenterally acquired viral infection was found in them. This observation supports the hypothesis that a non-B, non-C virus might be implicated in chronic hepatitis. However, this hypothesis remains to be demonstrated.  相似文献   

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INTRODUCTION: The newly discovered (1995) hepatitis G virus (HGV) is an RNA virus from the Flaviviridae family with 85% genomic homology to GB virus C (GBV-C). We studied the prevalence of HGV infection among a cohort of 398 renal transplant recipients (RTR), all of whom had previously received blood transfusions, been grafted between August 1984 and December 1991, and been treated by cyclosporin A (CsA) as the main immunosuppressant. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: According to hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibody status, and after exclusion of 28 HBs antigen-positive recipients, this cohort had previously been divided into an HCV +ve subgroup (106 RTR; 62 M vs 44 F; 29 French vs 77 non-French) and an HCV -ve subgroup (264 RTR; 181 M vs 83 F, 196 French vs 68 non-French). We randomly selected 27 RTR in the HCV+/HBV- subgroup (14 M vs 13 F, 10 French vs 17 Italians) and 27 RTR in the HCV-/HBV- subgroup (19 M vs 8 F, 18 French vs 9 Italians) for HGV screening. The detection of HGV RNA sequences in serum (viraemia) was done by double nested RT-PCR using specific primers chosen in the 5' non-coding genomic region. The serum detection of specific antibodies (anti E2) was done by ELISA test. All sera (at time of liver biopsy or at last follow-up) were tested in duplicate. RESULTS: The prevalence of HGV viraemia was 26% (14/54) in the whole group and in both HCV +ve and -ve subgroups (7/27). The prevalence of HGV infection (viraemia + and/or anti E2 antibodies +) was 44% (24/54) in the whole group and in both HCV +ve and -ve subgroups (12/27). In addition, the prevalence was similar in males vs females and in French vs foreigners recipients (mostly Italians). In the HCV +ve subgroup, the seven HGV viraemia-positive patients who previously had liver biopsies disclosed chronic active hepatitis in four (mean Knodell score 5.75) and normal livers in three, with only one case of elevated ALT (CAH 5). In the HCV- subgroup, none of the seven HGV+ viraemic patients had elevated ALT and liver biopsy was not performed. CONCLUSION: HGV infection prevalence is high (44%) in RTR, but clearly independent of HCV status and/or the geographical origin of the recipients. This data indicates a different epidemiology as compared to our HCVs previous experience.  相似文献   

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The risks of acquisition of hepatitis C infection, the histological spectrum of liver disease, and the presence of viraemia were investigated in anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibody positive blood donors. All 357 (0.64%) blood donors to the South Australian Red Cross Transfusion Service found to have anti-HCV antibody during the first seven months of testing in 1990 were assessed, and 70 (19.6%) were found to have elevated alanine transaminase levels. These subjects were referred for participation in the study; 31 presented for enrollment. Sixteen (52%) of the 31 patients had previously used intravenous drugs, four (13%) had been transfused, two (6%) had a history of occupational exposure to blood, and three (10%) had tattoos and ear-piercing as possible risk factors for acquisition of hepatitis C. There was no history of parenteral exposure in six (16%). None of these donors had clinical evidence of liver disease, but in all 24 of the 31 who had a liver biopsy there was histological evidence of significant liver damage. Twelve had evidence of chronic active hepatitis. All 24 subjects biopsied were viraemic as judged by the presence of HCV RNA in serum.  相似文献   

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We investigated the course of distinct episodes of acute non-A, non-B (NANB) hepatitis in three polytransfused thalassaemic children. In each case, the first episode was associated with the appearance of serum hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA and anti-HCV seroconversion. The second episode was accompanied by the reappearance of HCV viraemia, which in two patients was due to reinfection with a different HCV strain and in the third could be the result of either reactivation of primary infection or reinfection with a new but closely related strain. Thus HCV infection may not induce protective immunity, which has implications for vaccine development.  相似文献   

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Nested RT-PCR, done by using degenerated primer pair, was used to detect hepatitis C virus RNA (HCV RNA) in serum, plasma, liver and peripheral blood leukocytes (PBLC) of 30 patients with acute and chronic posttransfusion hepatitis C and 7 asymptomatic anti-HCV positive subjects. The results showed that the percentage of positive HCV RNA in PBLC, including both the plus and minus strands, in patients with chronic hepatitis C was significantly higher than that in acute hepatitis C and asymptomatic anti-HCV positive subjects (P < 0.05-0.001). All the 7 asymptomatic anti-HCV positive subjects did not have detectable minus strand of HCV RNA in their PBLC, serum or plasma. In 17 patients who had liver histologic examination, the positive rate of both strands of HCV RNA in PBLC of acute hepatitis (AH) was lower than that of chronic active hepatitis (CAH) (P < 0.05). Both strands of HCV RNA were detected in the liver of one AH and 6 CAH patients. The present data confirmed that PBLC of patients with hepatitis C were indeed infected by HCV. The longer the infection time, the more the chance of PBLC being infected by HCV. Patients with active liver disease (CAH) had usually higher positive rate of minus strands of HCV RNA in PBLC. In the serum and plasma of all the 37 cases, minus strand of HCV RNA was not detected and the positive rate of the plus strand of HCV RNA in their serum and plasma was similar. Futhermore, the positive rate of both plus and minus strands of HCV RNA in PBLC of 30 patients with chronic hepatitis C was also similar. It is suggested that HCV not only may infect PBLC, but also replicate in PBLC and that the occurrence of minus strand of HCV RNA is associated with activity of liver disease.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND: Liver disease in chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection ranges from minimal lesions to liver cirrhosis, eventually evolving to hepatocellular carcinoma. Whether and how HCV determines the different clinical and histological manifestations of the disease is not fully understood. AIMS: To verify whether the amount of virus in individual patients could be related to the severity of liver injury. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Levels of HCV RNA were measured in serum in 96 consecutive patients with chronic hepatitis type C using a signal amplification assay. The relation between viraemic values and the corresponding viral load in the liver was assessed in a subgroup of 21 patients in whom HCV RNA was measured in serum samples and liver specimens obtained at the same time. RESULTS: A positive correlation was observed between the amount of viral nucleic acid in the two compartments, indicating that levels of viraemia reflect the amount of virus present in the liver. Viral load did not correlate with aminotransferase activities nor with histological diagnosis, and serum and liver levels of HCV RNA were not significantly different in patients infected by the various HCV genotypes. CONCLUSIONS: Measurement of HCV replication in serum is a mirror of viral replication in the liver. The extent of replicative activity of HCV does not seem to play a role in the modulation of the associated hepatic disease.  相似文献   

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It has been shown that hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is closely associated with mixed type cryoglobulinaemia. It is also known that HCV infection is rampant among chronic haemodialysis patients. We studied 531 renal failure patients on maintenance dialysis including 170 with positive HCV antibodies for cryoglobulinaemia, and its incidence was compared with controls which consisted of 242 chronic hepatitis C patients without renal failure and 183 healthy adults. Cryoglobulinaemia was present in 30.6% of dialysis patients with HCV infection, 10.8% of dialysis patients without HCV infection, 29.8% of patients with chronic hepatitis C without renal failure, and 0% of healthy adults. Among the 30 new renal failure patients who were started on dialysis within 6 months, four were positive for HCV antibodies, and one of them had cryoglobulinaemia; of the 26 HCV-negative patients, four (15%) were cryoglobulinaemic. The cryocrit values among dialysis patients were much lower than those of the control cases and other reports on non-dialysis cases. Patients with cryoglobulinaemia were generally younger compared with patients negative for this condition. There was no correlation between cryoglobulinaemia and past blood transfusion, underlying disease or length of dialysis. Cryoglobulinaemic patients seem to develop renal failure at relatively young ages and a considerable proportion of cryoglobulinaemic dialysis patients may have already had cryoglobulinaemia at the time of the start of haemodialysis. There was no indication that the presence of cryoglobulin in serum adversely affects the liver disease nor increases serum virus load in HCV-infected dialysis patients. Thus, it was concluded that although HCV infection has a certain role in the development of cryoglobulinaemia in dialysis patients, they develop cryoglobulinaemia less frequently and produce cryoglobulin to a lesser degree in the presence of HCV infection as compared with non-dialysis patients.  相似文献   

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Therapy with ribavirin for 6-12 months is associated with decreases in serum aminotransferases in some patients with chronic hepatitis C. We have assessed the practicality and safety of prolonged therapy with ribavirin. Six patients with chronic hepatitis C were given 1000-1200 mg of ribavirin daily for 24 months. Serum aminotransferases and hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA levels were monitored during and after therapy. Liver biopsies were carried out before and at the end of treatment. With therapy, mean serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels fell from 161 U/L to 45 U/L at 12 months and to 39 U/L at 24 months. HCV RNA levels did not change. Liver histology improved in five and was unchanged in one patient. When therapy was stopped, aminotransferases rose to pretreatment levels. Side effects included mild fatigue and headaches. Two patients developed gallstones during therapy, perhaps caused by the chronic haemolysis that occurred in all patients. In conclusion, prolonged therapy with ribavirin can result in sustained improvements in serum aminotransferases and hepatic histology in a proportion of patients with chronic hepatitis C. Ribavirin therapy does not cause decreases in viraemia and, therefore, probably must be continued indefinitely to provide lasting benefit. The advantages of such therapy must be weighed against possible long-term side-effects.  相似文献   

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Positive serum anti-nuclear antibody (ANA) and anti-smooth muscle antibody (SMA) have been reported in 10-66% of patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection from Western countries. However, the mechanism involved in this immunological disorder is still unknown. This study was carried out to evaluate the prevalence and clinical significance of positive serum auto-antibodies in Chinese patients with chronic hepatitis C and to assess the role of serum HCV-RNA titre and HCV genotype in the presence of serum auto-antibodies. Serum ANA, SMA and anti-mitochondrial antibody (AMA) were measured in 122 patients with chronic hepatitis C. Clinical, biochemical and virological data (serum HCV-RNA titre and HCV genotype) were compared between patients with and without serum auto-antibodies. Fifty-eight (48%) patients were associated with positive serum auto-antibodies: 42 (34%) positive for ANA, six (5%) positive for SMA, nine (7%) positive for both ANA and SMA and one (1%) positive for AMA. Clinical parameters (age, sex, blood transfusion history), liver biochemical tests, the presence of cryoglobulinaemia or cirrhosis, and the response to interferon treatment were not significantly different between patients with and without positive serum auto-antibodies. Serum HCV-RNA levels and HCV genotypes were also not significantly different between the two groups. Logistic regression analysis showed that none of the previously mentioned parameters were significant predictors to associate with serum auto-antibodies in chronic hepatitis C. We concluded that 48% of Chinese patients with chronic hepatitis C were associated with positive serum auto-antibodies. Hepatitis C virus genotypes and serum HCV-RNA levels were not correlated to the presence of serum auto-antibodies. The clinical significance and actual pathogenesis of this phenomenon remain to be clarified.  相似文献   

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OBJECTIVE: To identify independent patient, disease and viral characteristics that predict a sustained biochemical or viral response to interferon alfa therapy in patients with chronic hepatitis C. Design: Comparison of interferon responders and non-responders by univariate and multivariate analysis. SETTING: The hepatitis clinic of the Alfred Hospital, Melbourne (a tertiary referral hospital), between July 1989 and June 1994. SUBJECTS: All patients with chronic hepatitis C who were treated with interferon alfa (IFN-alpha; 3 million IU, three times a week or more) for at least 12 weeks. OUTCOME MEASURES: Patient demographic and epidemiologic characteristics, pretreatment serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and 2-gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT) levels, histological grading of hepatic steatosis, necroinflammatory activity and fibrosis, serum hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA titres and genotype and post-treatment serum ALT levels and presence of HCV RNA. Results: Of 58 patients, 13 (22%) had a sustained (six months or longer) biochemical response to IFN-alpha therapy, including 12 (21%) with a sustained viral response. Univariate analysis showed that young patients with a normal serum GGT level, grade 0-1 steatosis and fibrosis, low viral titre and infection with genotypes 3a and 2a were more likely to have a sustained response. Infection with genotypes other than 1a and 1b was the only independent variable associated with both a sustained biochemical and viral response. After adjusting for genotype, a hepatic fibrosis grade of 0-1 was also independently associated with viral response. This logistic regression model accurately predicted the virological response in 80% of cases. Conclusion: In Australian patients with chronic hepatitis C, a sustained viral response to IFN-alpha therapy is most likely in those infected with a genotype other than 1a or 1b and with minimal hepatic fibrosis.  相似文献   

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OBJECTIVES: The hepatitis G virus (HGV) is a newly described flavivirus that affects a high proportion of patients with chronic viral hepatitis: our objective was to determine what role HGV might play in the course of disease. METHODS: We evaluated stored serum samples from 108 patients with chronic hepatitis B and 99 patients with chronic hepatitis C who participated in trials of alpha-interferon or ribavirin for the presence of hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA and hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA by branched DNA and for the presence of HGV RNA by polymerase chain reaction (PCR), using primers from the NS5 region of the genome. RESULTS: Initially, 20 (19%) patients with hepatitis B and 11 (11%) with hepatitis C had HGV RNA in their serum. Patients with and without HGV infection were similar with regard to clinical features, laboratory tests, and hepatic histology. HGV RNA levels fell during interferon therapy and became undetectable in those receiving the highest doses; however, HGV RNA levels returned to pretreatment values when therapy was stopped. With ribavirin therapy, HGV RNA levels did not change. Two- to 12-yr follow-up serum samples were available from 17 initially HGV RNA-positive patients, of whom only 10 (59%) were still positive. CONCLUSIONS: HGV infection is common among patients with chronic hepatitis B and C but has little effect on the short-term course of disease or response to therapy. HGV RNA levels are suppressed but not eradicated by alpha-interferon and are unaffected by ribavirin treatment. Spontaneous loss of HGV RNA occurs over time in a proportion of patients.  相似文献   

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The possibility of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in HBsAg-negative patients has been shown. However, an "inapparent" coinfection by HBV in hepatitis C virus (HCV)-positive patients generally is not taken into account in clinical practice. Mechanisms responsible for resistance to interferon (IFN) have not been completely clarified. The aim of this study was to investigate whether an "inapparent" coinfection by HBV in anti-HCV-positive chronic liver disease patients may influence IFN response. Fourteen anti-HCV positive, HBsAg-negative but serum HBV DNA-positive patients by PCR and 111 anti-HCV-positive, HBsAg-negative and HBV DNA (PCR)-negative patients with chronic hepatitis were treated with 3 MU of recombinant alpha-2a IFN 3 times weekly for 12 months. Serum HBV DNA and HCV RNA were determined before treatment, after 6-12 months and in coincidence with ALT flare-up by PCR. HBV PCR was performed using primers specific for the S region of the HBV genome and HCV PCR with primers localised in the 5'NC region of HCV genome. IgM anti-HBc was tested using IMx Core-M Abbott assay. By the end of treatment, ALT values had become normal in 4/14 HBV DNA-positive patients (28%), but all "responders" (4/4) relapsed between 2 and 5 months after therapy. All but one patient were HCV RNA-positive before treatment, 6 were also both HBV DNA and HCV RNA-positive during ALT flare-ups. In 5 patients, only HBV DNA and in 3 patients, only HCV RNA was detected when transaminase values increased. All patients remained HBsAg-negative and anti-HCV-positive. IgM anti-HBc was detected both before treatment and during ALT elevation in 3 patients and only during ALT relapse in 3 others. Of the 111 anti-HCV positive, HBsAg-negative and HBV DNA (PCR)-negative patients with chronic hepatitis, a biochemical response to IFN treatment was observed in 54% of the cases. Relapse of ALT values was observed in 47% of the cases during a follow-up of 1 year after treatment. "Inapparent" HBV/HCV coinfection may be implicated in cases of resistance to IFN treatment. In addition, HBV replication may persist in patients in whom HCV replication was inhibited by IFN treatment. The pathogenic role of HBV in liver disease was confirmed by detection of IgM anti-HBc in some cases; the appearance of these antibodies only after IFN treatment suggests that IFN may exert a selective role in favour of HBV. Further studies will show the effect of different treatment schedules. HBV DNA and/or IgM anti-HBc detection with very sensitive methods may be important both as a prognostic factor and as a tool for better understanding interviral relationships and mechanisms involved in multiple hepatitis virus infections.  相似文献   

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Hepatitis G virus (HGV) causes persistent infection in man, but its disease association is controversial. We studied the HGV disease association in 25 liver transplantation (LT) recipients without evidence of hepatitis B and C infection. HGV RNA was tested by semiquantitative RT-PCR in serial serum samples and its presence was correlated with the biochemical and histological evidence of liver damage. The overall prevalence of HGV infection in this population was 9/25 (36%), one patient being HGV RNA positive since before LT, while the other eight apparently acquired de novo infections after LT. In five cases, appearance of HGV was followed by biochemical and histological evidence of liver damage: the liver biopsy showed acute rejection in two cases, acute cholangitis in two, and acute hepatitis in one. At the end of follow-up, histological evidence of chronic hepatitis was found in one HGV-positive patient but also in three HGV-negative patients, whereas the only patient with acute hepatitis at the time HGV RNA was first detected in serum developed an intralobular gigantocellular granuloma. In conclusion, HGV infection after LT may be seldom associated with acute and chronic liver damage, but comparable histological features can be observed also among HGV-negative controls.  相似文献   

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