In patients with chronic hepatitis B infection, the clearance of HBeAg after treatment with interferon alfa is associated with improved clinical outcomes.
Measurement of serum levels of cTnT provides evidence of myocyte injury in patients with clinically suspected myocarditis more sensitively than does conventional determination of cardiac enzyme levels. Myocardial cell damage may be present even in the absence of histologic signs of myocarditis. Additional immunohistologic analysis often shows lymphocytic infiltrates in these patients. Elevated levels of cTnT are highly predictive for myocarditis in this group.
Standardization of methods for the quantification of 25(OH)D on a human-based sample panel by means of LCMS/MS would help to reduce the inter-method variability with respect to accuracy existing in 25(OH)D measurement considerably. However, there will still remain differences in the accuracy of methods utilizing sample purification before final quantification or immunological reaction when compared with those methods without separate sample purification.
Iron deficiency was more common in women, and iron overload was more common in men. Among male employees, iron overload was almost as common as iron deficiency.
Body wasting, protein catabolism, and hypoalbuminemia are complicating features of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Given their multifactorial causes, the contributing role of intestinal protein loss has not yet been fully elucidated. To quantify enteric protein leakage, determination of fecal alpha 1-antitrypsin (AAT) excretion has been established as an accurate and reliable endogenous marker. We estimated AAT concentration by standard immune nephelometry in duplicate random stool samples of 49 patients with AIDS, and we compared it to that of 43 patients with chronic inflammatory bowel disease and to 34 healthy controls. When compared with healthy persons, patients with AIDS had increased fecal AAT excretion regardless of current opportunistic intestinal infections and fecal AAT excretion similar to that of patients with quiescent chronic inflammatory bowel disease. The ratio of fecal and serum AAT concentration was not different between AIDS patients and healthy controls, although it was consistently increased in those with chronic inflammatory bowel disease. Significant intestinal protein leakage occurs in patients with AIDS, probably due to primary impairment of gut permeability. Enteric protein loss may be an important feature of human immunodeficiency virus-associated enteropathy with altered mucosal barrier function.
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