The occurrence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection amongst chronic renal failure (CRF) patients in our Nephrology Unit was investigated over a period of 1 year. A total of 71 patients was studied comprising 26 chronic haemodialysis (CHD) patients, 6 acute haemodialysis patients, 4 peritoneal dialysis patients and 35 CRF patients not on dialysis. Patients were screened before and after haemodialysis, and their baseline and postdialysis values of liver enzymes were determined. Eleven (15.5%) of the total 71 patients were HCV antibody positive. Analysis of the individual patient groups showed that 8 (30.7%) of the 26 CHD patients were positive for HCV. Our data showed a statistically significant relationship between seroconversion and duration of dialysis (p < 0.05). A high statistically significant (p < 0.0001) correlation was observed between the HCV antibodies and CRF. The relative risk of hepatitis C was about 22 times greater for those with CRF compared with the normal controls, which makes CRF an important risk factor. A high proportion of the HCV seroconverters had elevated liver enzyme (serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase). The data presented show a positive correlation between HCV seroconversion, CRF, duration on dialysis and elevated serum liver enzymes.
Eighty-three patients with chronic end-stage renal failure, including 65 on haemodialysis and 18 on intermittent peritoneal dialysis, were evaluated for hepatitis B virus profile and antibodies to hepatitis C virus (HCV). All those positive for HBsAg were excluded from the study. Nineteen patients were found to be positive for antibodies to HCV by the ELISA II test. Eight cases were already positive for HCV antibody when they started dialysis in our unit, the other 11 became positive during dialysis in our unit. Only one of the patients on peritoneal dialysis was positive for HCV. A liver biopsy was obtained from 17 patients, who consented to the procedure. All the cases were evaluated for the number of blood transfusions received, HIV infection and the approximate time of contracting the HCV infection. Liver enzymes were determined every month. Only three patients had abnormally raised serum aminotransferase at the time of biopsy. The various histopathological lesions detected were chronic active hepatitis (n = 3, including one with changes consistent with cirrhosis), chronic persistent hepatitis (n = 4), non-specific hepatitis (n = 3) and haemosiderosis (n = 3); four biopsy samples were normal. There was no correlation between the biochemical and histopathological changes. Moreover, patients with normal serum aminotransferase levels had abnormal histopathological changes. All were negative for HIV and none of the patients had received a renal graft. Twelve patients had received blood transfusions varying from 2 to 12 units, four had not received any blood, and in one the history of blood transfusion could not be confirmed. The four patients with anti-HCV antibodies who had not received blood transfusion had relatively mild disease--non-specific hepatitis (n = 2) or normal biopsy (n = 2). One patient with cirrhosis died 30 months after liver biopsy from hepatic insufficiency and three received renal transplants. Others are continuing on dialysis and their biochemical tests are within normal limits 12-45 (30 +/- 14) months after biopsy. In conclusion, biochemical tests are poor indicators of liver disease, and liver biopsy is a definitive way of evaluating the patients of dialysis with positive HCV antibodies for prognosis.
Therapeutic efficacy and clinical side-effects of ivermectin (single dose of 100 micrograms/kg) and diethylcarbamazine (DEC) (3 mg/kg for one day, then 6 mg/kg daily for 12 d) were evaluated for microfilaricidal effect in Bancroftian filariasis. Seventy-one microfilaraemic consenting adult male patients (greater than or equal to 100 microfilariae (mf)/ml) were randomly assigned to receive ivermectin, DEC or placebo and kept in hospital for 15 d. Those receiving placebo were treated with ivermectin on day 9. Ivermectin (19 'double-blinded' and 22 'unblinded' patients) caused an abrupt reduction in mf count to 1.5% of the pre-treatment level 12 h after drug administration and to 0.06% on day 14, with recrudescence to 1.8% after one month and to 9.2% after 3 months. DEC (30 patients) caused a gradual drop in mf count to 1.1% of the pre-treatment level on day 14, which increased to 2.4% after one and 3 months. The total scores of side-effects were 77 (1%), 305 (2.1%) and 311.5 (3.0%) for placebo, ivermectin and DEC respectively; the differences between DEC or ivermectin and placebo were statistically significant. Ivermectin produced lower side-reaction scores than DEC and the differences were highly significant at the 95% confidence level. Side-effects were mainly headache and body aches in the ivermectin patients, which appeared as early as 4 h after drug administration, resolved within 36 to 48 hours, and were significantly related to mf densities. Side-effects in DEC patients were mainly testicular and epididymal pain and swelling, unrelated to mf densities, which began at day 2 and continued to day 7.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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