De novo acute infection and reactivation of hepatitis B virus in established cirrhosis

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Abstract

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. © 1979, British Medical Journal Publishing Group. All rights reserved.

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Theodossi, A., Wilkinson, S. P. W., Portmann, B., White, Y., Eddleston, A. L. W. F., Williams, R., & Zuckerman, A. J. (1979). De novo acute infection and reactivation of hepatitis B virus in established cirrhosis. British Medical Journal, 2(6195), 893–895. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.2.6195.893

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