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The association of oligoclonal mixed cryoglobulinemia with cirrhosis in patients infected with hepatitis C virus / Ragab Adly Ali Ahmed ; Supervised Maher Abu Baker Alamir, Nouran Elghandour , Nagwa Roshdy

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: Cairo : Ragab Adly Ali Ahmed , 2017Description: 143 P. : charts , facsimiles ; 25cmOther title:
  • دراسة ارتباط الكرايوجلوبيولين المحدد المنشاء و تليف الكبد فى المرضي المصابين بالالتهاب الكبدى الفيروسى -ج [Added title page title]
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Dissertation note: Thesis (Ph.D.) - Cairo University - Faculty of Medicine - Department of Internal Medicine Summary: Background:Estimates of the prevalence of mixed cryoglobulinemia in people with HCV infection vary widely. This is because of unfamiliarity with clinical symptoms, lead-time bias, and mishandling of specimens. The association between cryoglobulinemia and severe liver affection is a controversial issue. The aim of the present work:To determine whether a specific cryoglobulin type, type IIa and not mixed cryoglobulins in general associate with cirrhosis & its progression in patients infected with hepatitis C virus. Patients and methods:The study conducted on 80 patients infected with HCV (with and without cirrhosis). The subjects were divided into two groups: Group 1: 40 Patients infected with hepatitis C and have evidence of liver cirrhosis. Group 2: 40 Patients infected with hepatitis C without cirrhosis. Data was collected for each patient including age, sex, cryoglobulin characterization, serum HCV-RNA concentration, anti-HCV antibodies, and serum alanine transaminase.Univariate analyses were used to compare demographics, clinical and laboratory data. Differences in proportions were examined with the Chi-square test or Fisher{u2019}s exact test. An unpaired T test was used for continuous variables. All calculated P values are 2-tailed and those < 0.05 were noted. Results:the study showedthe prevalence of mixed cryoglobulinstype IIatest,which was positive in 25% of studied population (both groups), and high positive correlation was detected between the cryoglobulins positivity and presence of cirrhosis, as we found that only 5 patients (12.5%) of group 1 (patients with no evidence of cirrhosis), while it was positive in 15 patients (37.5%) of group 2 (patients with evidence of cirrhosis) which made P-value (0.01) highly statistically significant. Also, it was found that HCV- PCR was significantly elevated in group 1(patients without cirrhosis) than in group 2 with statistically significant P-value 0.01.Finally, our studydid not detect any positive correlation between mixed cryoglobulin type IIa positivity and age, sex, or ALT levels
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Thesis Thesis قاعة الرسائل الجامعية - الدور الاول المكتبة المركزبة الجديدة - جامعة القاهرة Cai01.11.18.Ph.D.2017.Ra.A (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan 01010110073845000
CD - Rom CD - Rom مخـــزن الرســائل الجـــامعية - البدروم المكتبة المركزبة الجديدة - جامعة القاهرة Cai01.11.18.Ph.D.2017.Ra.A (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 73845.CD Not for loan 01020110073845000

Thesis (Ph.D.) - Cairo University - Faculty of Medicine - Department of Internal Medicine

Background:Estimates of the prevalence of mixed cryoglobulinemia in people with HCV infection vary widely. This is because of unfamiliarity with clinical symptoms, lead-time bias, and mishandling of specimens. The association between cryoglobulinemia and severe liver affection is a controversial issue. The aim of the present work:To determine whether a specific cryoglobulin type, type IIa and not mixed cryoglobulins in general associate with cirrhosis & its progression in patients infected with hepatitis C virus. Patients and methods:The study conducted on 80 patients infected with HCV (with and without cirrhosis). The subjects were divided into two groups: Group 1: 40 Patients infected with hepatitis C and have evidence of liver cirrhosis. Group 2: 40 Patients infected with hepatitis C without cirrhosis. Data was collected for each patient including age, sex, cryoglobulin characterization, serum HCV-RNA concentration, anti-HCV antibodies, and serum alanine transaminase.Univariate analyses were used to compare demographics, clinical and laboratory data. Differences in proportions were examined with the Chi-square test or Fisher{u2019}s exact test. An unpaired T test was used for continuous variables. All calculated P values are 2-tailed and those < 0.05 were noted. Results:the study showedthe prevalence of mixed cryoglobulinstype IIatest,which was positive in 25% of studied population (both groups), and high positive correlation was detected between the cryoglobulins positivity and presence of cirrhosis, as we found that only 5 patients (12.5%) of group 1 (patients with no evidence of cirrhosis), while it was positive in 15 patients (37.5%) of group 2 (patients with evidence of cirrhosis) which made P-value (0.01) highly statistically significant. Also, it was found that HCV- PCR was significantly elevated in group 1(patients without cirrhosis) than in group 2 with statistically significant P-value 0.01.Finally, our studydid not detect any positive correlation between mixed cryoglobulin type IIa positivity and age, sex, or ALT levels

Issued also as CD

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