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» LymeNet Flash » Questions and Discussion » Medical Questions » hepatits blood panel

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Author Topic: hepatits blood panel
dan67
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Has anyone had bordeline positive hepatitus bloodwork? I haven't had mine done yet, doing it soon, but I have heard others having this happen.
Posts: 641 | From Nevada | Registered: May 2009  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
joalo
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Up.

--------------------
Sick since January 1985. Misdiagnosed for 20 years. Tested CDC positive October 2005. Treating since April 2006.

Posts: 3228 | From Somewhere west of the Mississippi | Registered: Aug 2007  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Al
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OF INTEREST ,-----

HCV is Detected in Liver of HCV Antibody-Positive But HCV RNA Negative Patients, so don't assume HCV has been cleared if viral load is undetectable

"Detection of Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) RNA in the Liver of Healthy, Anti-HCV Antibody-Positive, Serum HCV RNA-Negative Patients with Normal Alanine Aminotransferase Levels"

".....the majority of healthy patients who test positive for anti-HCV antibodies and have normal ALT levels but who do not have HCV RNA detected in serum have an ongoing HCV infection because HCV RNA is detected in the liver. The epidemiological and clinical relevance of this finding should be studied in the future....."

The Journal of Infectious Diseases July 1, 2006;194:53-60
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Hepatology. 2008 Dec;48(6):1737-45.


Histological changes in HCV antibody-positive, HCV RNA-negative subjects suggest persistent virus infection.
Hoare M, Gelson WT, Rushbrook SM, Curran MD, Woodall T, Coleman N, Davies SE, Alexander GJ.
SourceDepartment of Medicine, School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.

Abstract
It is unclear whether hepatitis C virus (HCV) has been eradicated or persists at a low level in HCV antibody-positive HCV RNA-negative individuals. The natural history and liver histology are not well characterized. One hundred seventy-two HCV antibody-positive, serum HCV RNA-negative patients underwent diagnostic liver biopsy between 1992 and 2000 and were followed a median 7 years (range, 5-12). Patients with any possible cause of liver injury other than HCV were excluded. A single histopathologist scored sections using Ishak criteria. Characterization of the inflammatory infiltrate in selected cases used a novel semiquantitative technique and compared with HCV RNA-positive patients and healthy controls. One hundred two patients were excluded because of a risk factor for liver injury other than HCV. Seventy patients met the study criteria; four (5.7%) became HCV RNA-positive during follow-up. Sixty-six cases remained HCV RNA-negative; five (7.5%) had a normal liver biopsy; 54 (82%) had fibrosis (stage 2 or 3 in 16 (24%)). Nonviremic cases revealed expanded portal tracts with fewer CD4+ and more CD8+ cells than healthy controls, but were indistinguishable from HCV RNA-positive cases for these parameters. Lobular CD4 staining, absent in healthy controls, was noted in both HCV RNA-negative and -positive cases and was more marked in the latter with a sinusoidal lining cell distribution. Conclusion: Nonviremic HCV antibody-positive patients have a liver biopsy that is usually abnormal. Fibrosis was present in most with similar inflammatory infiltrate to viremic cases. The presence of a CD8+ rich inflammatory infiltrate suggests an ongoing immune response in the liver, supporting the view that HCV may persist in the liver in the majority of HCV RNA-negative cases.

Posts: 789 | From CT, | Registered: Jun 2006  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
   

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