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  2. Hepatitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hepatitis

    First-line treatment of alcoholic hepatitis is treatment of alcoholism. [36] For those who abstain completely from alcohol , reversal of liver disease and a longer life are possible; patients at every disease stage have been shown to benefit by prevention of additional liver injury.

  3. WHO model list of essential in vitro diagnostics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WHO_Model_List_of...

    The first edition contained 62 test categories and the second was updated to include 122 test categories. [2] The categories of tests include: general laboratory tests and disease-specific tests such as for hepatitis B and C, HIV, HPV, malaria, syphilis and tuberculosis.

  4. Antiserum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antiserum

    For example, convalescent serum, passive antibody transfusion from a previous human survivor, used to be the only known effective treatment for ebola infection with a high success rate of 7 out of 8 patients surviving. [1] Antisera are widely used in diagnostic virology laboratories.

  5. Liver abscess - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liver_abscess

    The prognosis has improved for liver abscesses. The mortality rate in-hospital is about 2.5-19%. The elderly, ICU admissions, shock, cancer, fungal infections, cirrhosis, chronic kidney disease, acute respiratory failure, severe disease, or disease of biliary origin have a worse prognosis. [5]

  6. Serology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serology

    Serology is the scientific study of serum and other body fluids.In practice, the term usually refers to the diagnostic identification of antibodies in the serum. [1] Such antibodies are typically formed in response to an infection (against a given microorganism), [2] against other foreign proteins (in response, for example, to a mismatched blood transfusion), or to one's own proteins (in ...

  7. Autoimmune hepatitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autoimmune_hepatitis

    Autoimmune hepatitis, formerly known as lupoid hepatitis, plasma cell hepatitis, or autoimmune chronic active hepatitis, is a chronic, autoimmune disease of the liver that occurs when the body's immune system attacks liver cells, causing the liver to be inflamed.

  8. Amoebic liver abscess - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amoebic_liver_abscess

    The two most common manifestations of E histolytica include colitis (bloody stool with mucus, abdominal pain, and/or diarrhea), and discovery of a liver abscess on imaging. [2] Liver abscesses commonly present as right upper quadrant abdominal pain and fever, with worsening features associated with abscess rupture.

  9. Anti-LKM antibody - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-LKM_antibody

    autoimmune hepatitis type II and chronic hepatitis C (10%) anti-LKM 2: cytochrome P450 2C9: drug-induced hepatitis (tienilic acid–induced) anti-LKM 3: cytochrome P450 1A2: chronic active hepatitis in association with autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type 1; [1] hepatitis D