In 1994, the team of Tchernev and Petrova
from Alexandrovska Hospital in Sofia examined a female patient with
liver cirrhosis caused by chronic Hepatitis C virus (HCV).
They were intrigued by the patient's many extra-hepatic manifestations
-- vascular lesions on the lower limbs, acute pain in the joints,
intense tingling of the fingers, and extreme labor-impairing fatigue.
They were also intrigued by the presence of cryoglobulins in the
patient's blood. Two years later, the patient developed enlarged lymph
nodes on the neck. When one of the nodes was histologically tested, the
patient was found to have lymphoma.
This case spurred the interest of the investigators in the
extra-hepatic manifestations and complications of HCV infection, and
for over a decade they studied the links between HCV infection,
cryoglobulinemia, and lymphoma.
A research article published on December 28, 2007 in the World
Journal of Gastroenterology addresses this problem. In a study of 136
Bulgarian patients with HCV, the team of Tchernev and Petrova found
76.5% of the patients had extra-hepatic manifestations. Common
manifestations were fatigue (59.6%), renal impairment (25%), type 2
diabetes (22.8%), paresthesia (19.9%), arthralgia (18.4%), and purpura
predominantly of the lower limbs (17.6%). Over 37% of the patients had
cryoglobulins, and 8.8% had B-cell lymphoma.
The study found positive links between the presence of extra-hepatic
manifestations and age, female gender, duration of the infection,
infection by transfusion of blood and blood products, and extensive
liver fibrosis. Therefore, elderly women with chronic HCV and advanced
liver fibrosis, who were infected by transfusion during childbirth, are
at the highest risk of developing extra-hepatic manifestations of HCV
infection.
The study also showed most extra-hepatic manifestations of HCV
infection are associated with the presence of cryoglobulins. In
particular, the risks of developing B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma are
much higher in cryoglobulin-positive than in cryoglobulin-negative
patients. In the study, 17.6% of cryoglobulin-positive patients had
lymphoma, whereas only 3.5% of cryoglobulin-negative patients did.
Given the prevalence of HCV around the world, it is
important for physicians to recognize the extra-hepatic signs and
symptoms of HCV infection. Patients who exhibit such manifestations
should be tested for HCV infection. This can lead to prompt diagnosis
and effective treatment of the infection before the development of
cryoglobulinemia, when treatment gives poor results or is ineffective.
-World Journal of Gastroenterology.
http://www.huliq.com/47399/extra-hepatic-manifestation-hepatitis-c-virus-infection
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