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1.
Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences. 2011; 27 (4): 780-783
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-113659

ABSTRACT

To determine frequency of depression in chronic hepatitis C na‹ve patients before interferon therapy using CES-D questionnaire. Patients testing positive antibodies to HCV by EIA of more than 6 months duration and who have not taken interferon therapy previously were included after taking informed consent. Patients who had co-infections such as hepatitis B and D virus or human immunodeficiency virus, or patients with other coexisting chronic liver disease like primary biliary cirrhosis, chronic autoimmune hepatitis and Wilson disease were excluded from study. Urdu version of CES-D a self-reporting questionnaire in public domain was administered. A score of >/= 10 was taken consistent with depression. Ninety-six patients were included and 59.4% were depressed. These included 57.9% males and 42.1% females. Highest frequency was seen in under-graduates and positive correlation was seen with duration of hepatitis C infection. This study showed that 59.4% of patients with hepatitis C have depression before initiation of therapy and this should be evaluated and treated if necessary before starting interferon therapy

2.
Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences. 2009; 25 (5): 766-769
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-93607

ABSTRACT

To determine the frequency of acute HCV infection after needle stick injury and its treatment outcome. Patients with HCV positive needle stick injury and reporting within 72 hours of incident were selected. Co-infections with HBV, HDV, HIV, hematological disorders and depression were excluded. Anti-HCV was done at presentation and those testing positive were excluded. HCV RNA was done after two weeks or anti-HCV after six weeks of incident. Those testing positive were kept under observation for 16 weeks for spontaneous resolution. After this period HCV RNA and Genotype were done and therapy with Peg-interferon was started. Rapid, early and sustained virological responses were checked. Two hundred eight patients with HCV positive needle stick injury were selected, 10 [4.8%] developed acute HCV infection out of them one [10%] had spontaneous recovery during the observation period of 16 weeks. seven [77.8%] achieved rapid virological response and eight [88.9%] achieved sustained virological response. Acute HCV is an uncommon disease to diagnose; it has favorable response to therapy if initiated early after a strict surveillance of patients for 8-16 weeks


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Needlestick Injuries/complications , Treatment Outcome , Health Personnel , Occupational Exposure/prevention & control , Blood-Borne Pathogens , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Alanine Transaminase
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