Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research

Autor: Souza, R. M., Freitas, L. A. R., Lyra, André Castro, Moraes, C. F., Braga, Eduardo Lorens, Lyra, Luiz Guilherme Costa
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2006
Zdroj: Repositório Institucional da UFBA
Universidade Federal da Bahia (UFBA)
instacron:UFBA
Popis: P. 79-83 Submitted by Santiago Fabio (fabio.ssantiago@hotmail.com) on 2012-10-24T17:52:11Z No. of bitstreams: 1 Souza, R.M..pdf: 757153 bytes, checksum: cf46f3f0f9715e7726e7f524a1991c0b (MD5) Made available in DSpace on 2012-10-24T17:52:11Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Souza, R.M..pdf: 757153 bytes, checksum: cf46f3f0f9715e7726e7f524a1991c0b (MD5) Previous issue date: 2006 The objective of the present study was to determine the presence of hepatic iron overload in patients with chronic HCV infection and to correlate it with histologic alterations, HCV genotype and response to therapy. Liver tissue samples from 95 patients with chronic hepatitis C were divided into two groups: group I, presence of iron overload in hepatic tissue (Perls’ staining) and group II, no iron overload. Hepatic iron overload was detected in 30 (31.6%) of 95 patients. Of the 69 patients tested by genotyping, 49 (71.01%) were genotype 1 and 20 (28.99%) genotype non-1. Iron overload was detected in 14 (28.6%) patients with genotype 1 and in 6 (30%) with genotype non-1 (P = 0.906). There was a significant difference in fibrosis stage between groups (P = 0.005). In group I (N = 30), one patient had stage F0/F1 of fibrosis, while in group II (N = 65), 22 (33.8%) patients had minimal or no fibrosis. Fibrosis stage F2/F3 was observed in 70% of group I patients compared to 46.2% of group II. Eighty-five patients were treated with a combination of interferon and ribavirin; 29 of them (34.1%) had a sustained virologic response and 8 (27.6%) of them had hepatic iron overload. Iron overload was detected in 18 (32.1%) of the 56 non-responders (P = 0.73). Hepatic iron overload was frequent among patients with chronic hepatitis C and was associated with a more severe stage of liver fibrosis. There was no association between iron overload and HCV genotype and response to interferon and ribavirin therapy. Salvador
Databáze: OpenAIRE