Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-xfwgj Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-30T14:38:46.714Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Screening for transmission of hepatitis within a liver unit

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2009

P. Bentley
Affiliation:
The Liver Unit, King's College Hospital, and the Department of Virology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
D. Haynes
Affiliation:
The Liver Unit, King's College Hospital, and the Department of Virology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
P. Sharpstone
Affiliation:
The Liver Unit, King's College Hospital, and the Department of Virology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
P. E. Taylor
Affiliation:
The Liver Unit, King's College Hospital, and the Department of Virology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
A. J. Zuckerman
Affiliation:
The Liver Unit, King's College Hospital, and the Department of Virology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
R. Williams
Affiliation:
The Liver Unit, King's College Hospital, and the Department of Virology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Summary

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Detailed screening of the patients and staff in a unit specializing in liver disease was carried out over a year to ascertain whether transmission of the serum hepatitis virus was occurring and whether the situation was comparable in any way to that found in a Renal Haemodialysis Unit. Of the 154 patients with liver disease tested on admission, 6% were found to have Australia antigen in the serum and throughout the year there were rarely less than two patients in the ward at any one time with positive serum. No instances of clinical hepatitis were detected in the other patients following their stay in the ward or in their attendant medical, nursing and lay staff. Six staff members were found to have Australia antigen in their serum. In four of these, all nurses, it was present in the first sample tested and so the infection may have been acquired earlier. Temporary elevations in both plasma bilirubin and serum aspartate aminotransferase levels were found in another five staff members whose serum was negative for Australia antigen and who clinically were well. In a further eight and apparently healthy staff members, an isolated but persistent elevation of the plasma bilirubin was noted. In both groups these changes could represent the spread of subclinical infectious hepatitis and it is recommended that in units dealing with ‘liver patients’ not only should considerable care be taken during diagnostic and therapeutic procedures but the medical and nursing staff should be screened at regular intervals.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1972

References

REFERENCES

Almeida, J. D. & Waterson, A. P. (1969). Immune complexes in hepatitis. Lancet ii, 983.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Apostolov, K., Bauer, D. J., Selway, J. W. T., Fox, R. A., Dudley, F. J. & Sherlock, S. (1971). Australia antigen in urine. Lancet i, 1274.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Del, Prete S., Costantino, D., Doglia, M., Graziina, A., Ajdukiewicz, A., Dudley, F. J. & Sherlock, S. (1970). Detection of a new serum-antigen in three epidemics of short-incubation hepatitis. Lancet ii, 579.Google Scholar
Dudley, F. J., Fox, R. A. & Sherlock, S. (1971). Relationship of hepatitis-associated antigen (HAA) to acute and chronic liver injury. Lancet ii, 1.Google Scholar
Giles, J. P., McCollum, E. W., Berndtson, L. W. Jr & Krugman, S. (1969). Viral hepatitis – Relation of Australia/S.H. antigen to the Willowbrook M.S.-2 strain. New England Journal of Medicine 281, 119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hawe, B. J., Goldsmith, H. J. & Jones, P. O. (1971). Dialysis-associated hepatitis: prevention and control. British Medical Journal i, 540.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knight, A. H., Fox, R. A., Baillod, R. A., Niazi, S. P., Sherlock, S. & Moorhead, J. F. (1970). Hepatitis-associated antigen and antibody in haemodialysis patients and staff. British Medical Journal iii, 603.Google Scholar
Powell, L. W., Hemingway, E., Billing, B. H. & Sherlock, S. (1967). Idiopathic unconjugated hyperbihrubinaemia (Gilbert's Syndrome). A study of 42 families. New England Journal of Medicine 277, 1108.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Taylor, P. E., Almeida, J. D., Zuckerman, A. J., Leach, J. M., Del, Prete S., Constantino, D. & Doglia, M. (1972). The relationship of the Milan antigen to abnormal serum liproprotein. Archives of Diseases of Childhood. In Press.Google Scholar
Zuckerman, A. J. (1970). Viral hepatitis and tests for the Australia (hepatitis-associated) antigen and antibody. Bulletin of the World Health Organization 42, 957.Google Scholar