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Abstract : |
AIM: To investigate the early diagnostic methods of bacterial and fungal infection in patients with chronic cholestatic hepatitis B. METHODS: One hundred and one adult in-patients with chronic hepatitis B were studied and divided into 3 groups: direct bilirubin (DBil)/total bilirubin (TBil) >=0.5, without bacterial and fungal infection (group A, n=38); DBil/TBil <0.5, without bacterial and fungal infection (group B, n=23); DBil/TBil>=0.5, with bacterial or fungal infection (group C, n=40). The serum biochemical index and pulse rate were analyzed. RESULTS: Level of TBil, DBil, alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and DBil/ALP in group A increased compared with that in group B. The level of ALP in group C decreased compared with that in group A, whereas the level of TBil, DBil and DBil/ALP increased (ALP: 156+/-43, 199+/-68, respectively, P<0.05; TBil: 370+/-227, 220+/-206, respectively, P<0.01; DBil: 214+/-143, 146+/-136, respectively, P<0.01; DBil/ALP: 1.65+/-1.05, 0.78+/-0.70, respectively, P<0.001). The level of DBil and infection affected DBil/ALP. Independent of the effect of DBil, infection caused DBil/ALP to rise (P<0.05). The pulse rate in group A decreased compared with that in group B (63.7+/-6.4, 77.7+/-11.4, respectively, P<0.001), and the pulse rate in group C increased compared with that in group A (81.2+/-12.2, 63.7+/-6.4, respectively, P<0.001). The equation (infection=0.218 pusle rate +1.064 DBil/ALP -16.361), with total accuracy of 85.5%, was obtained from stepwise logistic regression. Pulse rate (>=80/min) and DBil/ALP (>=1.0) were used to screen infection. The sensitivity was 62.5% and 64.7% respectively, and the specificity was 100% and 82.8% respectively. CONCLUSION: Bacterial and fungal infection deteriorate jaundice and increase pulse rate, decrease serum ALP and increase DBil/ALP. Pulse rate, DBil/ALP and the equation (infection=0.218 pusle rate+1.064 DBil/ALP-16.361) are helpful to early diagnosis of bacterial and fungal infection in patients with chronic cholestatic hepatitis B., |