Hepatitis B surface antigen is widely used in hepatitis B virus surveillance; patients who test negative for the antigen are judged to be uninfected. However, occult hepatitis B virus infection has been confirmed with hepatitis B virus DNA at low levels in the liver and peripheral blood in patients positive for hepatitis B core antibody or hepatitis B surface antibody, even if they test negative for hepatitis B surface antigen. To investigate the prevalence of occult hepatitis B virus in hemodialysis patients, we performed cross-sectional analysis of 161 hemodialysis patients in two related institutions for hepatitis B surface antigen, hepatitis B core antibody, and hepatitis B surface antibody.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 66-year-old woman admitted with dyspnea on exertion had atrial fibrillation and left ventricular dysfunction. Echocardiography revealed an atrial septal defect (ASD) and a soft, easily deformable thrombus in the dilated left atrium. The atrial mass suddenly disappeared on the 10th day after admission, and contrast-enhanced chest computed tomography and pulmonary blood flow scintigraphy showed that the thrombus had detached from the left atrium, floated into the right atrium through the ASD and caused pulmonary embolism.
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