Publication | Closed Access
Non‐A, non‐b hepatitis: identification of hepatitis‐b‐like virus particles in serum and liver
48
Citations
18
References
1980
Year
Viral DiagnosticsImmunologyHepatitis BPathologyDna Polymerase ActivityHepatitis‐b‐like Virus ParticlesHepatic DisordersNon‐b HepatitisViral HepatitisBioanalysisSerologic TestingSmall SpheresLaboratory MedicineDiagnostic VirologyLiver PhysiologyVirologyHepatologyHepatitis CFilaments 15HepatitisLiver DiseaseMedicine
Hepatitis B virus-like particles including: small spheres and filaments 15--25 nm in diameter together with a 35--40 nm Dane particle-like virion have been identified in sera of patients with non-A, non-B hepatitis. In a coded serological study, such particles were detected transiently in 3/4 acute, and persistently in 7/8 chronic cases of non-A, non-B hepatitis with non-A, non-B antigenemia. Only 2/12 similar cases without non-A, non-B antigens (Ag) in serum had detectable particles but neither patients with drugs, or type A hepatitis, nor cases of obstructive jaundice. The particles did not express hepatitis B surface (HBs) or non-A, non-B Ag at their surface but were associated, in three patients, with significant endogenous DNA polymerase activity. Furthermore, particles similar to hepatitis B cores (BHc) and also associated with DNA polymerase activity were demonstrated by sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation of a liver homogenate obtained from a patient who had died of non-A, non-B hepatitis. The non-A, non-B hepatitis virion described here appears, therefore, as a hepatitis B-like virus. The exact kinship between these two agents is currently being investigated.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1