0.05) was found when TTV infected and noninfected individuals were compared. Knowledge related to TTV has rapidly increased, but many fundamental aspects remain unclear. This led us to question the role of TTV and doubt remains as to whether or not it is just a commensal virus. Further studies are necessary to confirm and extend these findings." /> 0.05),was,found,when,TTV,infected,and,noninfected,individuals,were,compared.,Knowledge,related,to,TTV,has,rapidly,increased,,but,many,fundamental,aspects,remain,unclear.,This,led,us,to,question,the,role,of,TTV,and,doubt,remains,as,to,whether,or,not,it,is,just,a,commensal,virus.,Further,studies,are,necessary,to,confirm,and,extend,these,findings." />

Detection of TTV in peripheral blood cells from patients with ...

Collect this paper and discover other ones on Labmeeting. Learn more.
- Hide Abstract
This work analyzes the prevalence of TTV DNA in peripheral blood cells from patients with hepatic alterations and healthy blood donors and measures levels of sodium, potassium, urea, creatinine, phosphatase alkaline, total and direct bilirubin, gamma glutamyl transferase (GGT), alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) in certain randomly selected patients. DNA samples from 111 individuals were evaluated. They were divided into two groups, "A" (study) and "B" (control), including 54 patients with liver enzyme alterations (ALT/AST) presenting non-B-non-C hepatitis and 57 blood donors, respectively. TTV DNA was determined by nested PCR. Certain products of the second-round PCR were sequenced. Serum biochemical assay was performed and disclosed TTV in 31.48% (17/54) of patients in group A and 5.26% (3/57) in the control group B. TTV prevalence was significantly higher in patients with liver disease than in healthy donors. In group A, sodium, potassium, urea, creatinine, phosphatase alkaline, total and direct bilirubin, gamma glutamyl transferase (GGT), alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) levels were analyzed in certain randomly selected patients and no significant difference in biochemical levels (p>0.05) was found when TTV infected and noninfected individuals were compared. Knowledge related to TTV has rapidly increased, but many fundamental aspects remain unclear. This led us to question the role of TTV and doubt remains as to whether or not it is just a commensal virus. Further studies are necessary to confirm and extend these findings.
The new microbiologica : official journal of the Italian Society for Medical, Odontoiatric, and Clinical Microbiology (SIMMOC) 31(2):195-201, 2008 AprWho cited this? | PubMed ID: 18623984 | Fulltext


+ Click Here for Related Papers


Join Labmeeting

  • Organize and search your PDF collection
  • Collect papers
  • Search millions of papers
  • Keep up to date with paper alerts
  • Read your papers from anywhere
  • Recommend papers to colleagues
  • Manage your lab

Join Labmeeting

Labmeeting is a web service for researchers. Sign up with your academic email address.

Individuals or corporations not affiliated with an academic institution can request a trial subscription.


Got a question?
The Labmeeting Network
has the answer.
Ask scientists at top universities like Harvard, Stanford, and MIT for their expert opinion!