Journal/Magazine Articles
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This collection contains original research articles, review articles and case reports published in local and international peer reviewed journals by the staff members of the Faculty of Medicine
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Item Predictive value of hepatic transaminases during febrile phase as a predictor of a severe form of dengue: analysis of adult dengue patients from a tertiary care setting of Sri Lanka(Biomed Central, 2021) Priyangika, D.K.D.; Premawansa, G.; Adikari, M.; Thillainathan, S.; Premawansa, S.; Jayamanne, B.D.W.; Premaratna, R.OBJECTIVES: Dengue viral infection is an ongoing epidemic in Sri Lanka, causing significant mortality and morbidity. A descriptive-analytical study was carried out using serologically confirmed Dengue patients during a 6-month period. The relationship between the elevation of hepatic enzymes and severity of Dengue was assessed after stratifying recorded maximum AST/ALT (SGOT/SGPT) values 2-15 times elevated and by the phases of the illness. Sensitivity, specificity, predictive values, and ROC curves were assessed using maximum values for AST and ALT. RESULTS: Out of 255 patients, 107(42%) were females. The majority (52.9%) were in the 20-39-year age group. Only 19.6% had DHF. No statistically significant difference was noticed in the values of maximum transaminases during the febrile phase among DF and DHF patients. Higher sensitivity and low specificity with the 1-5 times elevation range was noticed, and a higher cut-off level of more than 5 times elevation showed low sensitivity and higher specificity. The combination of both transaminases cut-offs with age and sex also does not show clinically significant predictability of severe disease. The AST and ALT elevations are not showing discriminatory predictive value on dengue severity. As different serotypes cause different epidemics, it is important to carry out large-scale specific studies considering the serotypes. KEYWORDS: And liver enzymes; Dengue; Dengue severity prediction; Transaminases in Dengue.Item Is Total Serum Nitrite and Nitrate (NOx) Level in Dengue Patients a Potential Prognostic Marker of Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever?(Hindawi Pub. Corp., 2018) Mapalagamage, M.; Handunnetti, S.; Premawansa, G.; Thillainathan, S.; Fernando, T.; Kanapathippillai, K.; Wickremasinghe, R.; de Silva, A.D.; Premawansa, S.Potential use of total nitrite plus nitrate (NOx) and nitrite (NO2-) separately as surrogate markers for serum nitric oxide in severe dengue and their longitudinal changes along with the progression of infection was studied. Deproteinized sera from confirmed dengue fever (DF, n = 145) and dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF, n = 74) patients on admission-A, critical-C, discharge-D, and convalescence-CON stages and from age-gender matched healthy individuals (HC, n = 77) were taken to assess NO2- and NOx levels using Griess and modified Griess assays. Serum NOx in DHFA was significantly lower compared to DFA (p < 0.001). HC had the lowest NOx and NO2- compared to all patient categories (p < 0.001) except NO2- in DF-CON and DHF-CON and NOx in DHF-CON. Serum NOx and NO2- in DHF patients admitted on fever day 3 (DHFA-3) was significantly lower compared to DFA-3 (p < 0.05). Cut-off values of 4.46 μM for NOx (91.3% sensitivity and 80.1% specificity) and 1.25 μM for NO2-(75.0% sensitivity and 73.3% specificity) were obtained for day 3 of fever. Serum NOx may be used as potential prognostic marker of DHF in patients presenting with DF in the early stage (on day 3 of fever) of the disease.Item Protein Carbonyl as a biomarker of oxidative stress in severe Leptospirosis, and its usefulness in differentiating Leptospirosis from Dengue Infections(Public Library of Science, 2016) Fernando, N.; Wickremesinghe, S.; Niloofa, R.; Rodrigo, C.; Karunanayake, L.; de Silva, H.J.; Wickremasinghe, A.R.; Premawansa, S.; Rajapakse, S.; Handunnetti, S.M.Pathogenesis of disease severity in leptospirosis is not clearly understood whether it is due to direct damage by pathogen or by adverse immune responses. Knowledge on biomarkers of oxidative stress which could be used in identifying patients with severe illness has shown to be of great value in disease management. Thus, the main aim of this study was to assess the damage to serum proteins and lipids, and their significance as biomarkers of oxidative stress in severe leptospirosis. In regions endemic for both leptospirosis and dengue, leptospirosis cases are often misdiagnosed as dengue during dengue epidemics. Therefore, the second aim was to assess the potential of the oxidative stress markers in differentiating severe leptospirosis from critical phase dengue. We measured serum antioxidants (uric acid and bilirubin), total antioxidant capacity (AOC), protein carbonyl (PC) and lipid hydroperoxide (LP) in patients with severe leptospirosis (n = 60), mild leptospirosis (n = 50), dengue during the critical phase (n = 30) and in healthy subjects (n = 30). All patient groups had similar total antioxidant capacity levels. However, the presence of significantly high uric acid and total bilirubin levels may reflect the degree of renal and hepatic involvement seen in severe leptospirosis patients (p<0.02). Serum PC and LP levels were significantly higher in leptospirosis patients compared to critical phase dengue infections (p<0.005). Moreover, high serum PC levels appear to differentiate SL from DC [area under the curve (AUC) = 0.96; p<0.001]. Serum PC may be a reliable biomarker of oxidative damage to serum proteins to identify severe leptospirosis patients (AUC = 0.99) and also to differentiate severe leptospirosis from mild cases (AUC = 0.78; p<0.005) indicating its contribution to pathogenesis. Use of serum PC as an indicator of leptospirosis severity and as an oxidative stress biomarker in differentiating leptospirosis from dengue would provide the opportunity to save lives via prompt patient management.