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ISSN 2063-5346
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THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN BIOCHEMICAL CHANGES IN THE LIPID PROFILE AND LIVER FUNCTION TEST AND THE SEVERITY OF DENGUE INFECTION; A CROSS-SECTIONAL, OBSERVATIONAL STUDY

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Dr. Ganesh Thorat, Dr. Mrs. Gauri Tamhankar, Dr. Makarand B.Mane
» doi: 10.31838/ecb/2023.12.si4.289

Abstract

DF is caused by a mosquito-borne virus and normally resolves itself. This disease is caused by one of four dengue viruses. Blood aminotransferases and transaminases are elevated in DF patients due to liver dysfunction. Reactive hepatitis and virus-induced hepatocyte injury raise enzyme levels. Hepatitis may cause bleeding, renal failure, encephalopathy, and acalculous cholecystitis. Thrombocytopenia and liver dysfunction induce bleeding. As a result, we've made the decision to include monitoring of LFT and LF in our study of DF patients. SDF affected liver function tests and fasting lipid profiles in this study. Total cholesterol, HDL and LDL levels all decrease, suggesting a lipid infection. Thus, we conclude that severe infection tests may improve dengue treatment by early triaging patients.

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