Gunaid A A, Nasher T M, el-Guneid A M, Hill M, Dayton R, Pal A, Skidmore S J, Coleman J C, Murray-Lyon I M
Al-Thawra Hospital, Sana's, Republic of Yemen.
J Med Virol. 1997 Jan;51(1):64-6. doi: 10.1002/(sici)1096-9071(199701)51:1<64::aid-jmv10>3.0.co;2-4.
The causes of acute icteric viral hepatitis were determined in 78 adult Yemeni patients. Acute hepatitis B (IgM anti-HBc positive) was the most common type (26.9%). Acute hepatitis E (IgM anti-HEV positive) occurred in 14% and was not associated with travel outside Yemen. Sixty percent of all 78 patients were positive for IgG anti-HEV as were 40% of a series of 48 healthy male blood donors and pregnant females, indicating that HEV is prevalent in Yemen. Acute hepatitis A (IgM anti-HAV positive) and hepatitis C and D were responsible for 5.1%, 6.4%, and 2.6% cases, respectively. This totals to 106%, as an infection with two viruses occurred in 6.4% cases. In 51.3% of all cases, no virological markers of acute hepatitis were detected, suggesting an as yet undiscovered agent.