Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
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Query: EC:3.2.1.31 (
beta-glucuronidase
)
7,680
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To investigate the possibilities of differentiating between inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and infectious colitis on clinical, microbiological, laboratory and histological grounds, a prospective study of 105 patients with a first attack of colitis was undertaken. Rectal biopsy was performed on four occasions during 1 year. In 56% of the patients who proved to have IBD, the mode of onset of diarrhoeal symptoms was insidious and in 44% it was more acute, while in 81% of those who proved to have infectious colitis the onset was acute. Most patients with infectious colitis presented within 1 week, had early fever, and did not show any histological features characteristic of IBD. In most IBD patients with a non-insidious onset there were clinical warning signs of IBD, such as slight previous bowel symptoms, a late presentation time (> 1 week) and absence of early fever, or histological features characteristic of IBD. Moreover, 62% of the IBD patients with a non-insidious onset fell ill in connection with travelling abroad,
gastrointestinal infection
or treatment with antibiotics. Travel abroad seemed to be associated with an increased risk of developing IBD. The strongest histological predictor of IBD was basal plasmocytosis, followed by more than two vertical crypt branches/MPF, crypt distortion, villous mucosa, mucosal atrophy, epithelioid granulomas and Paneth cell metaplasia. These signs were rarely or never found among patients with infectious colitis. Their frequency increased with the interval between the initial symptoms and the first biopsy. The presence of focal basal plasmocytosis seems to be the earliest sign of IBD. The frequency of histological signs indicating IBD was maximal (88%) at the 1-week biopsy. During treatment the basal plasmocytosis and villous mucosa decreased, while crypt distortion and mucosal atrophy remained unchanged. Early treatment did not prevent the appearance of any feature. Nor did it prevent relapse. In 21% of the IBD patients microbial findings were positive. The findings consisted in known colitis-causing agents in 14% and other agents, such as viruses, in another 7%. In 78% of the patients with non-relapsing colitis (NRC), colitis-causing agents were found. Haemolytic strains of E. coli were detected more often in IBD. Among the IBD patients, 65% showed positive immunofluorescence reactivity to neutrophil granulocytes, indicating the presence of antineutrophil antibodies (ANCA). The corresponding figure for NRC patients was 5%. Antibodies against
beta-glucuronidase
were found in 42% of the patients with granulocyte reactivity.
...
PMID:First attack of inflammatory bowel disease and infectious colitis. A clinical, histological and microbiological study with special reference to early diagnosis. 811 39
Individual susceptibility to
gastrointestinal infection
is seen commonly in food poisoning outbreaks, but factors (such as diet) which may modulate this variability are understood poorly. Similarly, factors altering the population dynamics of enteric non-pathogenic Escherichia coli or of pathogenic E. coli containing toxin-signature DNA sequences in the colonic flora of healthy individuals are largely unknown. Feces were collected 4 times over a 12 week period from 41 healthy volunteer adults on a weight control diet (high or low in fiber). E. coli strains were examined by conventional culture followed by PCR for virulence genes stx1, stx2, eae and hlyA, and polymorphic
beta-glucuronidase
. Total E. coli counts ranged from undetectable to 8.75 log10 CFU/g feces and were unaffected by dietary fiber consumption or gender. Total E. coli counts were correlated positively with age (r = 0.401, P < 0.05). Fifty-eight percent (n = 24) of study individuals harboured more than 1 morph of
beta-glucuronidase
, indicating the presence of more than 1 strain of E. coli. Virulence genes were detected in 12 of 41 adults, comprising 10 stx1, 3 stx2, 3 eae, and 0 hlyA, but occurrence was not associated with diet, gender, or age. Factors influencing strain mobility over time did not appear to include diet or gender, while the positive relationship between total E. coli numbers and increasing age suggests that some older individuals are "more permissive" to mobile E. coli, including those with toxin genes.
...
PMID:Population and virulence factor dynamics in fecal Escherichia coli from healthy adults consuming weight control diets. 1612 Dec 24