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We examined the frequency of isolation of Blastocystis hominis from stools of patients seen in an indigent-care teaching hospital. Over a 2-year period, 2,744 stool specimens were examined prospectively. B. hominis was found in 262 stools (9.5% of all stool specimens and 53.5% of the positive specimens). Clinical data were obtained from 80 patients with stools positive for B. hominis. B. hominis was the only parasite isolated in 39 of 47 (83%) of the adults, compared with 17 of 33 (52%) of the children (p = 0.006). All but 2 of 52 patients without concomitant parasitic infection or bacterial pathogens in stool had gastrointestinal symptoms (41 abdominal pain, 26 diarrhea, and 5 vomiting), but no association was seen with fever, peripheral leukocytosis, stool occult blood, fecal leukocytes, or endoscopic or radiologic evidence of colitis. Therefore, B. hominis was frequently recovered from stools examined in a hospital clinical parasitology laboratory. The clinical presentations of patients in our series did not suggest that B. hominis was invasive. Most patients with B. hominis probably do not require treatment since they will either have spontaneous resolution of symptoms or will be found to have an alternative explanation for their problem.
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PMID:Frequency of recovery of Blastocystis hominis in clinical practice. 222 95

The authors describe the course of Crohn's disease in two boys and six girls aged 11.1-15.6 years. In three patients with terminal ileitis and affection of the ascendent colon the disease is characterized by prolonged growth retardation, subfebrile temperatures, abdominal pain. For patients with granulomatous colitis, blood-stained diarrhoea is typical abdominal pain and loss of body weight. Three patients were treated first for idiopathic proctocolitis and only in the course of the disease the diagnosis of Crohn's disease was established. In 87.5% of the patients on admission anaemia was found and all patients had a varying elevated red cell sedimentation rate and CRP. The author draws attention to extraintestinal symptoms (dermal, ophthalmological, articular, somatic retardation) which precede in particular somatic retardation) which precede in particular in affections of the small intestine intestinal manifestations. Their erroneous interpretation may delay the establishment of the diagnosis of Crohn's disease. The author emphasizes the importance of basic laboratory examinations and examination by ultrasound for early detection of patients.
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PMID:[Clinical picture of Crohn's disease in children and adolescents]. 224 75

From January 1983 to December 1988, 88 consecutive patients with ambulatory ischemic colitis without severe disease or surgical operation were observed. The diagnosis was established in all cases by endoscopy, and in 64 cases by histologic examination. The study included 55 women and 33 men with a mean age of 65.4 years (22-90). Symptoms included: abdominal pain (73 percent), diarrhea (60 percent) and bloody stools (85 percent). The sequence abdominal pain-diarrhea-bloody stools was noted in 41 percent of cases. Most cases of colitis were located in the sigmoid and left colon. The immediate course was uneventful in 81 patients. Six patients underwent surgery and of these, three died. The mortality rate was 4.5 percent (4 cases). Long-term outcome was known in 41 cases. None of the patients were symptomatic, but a moderate secondary stenosis was noted in 4 of 31 patients who underwent endoscopic or radiological follow-up examination. In 80 cases, one or more potentially etiological factors were observed including vascular obstruction (32 cases), low-flow states (27 cases), and drugs (78 cases). Twenty patients were taking non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (23 percent). Drug treatment was recent in 10 cases, and in four, it was the only possible etiological factor. This suggests the responsibility of anti-inflammatory drugs in the onset of certain cases of ischemic colitis.
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PMID:["Ambulatory" ischemic colitis. Clinical course and etiologic features in 88 cases]. 226 20

Ten hospitalized patients with severe diarrhea associated with intestinal Candida overgrowth are reported. Candida-associated diarrhea is predominantly of the secretory type, characterized by frequent watery stools, usually without blood, mucus, tenesmus, or abdominal pain. The patients were elderly, malnourished, and critically ill, or suffered from chronic debilitating illness. Their hospital stays were prolonged, and the majority were being treated with multiple antibiotics or chemotherapeutic agents. Diarrhea often led to dehydration, prerenal azotemia, hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis, and electrolyte imbalance. Stool culture most frequently isolated Cand. albicans in association with decreased normal flora. Colonoscopy showed no evidence of colitis. Diagnosis was made based on the absence of diarrhea-producing medications, the continuation of diarrhea despite fasting, the exclusion of other infections, inflammatory conditions and other causes of secretory diarrhea, and a dramatic response to a short course of nystatin.
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PMID:Candida-associated diarrhea in hospitalized patients. 229 77

The effect of prednisolone (20-30 mg daily for six to nine weeks) was studied in eight patients with Crohn's disease and recurrent, preanastomotic ileal inflammation, in respect of symptoms, endoscopic findings and phospholipase A2 activity in the ileal mucosa. The Harvey-Bradshaw Crohn's disease activity index improved significantly, mainly because of reduced frequency of loose stools and diminution of abdominal pain. Endoscopy revealed no corresponding decrease in ileal inflammation, which in all cases persisted after treatment. The phospholipase A2 activity in the ileal mucosa was not altered by prednisolone. In two of three patients with concomitant colitis colonic inflammation improved. The study confirmed earlier reports of good symptomatic relief from glucocorticoid treatment in Crohn's disease of the small bowel, but endoscopy suggests that this improvement was not the result of resolution of small intestinal mucosal inflammation.
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PMID:Glucocorticoid treatment in ileal Crohn's disease: relief of symptoms but not of endoscopically viewed inflammation. 232 98

From a retrospective study on children who underwent colonoscopy or rectosigmoidoscopy with multiple level biopsies, we selected five patients whose rectocolonic endoscopic aspect was normal and contrasting with the presence of a microscopic colitis on biopsies. These five children had chronic diarrhea (mean duration of 14 months), associated with vomiting (three cases), abdominal pain (two cases), anorexia (two cases), abdominal distension (two cases), and weight loss (four cases). Symptomatic treatment was used in all children: loperamide (one case), trimebutine (three cases), and aluminium and magnesium silicate (two cases). One child received sulfasalazine for 2 months. After 1 year, all patients had normal stools. Rectosigmoidoscopy was performed in four patients and was normal. Biopsies obtained in three cases were normal in two cases and showed a persistent microscopic colitis in one case. Microscopic colitis may be a distinct cause of chronic diarrhea in children.
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PMID:Microscopic colitis: a new cause of chronic diarrhea in children? 232 76

The authors retrospectively reviewed the records of 50 patients whose initial diagnosis of Crohn's disease was made after the age of 50 years on the basis of strict histopathologic criteria. Progress of the 32 women and 18 men with a median age of 60 years (range, 50 to 78 years) was followed for a median of 95.5 months (range, 81.1 to 236.6 months). The most common presenting signs and symptoms were abdominal pain (82 percent), diarrhea (70 percent), weight loss (56 percent), bleeding from the gastrointestinal tract (26 percent), abdominal mass (16 percent), and fistula (14 percent). Initial operations performed were ileocolic resection (38 percent), proctocolectomy (16 percent), small bowel resection (10 percent), colostomy (2 percent), and a variety of segmental resections of the colon (34 percent). The overall recurrence rate of disease in patients in whom all obvious disease was resected, based on distribution of disease, was 80 percent (ileocolitis), 38 percent (ileitis), and 35 percent (colitis). Crohn's disease more often affects the distal gastrointestinal tract in older age groups. After resection, however, the clinical course is similar to that of the younger population. The high recurrence rate of Crohn's colitis is probably a result of the large number of initial segmental resections.
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PMID:Clinical course of Crohn's disease in older patients. A retrospective study. 235 Sep 97

Subepithelial fibrosis has previously been reported in the small intestine (collagenous sprue) and colon (collagenous colitis). We report a 15-yr-old girl with chronic gastritis and subepithelial fibrosis of the gastric corpus who presented with recurrent abdominal pain and acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Nodularity and erythema of the gastric corpus were persistent endoscopic findings. Biopsies revealed patchy chronic active gastritis with a striking focal thick band of collagen immediately beneath the surface epithelial cells that did not extend to deeper portions of the lamina propria. Contrast radiography demonstrated an abnormal mucosa of the gastric corpus with a mosaiclike surface pattern. Numerous studies have failed to elucidate the etiology. Despite treatment with ranitidine, sucralfate, and furazolidone, there has been no clinical or pathologic improvement. The pathogenesis and prognosis of collagenous gastritis, and its relationship to collagenous sprue and collagenous colitis, remain to be defined.
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PMID:Collagenous gastritis. 258 19

Collagenous colitis and microscopic colitis are histologic entities which do not have corresponding endoscopic features. Their precise incidence and role in the development of intestinal symptoms are poorly known. The aim of this study was to determine the frequency of these histologic abnormalities in patients with endoscopically normal colon and to correlate these findings with abdominal symptoms. Total colonoscopy was performed in 132 consecutive patients, 81 females and 51 males, aged 19 to 83 years (mean: 47.8 years). Patients complained of abdominal pain and/or diarrhea (66 cases), normal bowel transit or constipation (66 cases). Subjects were prepared for colonoscopy with polyethylene glycol 4,000. Three to 8 biopsies were taken from the rectum and the different parts of the colon. Histologic abnormalities were found in 36 patients (27.2 p. 100): collagenous colitis (7 cases), microscopic colitis (21 cases), and melanosis coli (8 cases). The frequency of diarrhea was significantly higher in patients with collagenous colitis and microscopic colitis than in those with melanosis coli or normal colonic mucosa. These results clearly demonstrate that routine biopsies of the rectum and colon are useful in patients with abdominal symptoms, particularly diarrhea, and normal endoscopy.
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PMID:[Biopsies of the endoscopically normal rectum and colon: a necessity. Incidence of collagen colitis and microscopic colitis]. 266 Dec 94

Hemorrhagic colitis due to Escherichia coli O157:H7 is a distinct clinical entity characterized by abdominal pain, watery diarrhea progressing to bloody diarrhea, and little or no fever. It has been reported to have a mortality as high as 31%. This form of colitis is not described in the radiologic literature. This paper describes the radiographic findings, and stresses the need for radiologists to be familiar with the disease in order to assist in early diagnosis. Key clinical and epidemiological features are reviewed.
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PMID:Radiologic findings in hemorrhagic colitis due to Escherichia coli O157:H7. 268 Jul 40


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