Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (abdominal pain)
31,184 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Campylobacter has recently been recognized as a common pathogen of the intestinal tract in pediatric practice. We report on 21 patients who were diagnosed as having enteritis due to Campylobacter jejuni infection. The most common symptom was diarrhea, accompanied by fever, vomiting and abdominal pain. The in vitro sensitivity test demonstrated the efficacy of aminoglycosides, chloramphenicol and erythromycin in the treatment of this disease. All the patients were symptom-free when discharged from the hospital.
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PMID:Campylobacter enteritis in infants and young children. 709 45

In the region Eindhoven 36 children with Campylobacter-enteritis were examined from I January 1980 to 31 December 1980. Symptoms were studied and stools were cultured over a four-month period. Abdominal pain and/or diarrhea occurred in more than 90% of patients and were not infrequently of longer duration. Bloody stools were found in 58% of patients and disappeared relatively early during the time of illness, as well as fever and vomiting. After one month Campylobacter could only be cultured in 5% of children; 14 household contacts, who proved to have Campylobacter-enteritis, had also negative stool cultures after one month. Asymptomatic carriership was found in four cases among these household contracts. Campylobacter fetus subspecies jejuni could not be isolated in stools of a number of asymptomatic individuals, working in the meat industry, who were considered to have a higher risk of infection. This group could therefore not be determined as an endogenous human reservoir. On the other hand Campylobacter was isolated in a few domestic animals without symptoms of illness, as well as in some cattle stables and sites. In these places, where several contaminated animals are together, significant reservoirs for human infection may be present.
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PMID:[Campylobacter enteritis in 0-5-year-old children in the Eindhoven area - and epidemiological study]. 712 34

9 children with campylobacter enteritis aging from 3 days to 4 years were seen over a 8-month period. In 2 cases prompt recovery was achieved by erythromycin therapy. In the remaining 7 cases, the course was most often very mild, and symptomatic therapy was sufficient. Epidemiologically, the incidence of campylobacter enteritis is comparable to that of salmonella enteritis. Obviously, birds and poultry, but also dogs, cats, sheep and other domestic and farm animals are important sources of infection. Spread among human beings has also been made probable. The most frequent clinical features are fever, abdominal pain and bloody diarrhoea. Complications are most often associated with subspecies intestinalis whereas infections with subspecies jejuni almost exclusively cause enteritis. C. fetus is usually sensitive to erythromycin, tetracycline and aminoglycosides. The advantage of antibiotic therapy, however, has not yet been established.
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PMID:[Infantile Campylobacter enteritis (author's transl)]. 728 25

Among 81 hospitalized patients with enteritis due to Campylobacter fetus ssp. jejuni, abdominal pain was found to be an outstanding symptom, being observed in half the patients on admission. In 16 patients pain was the main reason for admission and in 5 prompted laparotomy. In 4 cases appendicitis was suspected, but in only 2 was slight inflammation seen; in 1 of these, however, the inflammation could not be verified by microscopic examination. One patient was operated on because of intestinal occlusion, presumably due to Campylobacter enteritis. In 10 further cases a surgeon was consulted because the abdominal pains were at first suspected to be due to cholecystitis, pancreatitis or other abdominal emergencies. Thus, acute phase of Campylobacter infection may mimick acute abdominal emergency. The diagnosis is sometimes hampered by the late onset of diarrhoea or even by its total absence, as well as by the usual presence of abdominal tenderness and severe abdominal pains.
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PMID:Campylobacter enteritis mimicking acute abdominal emergency. 734 86

An outbreak of acute enteritis due to Campylobacter fetus subspecies jejuni involving a total of 35 out of 74 children occurred at a nursery school of Tokyo in January 1979 and lasted for 7 days. It was the first case of a community outbreak of the disease to be recognized in Japan. The major symptoms observed in the patients consisted of diarrhea (88%), fever (82%), abdominal pain (39%), and vomiting (6.1%). The rate of isolation of the organism from the patients was 39%. Sera of four patients showed elevated agglutinin titers against the organism ranging from 1:80 to 1:320. Although it is suggested that the outbreak was caused by a communal lunch or between-meal snacks prepared by and provided at the nursery school, the incriminated food, source and route of contamination could not be pinpointed.
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PMID:An outbreak of acute enteritis due to Campylobacter fetus subspecies jejuni at a nursery school of Tokyo. 743 96

Eleven patients were referred to the infectious diseases wards of the Prince Henry Hospital, Sydney, between August and December, 1979, with acute infectious diarrhoea acquired within Australia. Nine of the 11 had infection with Campylobacter species as the sole pathogens. In contrast, a variety of pathogens was isolated from the stools of 13 patients referred to the hospital with enteritis acquired during overseas travel, including three Shigella species, but only one Campylobacter species. The patients with campylobacter enteritis suffered fever, abdominal discomfort and diarrhoea, often with some blood. Complications of campylobacter enteritis included colitis, severe abdominal pain, renal failure, severe muscle cramps, headache with meningism, myalgias and arthralgias. Campylobacter enteritis resolved with cessation of solid food intake, together with intravenous or oral fluid therapy. Some patients were treated with erythromycin, with prompt improvement, though a role for antibiotic therapy has not yet been established.
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PMID:Campylobacter: common cause of enteritis in an infectious diseases hospital. 743 13

Ancylostoma caninum, the cosmopolitan canine hookworm prevalent in domestic pets throughout northeastern Australia, has been identified as a cause of obscure abdominal pain. To investigate the influence of climate on putative and confirmed human infections, a retrospective study of patients with eosinophilic enteritis and established infections was undertaken to identify the monthly and seasonal rates. The numbers seen each month were maintained throughout most of the year but decreased in June and remained low during winter. An increased rate of enteritis occurred during spring, which preceded the wet season. It is concluded that climate directly influences the rate of human enteric infection by canine hookworms. The increase in prevalence before the monsoon season was unexpected and suggests other influences, such as extraneous infection promoted by the irrigation of domestic gardens and possibly endogenous reinfection of the gut by hypobiotic larvae.
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PMID:Seasonal influence on human enteric infection by Ancylostoma caninum. 767 17

Medical records of horses that underwent surgical treatment for colic between 1990 and 1992 were reviewed. Horses with a pulse rate of > or = 60 beats/min or signs of abdominal pain, which were also accompanied by a volume of > 2 L of material that refluxed from the stomach during the postoperative period (excluding horses with anterior enteritis), comprised the postoperative ileus (POI) group. Horses that had < 2 L of material reflux during the postoperative period and survived > 3 days after surgery comprised the reference population. The association of preoperative and intraoperative clinical variables with development of POI was evaluated by use of logistic regression analysis. Of 148 horses, 117 were assigned to the reference population, and 31 (21%) developed POI. Multiple logistic regression analysis was used to determine that PCV, pulse rate, type and location of lesion detected during surgery, and serum glucose concentration were the most important variables associated with development of POI. Time of recovery from anesthesia to development of POI was 0.5 to 120 hours (median, 13 hours). Duration of POI was 1 to 7 days (median, 1 day). Four of 31 (13%) horses with POI died. Of 148 horses, only 10 (7%) died; however, 4 of the 10 (40%) deaths in the short-term postoperative period were attributable to POI.
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PMID:Evaluation of factors associated with postoperative ileus in horses: 31 cases (1990-1992) 774 49

We report the case of a 46-year old HIV-infected patient who suffered from severe recurrent diarrhoea for 18 months. In stool cultures cryptosporidiae were identified. The cryptosporidial enteritis was unresponsive to therapy. In the further course of cryptosporidial infection the patient developed HIV-associated cholangitis with increasing upper abdominal pain, progredient laboratory cholestasis and morphological changes indicating posthepatic cholestasis. Papillary stenosis with erosive papilitis caused by cryptosporidia was diagnosed. Sphincterotomy significantly improved the clinical status of the patient. Cholangitis with associated crytosporidial infection in a HIV-infected patient ist discussed and necessary diagnostic and differential therapeutic approaches are described.
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PMID:[Sclerosing cholangitis with papillary stenosis in an HIV-infected patients with Cryptosporidium infection]. 797 86

We studied a group of 15 children with acute segmental enteritis associated with intestinal obstruction. The disease is characterized by fever, leukocytosis, copious bilious vomiting, and severe abdominal pain with signs of intestinal obstruction. Exploration revealed varying degrees of segmental ischemic change in the small bowel, but surgery seemed to be unnecessary in most cases. Antibiotics were effective in nonoperative cases. The clinical illness lasted 10-14 days. The disease was self-limited, and no mortality was found in our series. To our knowledge, this is the first report of this disease entity in Chinese children.
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PMID:Acute segmental obstructing enteritis in children. 878 3


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