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)

E. coli O157:H7, the predominant serotype of EHEC, is a cause of both outbreaks and sporadic cases of hemorrhagic colitis. In sporadic cases, and especially in outbreaks, there is an association with the consumption of improperly cooked ground beef. Both young children and geriatric patients have an increased attack rate for EHEC infection as well as an increased incidence of the two sequelae of intestinal infection with EHEC, hemolyticuremic syndrome, and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. The hallmark of hemorrhagic colitis due to EHEC is the development of bloody diarrhea several days after the onset of nonbloody diarrhea and abdominal pain. Fever is usually absent or low-grade. The pathogenesis of EHEC infection is probably related to at least two bacterial virulence factors: adherence of bacteria to intestinal mucosa and production of one or more cytotoxins. These cytotoxins are closely related to Shiga toxin and therefore are often referred to as Shiga-like toxins. Treatment for hemorrhagic colitis is supportive care; most illnesses are self-limited. At present, there is no evidence that antimicrobial therapy shortens the course of illness or prevents the development of sequelae.
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PMID:Hemorrhagic colitis associated with Escherichia coli O157:H7. 155 95

An outbreak of gastroenteritis involving a total of 256 patients (49.7%) among 515 persons occurred at a primary and secondary school in Agatsuma Town, Gunma Prefecture between the 23rd and 28th of June 1988. The majority of the cases occurred within the first 4 days. The main symptoms were abdominal pain (81.6%), diarrhea (57.0%) and headache (40.2%). In most cases, the stools were watery and occasionally mucous. Although food-borne infection was strongly suggested epidemiological evidence did not incriminate any foods as the cause of the outbreak. In the bacteriological study on stool specimens from 25 patients, Escherichia coli O167:H9 was isolated from 20 of these specimens, virtually in pure culture. The isolates of the E. coli serovar were negative for recognized diarrheagenic virulence properties: production of heat-labile and heat-stable enterotoxins, enteroinvasion, and production of Shiga-like toxin. When the HEp-2 cell-adherence test was used, however, they exhibited localized adherence. All the strains were demonstrated to carry 56 Md plasmids that presumably mediate the production of the adherence factor.
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PMID:[An outbreak of gastroenteritis possibly caused by Escherichia coli O167:H9]. 206 88

The relation between in vitro production of HeLa cell cytotoxin by strains of Shigella and clinical symptomatology was determined for 35 travelers from the United States who developed shigellosis in Guadalajara, Mexico. There were 25 patients with Shigella sonnei, eight with Shigella flexneri, one with Shigella boydii, and one with Shigella dysenteriae. These strains were evaluated for in vitro production of cytotoxin. The amount of cytotoxin did not correlate with the number of stools passed, the severity of abdominal pain, or the presence of nausea or vomiting. However, patients with strains of Shigella that produced more cytotoxic activity were more likely to have fever (P less than .02) and occult blood in their stools (P less than .004). The cytotoxicity produced by 30 (86%) strains could not be neutralized with rabbit antiserum to purified, formaldehyde-treated Shiga toxin from S. dysenteriae type 1 strain 60 R; the cytotoxicity of five (14%) of the strains was partially neutralized. When only nonneutralizable cytotoxin was considered, the presence of fecal leukocytes (P less than .04), as well as of occult blood (P less than .002) and fever (P less than .02), correlated with the amount of cytotoxin. The amount of nonneutralizable cytotoxin produced by shigella strains was related to the clinical findings. This cytotoxic activity was infrequently attributable to "Shiga toxin".
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PMID:The relation between production of cytotoxin and clinical features in shigellosis. 351 88

A 71-year-old woman presented with altered level of consciousness following episodes of diarrhea and abdominal pain. Shigella sonnei was later cultured from her stool. Although neurological complications, primarily seizures, have been reported sequelae in children afflicted shigellosis, there are only rare cases of encephalopathy in affected adults. A brief discussion of the neurological complications of Shigella infection and the yet undetermined role of Shiga toxin in producing neurotoxicity are presented.
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PMID:Shigella-induced encephalopathy in an adult. 892 41

A dysentery outbreak in the Central African Republic village of Zemio was diagnosed as "Shigella flexneri" by the Pasteur Institute in Bangui (IPB) in February 1996; 2 months later there was an outbreak of hemorrhagic colitis. 108 patients presented with bloody diarrhea; cramping abdominal pain, fever, nausea, and vomiting were uncommon. The illness lasted between 5 days and 3 weeks (average, 8 days). Antibiotics were ineffective. Four patients died and several developed hemolytic-uremic syndrome. Stool cultures done at IPB tested negative. PCR was used to detect enterohemorrhagic Shiga-like toxin (SLT) 1 and 2, the invasivity gene ipaH, and the attaching and effacing gene eaeA. DNA fragments of 130 and 494 nucleotides corresponding to amplified SLT1 and eaeA were found in 80% of the specimens tested. No amplification was obtained for SLT2 or for ipaH in specimens collected during the second epidemic. These results suggest the presence of enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli and the absence of Shigella. The number of reported cases of acute bloody diarrhea in infants and adults in Bangui has increased since 1996. E. coli O157:H7 was isolated from two fatal adult cases. Smoked zebu meat was suspected in several hospital cases (bloody diarrhea, hemolytic anemia, and renal insufficiency) in which non-fermenting sorbitol E. coli O157:H7 was not isolated. In two cases of acute diarrhea, other serotypes of E. coli were indicated by retrospective PCR on stools which were positive for SLT1 and for eaeA and negative for invasivity. A study was conducted in Bangui on 290 cases (33 with bloody diarrhea) and 140 controls. Patients were not paired because of civil unrest in the city. The questionnaire included demographic and socioeconomic characteristics, environmental factors, and habitual food consumption. The major contributing factor was consumption of locally made meat pies (kanda), which were made with smoked zebu meat. Kanda is stored at ambient temperature, often for days, before it is sold in markets or along roads. Before 1996, E. coli was not reported as a cause of bloody diarrhea in the Central African Republic.
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PMID:Enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli in Central African Republic. 918 91

A 21 years-old pregnant woman developed diarrhea, fresh bloody stools and abdominal pain on April 6th 1997 at 32 weeks of gestation, and was admitted to the hospital on April 11th. The stool culture on admission was positive for enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) O157:H7 (Stx1 and 2). Clinical laboratory data during admission showed only slight elevation of beta-microglobulin and N-acetyl glucosaminidase in the urine, and no neurological or hemolytic symptoms were seen. After the antibiotic and lactobacillus administration, all her symptoms were relieved and no abnormal findings in pregnancy were observed. She delivered a baby girl normally on May 30th. Serum (between 41 and 120 days from the onset) and milk (between 4 and 64 days post partum) samples from the mother, and serum (64 days of age) from a baby and cord blood were obtained to monitor the immune status against EHEC O157:H7 and against Shiga toxins (Stx). Anti-E. coli O157 LPS antibodies (IgA, G and M) were assayed by the ELISA method. Neutralizing anti-Stx antibodies were measured by using ACHN cell cytotoxicity assay. In the colostrum and mature milk, high levels of IgA and IgM, and no IgG antibodies against EHEC O157 LPS were detected. In one of the control colostrum samples obtained from 4 healthy mothers IgA antibody against EHEC O157 LPS was detected. To assess the potency of protection against EHEC O157:H7 by the breast milk, we monitored it by the bactericidal activity for the organism under complement-coincubation experiment, and by the neutralization test for the Stx cytotoxicity. As a result, breast milk samples (both colostrum and mature milk) from a patient were demonstrated to kill the organisms. One of 4 healthy milk samples, showed bactericidal activity though it was negative in O157-LPS antibody. This bactericidal activity seen in one healthy colostrum is possibly due to a nonspecific reaction caused by non-O157 E. coli infection. From these observations, it was suggested that the bactericidal activity was due to the IgM class antibody against EHEC O157:H7. However, the neutralizing antibody against Stx1 and 2 could not be detected in any sample. EHEC infection at late gestation did not cause adverse effects to a fetus, and breastfeeding may have advantage for the protection of a baby against EHEC infection.
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PMID:[Detection of bactericidal antibody in the breast milk of a mother infected with enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli O157:H7]. 1038 25

We report a case of a nine-year old boy with vomiting, abdominal pain and fever, who underwent surgery with a diagnosis of appendicitis in Mendoza and from whom a Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) O127:H21 strain was recovered. Forty-eight hours after surgery he presented bilious vomiting and two episodes of intestinal bleeding. Laboratory findings included: hematocrit, 35%; blood urea nitrogen, 0.22 g/L. The urinary output was normal. The following day physical examination showed an alert mildly hydrated child, without fever but with distended and painful abdomen. The patient was again submitted to surgery with a diagnosis of intestinal occlusion. Bleeding and multiple adhesions in jejunum and ileum were found. The patient still had tense and painful abdomen and presented two bowel movements with blood; hematocrit fell to 29% and blood urea nitrogen rose to 0.32 g/L. STEC O127:H21 eae(-)/Stx2/Stx2vh-b(+)/E-Hly(+) was isolated from a stool sample. He was discharged after 10 days of hospitalization and no long-term complications such as HUS or TTP were observed. This is the first report, to our knowledge, on the isolation of E. coli O127:H21, carrying the virulence factors that characterize STEC strains, associated to an enterohemorrhagic colitis case. This serotype was previously characterized as a non-classic enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC). STEC infections can mimic infectious or noninfectious pathologies. Therefore an important aspect of clinical management is making the diagnosis using different criteria thereby avoiding misdiagnoses which have occasionally led to invasive diagnostic and therapeutic procedures or the inappropriate use of antibiotics.
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PMID:Intestinal bleeding and occlusion associated with Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli O127:H21. 1096 19

Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) are the most common cause of postdiarrheal hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS). The most important EHEC serotype implicated worldwide is O157:H7. However, several so-called non-O157 EHEC serotypes have emerged. After a mean incubation period of 3 days, patients develop watery diarrhea accompanied by cramping abdominal pain. During the next days, in most patients watery diarrhea changes to bloody diarrhea. One week after the onset of diarrhea, in about 15% of infected patients under 10 years of age EHEC infection results in a systemic complication, HUS. Shiga toxins (Stxs) are considered the major virulence factors of EHEC involved in the pathogenesis of HUS. It is generally believed that after intestinal infection with EHEC, Stxs cross the intestinal barrier and bind to endothelial cells. At this point they presumably injure the host cell by inhibition of protein synthesis, stimulation of prothrombotic messages, or induction of apoptosis. The B subunit of Stx binds to the membrane receptor globotriaosylceramide (Gb3). Gb3 facilitates the endocytosis and intracellular trafficking of the toxin. The Stx A subunit hydrolyzes a specific adenine residue of the 60S ribosomal subunit of mammalian cells. As a consequence, Stx shuts down the protein machinery of the susceptible cell. The HUS is the net effect of a variety of interacting factors, including background risk of acquisition, host factors (such as age), virulence characteristics of the infecting EHEC strain, and exogenous factors. All known EHEC virulence determinants are located on mobile genetic elements, and this has an important impact on the evolution of these pathogens. The evolution of EHEC has a dynamic component that includes different genetic mechanisms. The recent progress in understanding the pathogenesis and epidemiology of EHEC infections forms a basis for the development of future strategies to prevent EHEC infections in humans.
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PMID:The role of virulence factors in enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC)--associated hemolytic-uremic syndrome. 1144 54

We have investigated 677 Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) strains from humans to determine their serotypes, virulence genes, and clinical signs in patients. Six different Shiga toxin types (1, 1c, 2, 2c, 2d, and 2e) were distributed in the STEC strains. Intimin (eae) genes were present in 62.6% of the strains and subtyped into intimins alpha1, beta1, gamma1, epsilon, theta, and eta. Shiga toxin types 1c and 2d were present only in eae-negative STEC strains, and type 2 was significantly (P < 0.001) more frequent in eae-positive STEC strains. Enterohemorrhagic E. coli hemolysin was associated with 96.2% of the eae-positive strains and with 65.2% of the eae-negative strains. Clinical signs in the patients were abdominal pain (8.7%), nonbloody diarrhea (59.2%), bloody diarrhea (14.3%), and hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS) (3.5%), and 14.3% of the patients had no signs of gastrointestinal disease or HUS. Infections with eae-positive STEC were significantly (P < 0.001) more frequent in children under 6 years of age than in other age groups, whereas eae-negative STEC infections dominated in adults. The STEC strains were grouped into 74 O:H types by serotyping and by PCR typing of the flagellar (fliC) genes in 221 nonmotile STEC strains. Eleven serotypes (O157:[H7], O26:[H11], O103:H2, O91:[H14], O111:[H8], O145:[H28], O128:H2, O113:[H4], O146:H21, O118:H16, and O76:[H19]) accounted for 69% of all STEC strains. We identified 41 STEC strains belonging to 31 serotypes which had not previously been described as human STEC. Twenty-six of these were positive for intimins alpha1 (one serotype), beta1 (eight serotypes), epsilon (two serotypes), and eta (three serotypes). Our study indicates that different types of STEC strains predominate in infant and adult patients and that new types of STEC strains are present among human isolates.
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PMID:Characterization of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli strains isolated from human patients in Germany over a 3-year period. 1500 60

A rapid laboratory system has been developed and evaluated that can simultaneously identify major diarrhoeagenic bacteria, including Salmonella enterica, Vibrio parahaemolyticus, Campylobacter jejuni and Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli, in stool specimens by real-time PCR. Specific identification was achieved by using selective TaqMan probes, detecting two targets in each pathogen. A positive result was scored only when both targets of a pathogen were amplified and the difference between threshold cycles for detection was less than five. Diagnosis of enteric bacterial infections using this highly sensitive method, including DNA extraction and real-time PCR, requires only 3 h. Forty stool specimens related to suspected food poisoning outbreaks were analysed: 16 (40%) of these samples were found to be positive for diarrhoeagenic bacteria using a conventional culture method; 28 (70%) were positive using the real-time PCR assay. Of the 12 PCR-positive but culture-negative cases, 11 patients had consumed pathogen-contaminated or high-risk food. Analysis of faecal samples from 105 outpatients who complained of diarrhoea and/or abdominal pain identified 19 (18%) patients as being positive for diarrhoeagenic bacteria using the culture method. An additional six (6%) patients were found to be positive by PCR analysis.
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PMID:Improvement in the detection rate of diarrhoeagenic bacteria in human stool specimens by a rapid real-time PCR assay. 1518 31


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