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Query: UMLS:C0004623 (
bacterial infection
)
15,226
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hylesia metabus larvae are susceptible to several pathogens indigenous to the area in which they are found. Some larvae show symptoms characteristic of
bacterial infection
; they become flaccid and lethargic, and show a marked
loss of appetite
. We isolated and identified 29 bacterial strains from live, dead and experimentally infected H. metabus larvae, and evaluated their pathogenic activity. The bacteria which caused mortality in the larvae were: Pseudomonas aeruginosa (60-93.3%), Proteus vulgaris (20%), Alcaligenes faecalis, Planococcus sp. and Bacillus megaterium (10%), at doses of 3-4 x 10(7). Although P. aeruginosa is a well-known insect pathogen, this is the first report of its pathogenic activity on H. metabus. The potential risk to humans and low virulence make it unlikely that P. aeruginosa could be used in an augmentative biological control programme. However its natural incidence may be enhanced using parasites and predators of H. metabus as carriers.
...
PMID:Pathogenic effects of bacteria isolated from larvae of Hylesia metabus Crammer (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae). 1223 36
The medical records of 53 horses with purpura haemorrhagica were reviewed. Seventeen of them had been exposed to or infected with Streptococcus equi, nine had been infected with Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis, five had been vaccinated with S. equi M protein, five had had a respiratory infection of unknown aetiology, and two had open wounds; the other 15 cases had no history of recent viral or
bacterial infection
. The horses were between six months and 19 years of age (mean 8.4 years). The predominant clinical signs were well demarcated subcutaneous oedema of all four limbs and haemorrhages on the visible mucous membranes; other signs included depression,
anorexia
, fever, tachycardia, tachypnoea, reluctance to move, drainage from lymph nodes, exudation of serum from the skin, colic, epistaxis and weight loss. Haematological and biochemical abnormalities commonly detected were anaemia, neutrophilia, hyperproteinaemia, hyperfibrinogenaemia, hyperglobulinaemia and high activities of muscle enzymes. All of the horses were treated with corticosteroids; 42 also received non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and 26 received antimicrobial drugs. Selected cases received special nursing care, including hydrotherapy and bandaging of the limbs. Most of the horses were treated for more than seven days and none of them relapsed. Forty-nine of the horses survived, one died and three were euthanased, either because their severe clinical disease failed to respond to treatment or because they developed secondary complications. Two of the four non-survivors had been vaccinated against S. equi with a product containing the M protein, one had a S. equi infection and the other had a respiratory infection of undetermined aetiology.
...
PMID:Purpura haemorrhagica in 53 horses. 1291 29
Salmonella typhimurium was isolated from the feces of an alpaca suffering
anorexia
and weight loss. Multifocal necrotizing and suppurative hepatitis consistent with
bacterial infection
was found in the liver biopsies. Enteric salmonellosis may be associated with milder physical and clinicopathological changes in camelids than in other large animal species.
...
PMID:Necrotizing hepatitis associated with enteric salmonellosis in an alpaca. 1514 6
Anorexia
is a common symptom accompanying infections, but the teleology of the phenomenon remains unexplained. We hypothesize that
anorexia
may represent a prehistoric behavioral adaptation to fight infection by maintaining T helper (Th)2 bias, which is particularly vital in fighting bacterial pathogens. Specifically, we propose that
anorexia
may avert the reduction of Th2/Th1 ratio by preventing feeding-induced neurohormonal and vagal output from the gut. Emerging evidence suggests that the vagal and neurohormonal output of the gut during feeding promotes Th1 function, which is desirable in fighting viral infections. Since fever may be an adaptation to fight bacteria and "colds" are generally viral in origin, the adage "starve a fever and feed a cold" may reflect a sensible behavioral strategy to tilt autonomic and Th balance in directions that are optimal for fighting the particular type of infection. The ability to modulate T helper balance through the neurohormonal and autonomic axis by adjusting food intake may be the mechanism behind other unexplained clinical observations such as the improved outcomes of ICU patients after enteric versus parenteric feedings. Compared to the prehistoric period when
bacterial infection
was commonplace, the anorexic response may be less adaptive today when viruses and cancers have become common triggers of
anorexia
. By promoting host
anorexia
, cachexia, and insomnia, cancers and viruses can deter behaviors such as digestion and sleep that would raise vagal and Th1 activity against tumors and viruses. Hydration and sleep, unexplained but widely accepted recommendations for flu patients, may also work by promoting vagal and Th1 functions. Modulating feeding, hydration, and sleep may prove beneficial in treating other conditions associated with abnormal autonomic and Th balance.
...
PMID:"Starve a fever and feed a cold": feeding and anorexia may be adaptive behavioral modulators of autonomic and T helper balance. 1582 88
Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is caused by the protozoan parasite Leishmania donovani and transmitted by the bite of infected sandfly Phlebotomus argentipes. Nearly half of the VL cases occur in children (childhood or paediatric VL). The clinical manifestations of childhood VL are more or less same as in the adults. Prolonged fever with
anorexia
and
loss of appetite
are the major presenting features. Marked enlargement of the spleen and liver (spleen larger than liver) with moderate to severe anaemia and changes in hair take place.
Bacterial infection
is a common coinfection and intestinal parasitic infestations are very common in children with VL. Liver function tests, blood, urine and stool may show abnormalities. Confirmation of diagnosis is made by demonstration of parasite by microscopic examination and culture of materials obtained by bone marrow aspiration or splenic puncture. Sodium antimony gluconate (stibogluconate) has been the drug of choice for over past 50 yr. Pentamidine isothionate, though effective is relatively toxic. Amphotericin B is the most effective drug for the treatment of VL. Miltefosine is the first-ever oral drug, is highly effective. Post kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis (PKDL) in children poses a therapeutic challenge. In the absence of an ideal vaccine for VL, control measures would essentially include prevention of transmission through vector control and community awareness.
...
PMID:Childhood visceral leishmaniasis. 1677 16
After
bacterial infection
, the host reacts by signalling to the central nervous system where a cascade of physiologic, neuroendocrine and behavioural processes is orchestrated, collectively termed the acute phase response. Endotoxemia following Gram-negative
bacterial infection
induces a wide array of effects, including fever,
loss of appetite
and changes in gastrointestinal function that attempt to eliminate the challenge and restore homeostasis. Systemic administration of low doses of endotoxin (5-40 microg/kg) to rats is associated with changes in gastrointestinal motor function, inhibition of gastric acid secretion and increase in the gastric mucosal resistance to damage. These changes are rapid in onset (observed within one hour), not related to vascular dysfunction, and appear to be mediated by mechanisms that involve the peripheral and the central nervous system. Nitric oxide (NO) plays a central role in the physiology of the gastrointestinal tract and its response to illness. Accumulated evidence supports an increase of NO synthesis in the brainstem, as well as in the gastric myenteric plexus thirty minutes after endotoxin administration. Such a synthesis is due to constitutive nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and occurs before the induction of NOS takes place. In this review we provide experimental evidence supporting the hypothesis that activation of a physiologic mechanism, mediated by the autonomic and the central nervous systems as well as constitutive NOS isoforms, is involved in acute changes of gastrointestinal function during early endotoxemia.
...
PMID:Nitrergic modulation of gastrointestinal function during early endotoxemia. 1716 58
Symptoms of
bacterial infection
include decreases in body mass (cachexia), induction of depressive-like hedonic tone (anhedonia), decreases in food intake (
anorexia
), and increases in body temperature (fever). Recognition of bacteria by the innate immune system triggers the release of proinflammatory cytokines which induce these sickness behaviors via actions at central and peripheral targets. In Siberian hamsters, exposure to short day lengths decreases both the production of proinflammatory cytokines and the magnitude of the symptoms of infection. Short-day attenuation of sickness behaviors may arise solely from decreased production of cytokines; alternatively, substrates responsible for the generation of sickness behaviors may be less responsive to cytokines in short days. To discriminate among these hypotheses, Siberian hamsters were treated with either bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 25 microg) or recombinant mouse IL-1beta (rIL-1beta; 100 ng) following 11 weeks of exposure to long (15 h light/day) and short (9 h light/day) photoperiods. Replicating earlier work, the magnitude and/or duration of LPS-induced
anorexia
, anhedonia, cachexia, and fever were greater in long-day relative to short-day hamsters. A comparable short-day attenuation of sickness behaviors and fever was obtained in response to rIL-1beta treatment, despite treatment with identical concentrations of cytokine. These data suggest that hamsters subjected to immunoenhancing short days exhibit diminished symptoms of infection not solely because infections elicit lower levels of cytokine production, but also because the substrates upon which cytokines act become relatively refractory.
...
PMID:Photoperiodic regulation of behavioral responsiveness to proinflammatory cytokines. 1727 61
The arcuate nucleus (Arc) and the lateral hypothalamic area (LHA), two key hypothalamic nuclei regulating feeding behavior, express c-Fos, a marker of neuronal activation in fasted animals. This is reversed by refeeding. In the present study we tested whether an anorectic dose of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), the cell wall component of Gram-negative bacteria, also inhibits fasting-induced c-Fos expression in these hypothalamic nuclei. This would suggest that they are involved in
anorexia
during bacterial infections as well. We also studied whether LPS modulates the activity of orexin-A positive (OX+) LHA neurons. Food deprived BALB/c mice were injected with LPS or saline and were sacrificed 4 or 6h later. Four hours after injection, LPS reduced the number of c-Fos positive cells in the Arc and in the LHA, but had no effect on c-Fos in OX+ neurons. Six hours after injection, LPS reduced c-Fos expression in the LHA, both in the OX- and OX+ neurons, but not in the Arc. These results show that LPS modulates neuronal activity in the Arc and LHA similar to feeding-related stimuli, suggesting that the observed effects might contribute to the anorectic effect of LPS. Thus, physiological satiety signals released during refeeding and
anorexia
during
bacterial infection
seem to engage similar neuronal substrates.
...
PMID:Inhibitory effects of lipopolysaccharide on hypothalamic nuclei implicated in the control of food intake. 1762 18
Annual variations in day length (photoperiod) trigger changes in the immune and reproductive system of seasonally-breeding animals. The purpose of this study was to determine whether photoperiodic changes in immunity depend on concurrent photoperiodic responses in the reproductive system, or whether immunological responses to photoperiod occur independent of reproductive responses. Here we report photoperiodic changes in enumerative, functional, and behavioral aspects of the immune system, and in immunomodulatory glucocorticoid secretion, in reproductively non-photoperiodic Wistar rats. T-cell numbers (CD3+, CD8+, CD8+CD25+, CD4+CD25+) were higher in the blood of rats housed in short as opposed to long-day lengths for 10 weeks. Following a simulated
bacterial infection
(Escherichia coli LPS; 125 microg/kg) the severity of several acute-phase sickness behaviors (
anorexia
, cachexia, neophobia, and social withdrawal) were attenuated in short days. LPS-stimulated IL-1beta and IL-6 production were comparable between photoperiods, but plasma TNFalpha was higher in long-day relative to short-day rats. In addition, corticosterone concentrations were higher in short-day relative to long-day rats. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that photoperiodic regulation of the immune system can occur entirely independently of photoperiodic regulation of the reproductive system. In the absence of concurrent reproductive responses, short days increase the numbers of leukocytes capable of immunosurveillance and inhibition of inflammatory responses, increase proinflammatory cytokine production, increase immunomodulatory glucocorticoid secretion, and ultimately attenuate behavioral responses to infection. Seasonal changes in the host immune system, endocrine system, and behavior may contribute to the seasonal variability in disease outcomes, even in reproductively non-photoperiodic mammals.
...
PMID:Winter day lengths enhance T lymphocyte phenotypes, inhibit cytokine responses, and attenuate behavioral symptoms of infection in laboratory rats. 1772 99
A 15-year-old girl was admitted with a high fever and progressive malaise, vomiting,
anorexia
and abdominal complaints. She previously had a sore throat and unilateral painful swollen lymph nodes in the neck. Laboratory investigation indicated a
bacterial infection
. Blood cultures were taken. There was infiltrate in the left lung. Pneumonia complicated with sepsis was suspected and ceftriaxone was started. The patient's condition deteriorated. Computed tomography (CT) scan showed progressive infiltrates in both lungs and pleural effusion. Blood culture led to the diagnosis. After changing antibiotics the patient slowly improved. Antibiotics were continued for several weeks.
...
PMID:A previously healthy 15-year-old girl with high fever and progressive dyspnoea. 1825 50
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