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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Enterotoxigenic
colibacillosis
was experimentally produced in 8 of 9 colostrum-fed calves orally given 10(11) Escherichia coli. The eight calves developed profuse diarrhea accompanied by dehydration and
depression
. At 12 hours after exposure, all calves were euthanatized for necropsy and for collection of tissues for microscopic examination. Histopathologic changes included stunted villi in the jejunum and ileum, focal degeneration and exfoliation of absorptive epithelial cells at the tips of jejunal and ileal villi, and focal emigration of neutrophils which was especially prominent above the dome area of aggregated lymphatic follicles (Peyer's patches). A layer of E coli adhered to the epithelial surface of the jejunum and ileum. In the duodenum, lesions were minimal or absent and bacteria were not adhering to the mucosa. Histopathologic changes were not observed in other tissues. In two calves examined 24 hours after they were inoculated and in two calves euthanatized 24 to 36 hours after spontaneously developing enteric
colibacillosis
, lesions were similar to those observed in the calves at 12 hours after exposure.
...
PMID:Enterotoxigenic colibacillosis in colostrum-fed calves: pathologic changes. 39 41
Lactase deficiency, manifested clinically by lactose malabsorption, is often the only biochemical evidence of a residual disturbance of jejunal mucosal function after Escherichia coli enteropathy in the infant. Villous morphology is usually normal. A sustained
depression
of the processes of biochemical differentiation of lactase biosynthesis has been postulated to explain similar states of lactase deficiency, but a possible influence of altered epithelial cell turnover on the mucosal lactase levels has not been investigated. In ten infants with a residual lactose malabsorption, after
E. coli infection
, jejunal cell renewal activity and disaccharidase activities were studied by analysis of the exfoliated cells collected by lumenal perfusion. Significant increases in DNA and protein exfoliation and in the brush border activities of sucrase and lactase were observed during recovery from the malabsorptive disturbance. DNA and protein efflux increased almost linearly during a 20-day period. Lactase was initially four times more deficient than sucrase activity in the exfoliated cells. Both enzyme activities increased at almost identical rates. Therefore, it took longer for lactase activity to return to normal levels. The lactase/sucrase ratios approached normal at the end of the 20-day period. The changes in the exfoliating levels of the two enzymes, when analysed in relation to the increases in cell renewal activity, suggested a relationship between sucrase and lactase levels and cell age.
...
PMID:Intestinal exfoliated cells in infant diarrhoea: changes in cell renewal and disaccharidase activities. 104 54
A fibrinous polyserositis syndrome due to generalized
Escherichia coli infection
in pigs was observed in 13 out of 17 systematically monitored herds. The mortality rate was approximately 0.1% among liveborn pigs. The occurrence was usually sporadic but a minor enzootic was observed in one herd. Most of the affected pigs succumbed during first or second week of life but cases were observed throughout the suckling period. The clinical signs included marked
depression
, anorexia, rough haircoat, laboured respiration and death in two to five days. Predominant gross pathological lesions were signs of septicaemia and a voluminous, gelatinous and fibrinous exudate in the pleural, the pericardial and the peritoneal cavities. Frequently also a firbinous polyarthritis and a fibrinous pneumonia were present. The majority of the isolated invasive E. coli strains were nonhaemolytic. Serologically 11 different E. coli O groups were encountered. O group most frequently represented was 020. None of the examined E. coli strains belonged to the serogroups which frequently are associated with enteropathogenicity in pigs.
...
PMID:Polyserositis in pigs due to generalized Escherichia coli infection. 110 Feb 4
A clinical study was undertaken to determine the immune status of patients with obstructive jaundice. Screening of 16 patients for phagocytic and microbicidal activity of polymorphonuclear cells (PMN) revealed a significant
depression
(21.2 +/- 3.7% phagocytosis and 20.85 +/- 4.5% intracellular killing) of these functions, as compared to normal values (30.37 +/- 5.1% and 26.41 +/- 4.3% respectively). An animal model of cholestasis was also established, using rats, in which a significant
depression
of activity of PMN and peritoneal macrophages was observed. These cellular abnormalities were found to precede and predispose to infection. The rats also showed an increased susceptibility to
Escherichia coli infection
(mortality rate 77.78%). A defect was detected in their serum responsible for depressing the function of phagocytic cells. An attempt was made to improve this immunosuppression by treating the rats with water extract of T. cordifolia 100 mg/kg for 7 days, following development of cholestasis. The extract improved the cellular immune functions. Mortality rate following Esch. coli infection was significantly reduced to 16.67 per cent. This study showed that cholestasis results in immunosuppression and therefore indicates the need for an immunomodulator in management of obstructive jaundice. The plant T. cordifolia seems to meet this need by consolidating host defence mechanism.
...
PMID:Modulation of immunosuppression in obstructive jaundice by Tinospora cordifolia. 269 92
A four-year-old castrated male domestic shorthair cat with recent onset of lethargy and
depression
was found to have hypokalaemia, low plasma bicarbonate concentration and a urine pH of 7. Subsequent findings of hyperchloraemic metabolic acidosis with failure to produce acid urine led to a diagnosis of distal renal tubular acidosis. Pyelonephritis associated with
Escherichia coli infection
of the urinary tract was also diagnosed. The urinary tract infection was eliminated by antibiotic treatment. For two years subsequently, the clinical effects of distal renal tubular acidosis have been controlled by oral administration of potassium bicarbonate, although some biochemical abnormalities have persisted.
...
PMID:Distal renal tubular acidosis in a cat with pyelonephritis. 352 97
Previous data from our laboratory have demonstrated that glucan administration significantly alters the course of a variety of experimentally induced infectious diseases. In view of the increasing incidence of gram-negative infections, studies were initiated to evaluate the effect of intraperitoneal glucan therapy on Escherichia coli-induced peritonitis and sepsis. Male ICR/Tex mice were injected intraperitoneally with glucan or dextrose on days 5 and 3 prior to intraperitoneal challenge with 1.0 x 10(8) E. coli. Glucan administration resulted in a significant enhancement of survival. Evaluation of the mechanism of protective action of glucan revealed that both the glucan and dextrose control groups showed an equivalent level of blood-borne E. coli at early periods. At 6 hours after challenge the glucan group showed a significant decrease in blood-borne E. coli. In contrast, the dextrose control group demonstrated progressive bacteremia. A significant
depression
of phagocytic activity occurred in E. coli-infected mice as compared with control mice that were not exposed to the bacterial challenge. The enhancement in phagocytic function observed in glucan-treated control mice was unaltered in E. coli challenged, glucan-treated mice. The possible importance of hyperfunctional macrophages in reduction of mortality from E. coli sepsis was denoted by methyl palmitate-induced reversal of the glucan hyperfunctional state. Methyl palmitate-treated glucan injected mice were not protected against
E. coli infection
. These data denote that the intraperitoneal administration of glucan significantly modifies the course of E. coli-induced peritonitis and bacteremia due, in part, to glucan-induced enhancement of macrophage function.
...
PMID:Immunotherapeutic modification of Escherichia coli--induced experimental peritonitis and bacteremia by glucan. 633 16
Monoclinic P2(1) crystals of the bacteriophage phi X174 have been incubated with calcium ions (Ca2+) and the induced structural conformational changes studied to 3 A resolution with X-ray crystallographic methods. Three different types of Ca2+ binding sites have been located within the asymmetric unit of the virion. Two sets of sites are associated with the F capsid protein. One set of sites associated with the F protein is in a general position near the icosahedral 3-fold axes of the virus, with the main-chain carbonyl oxygen atoms of residues Gly1321, Asp1421, Met1424 and Ser1426, and the side-chains of Gln1004 and Asp1421 as ligands. The other set of sites associated with the F protein is on the icosahedral 3-fold axes, with the symmetry-related main-chain carbonyl oxygen atoms of Ser1001 and the side-chains of Asn1002 as ligands. The bound Ca2+ induce a conformational change of the amino-terminal residues of the F proteins. A third set of sites, consisting of a pair of Ca2+ on the icosahedral 5-fold axes, are associated with the G spike protein and are concurrently liganded by the symmetry-related carbonyl oxygen side-chains of Asp2117. Concomitant with the binding of Ca2+ to the phage is the rotation of the Asp1209 side-chain of the F protein towards some additional electron density that was not observed in the absence of Ca2+. This density is situated in a shallow
depression
near the icosahedral 2-fold axes of the virus, and has been tentatively interpreted as a bound glucose molecule that is ordered only in the presence of Ca2+. The putative glucose binding site may be related to the attachment of the virus to cell surface lipopolysaccharides in the initial stages of
Escherichia coli infection
.
...
PMID:Calcium ion-induced structural changes in bacteriophage phi X174. 796 40
Escherichia coli bacteria expressing mannose-resistant fimbriae/haemagglutination induced the production of substantial amounts of tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) from a peripheral human lymphocyte, monocyte, basophil (LMB) cell suspension. In this regard, E. coli bacteria with S-mannose-resistant fimbriae/haemagglutination were the most potent inducers of IL-6 and TNF-alpha secretion, followed by the E. coli strain with P-mannose-resistant fimbriae/haemagglutination. The E. coli alpha-haemolysin did not stimulate cytokine release from human LMB. In fact, this toxin, at non-toxic concentrations, depressed the spontaneous as well as the E. coli-induced production of TNF-alpha, IL-6, IL-1 beta. Our results indicate that two mechanisms may contribute to the severity of
E. coli infection
: (a) stimulation of cytokine release by type-specific fimbriae/haemagglutination properties and (b)
depression
of immune response by the E. coli alpha-haemolysin.
...
PMID:Induction and suppression of cytokine release (tumour necrosis factor-alpha; interleukin-6, interleukin-1 beta) by Escherichia coli pathogenicity factors (adhesions, alpha-haemolysin). 849 69
The aim of this study was to develop a reliable model system of porcine post-weaning
colibacillosis
, and in doing so to assess the primary relationship of enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli to post-weaning diarrhoea and digestive disorders as encountered in the field. Six sequential experiments were carried out using 168 SPF piglets weaned into an optimal controlled environment at 28 days of age. The piglets were allocated to 23 treatment groups, 17 of which were inoculated either orally or intragastrically with enterotoxigenic strains of E. coli (LT+, STI+, STII+) possessing adhesive factors including K88 (F4). The piglets were challenged either once (Day 4 post-weaning) or on several days post-weaning, with the challenge load for each inoculation varying from 10(8) to 10(12) CFU. Overall 14.5% of inoculated pigs developed severe illness and died: these had lesions in their digestive tracts typical of
colibacillosis
. Diarrhoea occurred on at least 1 day in 50% of inoculated pigs, but was transient (1.7 days on average), appeared very soon after challenge (sometimes within half a day), and was accompanied by signs of
depression
and low weight gain. Generally a prompt recovery then occurred. In the second 2 weeks post-inoculation daily weight gain reached the same level in most inoculated groups of pigs as in the uninoculated controls. Only a small number of pigs developed a chronic enteritis lasting several days, as is typically observed in field cases. Diarrhoea was more common in the piglets that were tested adhesive positive to the K88 fimbriae receptor, but the disorders were no more severe in these animals. The response of all pigs depended primarily on the inoculum used, and especially on the challenge load. Although enterotoxigenic E. coli are clearly important in the aetiology of post-weaning diarrhoea, other factors are also required for the production of the chronic post-weaning digestive disorders and ill-thrift that are commonly encountered in commercial piggeries.
...
PMID:Experimental models of porcine post-weaning colibacillosis and their relationship to post-weaning diarrhoea and digestive disorders as encountered in the field. 1072 39
A study was conducted to evaluate the effects of ochratoxin A (OA) on Escherichia coli-challenged broiler chickens. Day-old broiler chicks were separated into two groups of 92 chicks each, with one group fed a control mash diet, and the other fed a mash diet containing 2 ppm OA. On day 14, each group was further separated into two groups, with one group inoculated with E. coli O78 (1 x 10(7) colony-forming units/0.5 ml), whereas the other group was not inoculated with E. coli. After E. coli inoculation on day 14, four birds from each group were euthanatized at 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 10, 14, and 21 days postinoculation.
Escherichia coli infection
caused dullness,
depression
, huddling, and diarrhea. Mortality was 14.3% in chicks infected with E. coli but fed no OA. Mortality increased to 35.7% in chicks fed OA and infected with E. coli. Decreased body weight and reduced feed intake were observed in chicks fed OA, and the effects were more pronounced in chicks fed OA and infected with E. coli. Increased serum levels of aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, uric acid, and creatinine and decreased levels of total proteins, albumin, globulins, calcium, and phosphorus were observed in OA-fed birds.
Escherichia coli infection
did not cause significant alteration in any of the serum biochemical parameters. The presence of OA in poultry rations increased mortality and the severity of an
E. coli infection
.
...
PMID:Effect of ochratoxin A on Escherichia coli-challenged broiler chicks. 1288 1
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