Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0013911 (emaciation)
1,059 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In Bangui (Central African Republic), where seroprevalence of HIV is 11% in the adult population, AIDS presents some clinical aspects different from the ones known in the west; the clinical experience reported in this paper is based on 504 cases infested by HIV group 4; diagnosis is very often made thanks to the clinical score recommended by World Health Organization (predictive value of 66%). Predominant manifestations (14%) are: asthenia (100%), emaciation (100%), fever (88%), diarrhea (42%), pulmonary attacks (37%), adenopathies, cutaneous manifestations (35%), neurological manifestations (14%). Some affections call for HIV infection with a significant predictive value: herpes zoster (96%), Kaposi's symptom (68%), mouth candidiasis (71%), pulmonary tuberculosis (56%: as far as some others are concerned, HIV has to be suspected: infant denutrition, acute infections, neurological disorders. Development is severe: 45% of the patients examined died in the 4 months coming after diagnosis. Epidemiology speaking, they are young patients (mean age 27.4 years), neither addicted nor "doped", heterosexual with multiple partners, with female prostitution occasionally; sex ratio is 0.95. Recognized transmission by transfusion is the exception (2/504). The transmission due to vaccination or injection is rare and difficult to evaluate. Only radical alteration of sexual behaviour will modify HIV dissemination.
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PMID:[Clinical aspects of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in Central Africa: 6 years' experience at a hospital in an endemic area]. 322 83

Cryptosporidiosis was diagnosed in 81 guinea pigs (Cavia porcellus) from 1979 through 1985 at a research animal diagnostic laboratory. Most of the guinea pigs were juveniles of Hartley stock and originated from 6 commercial laboratory animal suppliers or from one pet store supplier. Common clinical signs reported were failure to gain weight, weight loss, diarrhea, and death. At necropsy, macroscopic findings included emaciation, hyperemia of the small intestine, serosal edema of the cecal wall, and increased fluidity of ingesta throughout the intestines. Oval to round cryptosporidia (1 to 4 microns) were seen microscopically within or on the brush border of mucosal epithelial cells from the duodenum through the cecum. Acute histologic lesions consisted of necrosis and sloughing of enterocytes at the villus tips, inflammation, hyperemia and edema of the lamina propria, and hyperplasia of crypt epithelium. More chronic lesions consisted of marked villus bridging or villus fusion and blunting, metaplasia of the mucosal epithelium, and lymphocytic infiltration of the lamina propria.
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PMID:Cryptosporidiosis in guinea pigs: a retrospective study. 350 20

A 12-year-old Thoroughbred mare, with a history of anorexia, dramatic weight loss, fluctuating pyrexia and intermittent diarrhoea after an episode of colic, was presented for examination with depression, emaciation and ataxia. Thoracic and abdominal paracenteses yielded copious quantities of inflammatory exudate. Palpation per rectum revealed an enlarged spleen. The primary alterations in haematology included a severe leucocytosis with a left shift, and a hyperproteinaemia characterised by hypoalbuminaemia and hypergammaglobulinaemia. Post-mortem examination revealed a low grade pleurisy and peritonitis with fluid accumulation in both cavities. A suppurative gastritis with full thickness perforations of the stomach wall associated with Gasterophilus intestinalis larvae had extended to the juxtaposed organ initiating an extensive suppurative splenitis. Streptococcus zooepidemicus was cultured.
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PMID:Suppurative splenitis and peritonitis in a horse after gastric ulceration caused by larvae of Gasterophilus intestinalis. 363 94

Trichuriasis caused by Trichuris discolor was diagnosed in a 19-month-old Holstein heifer examined because of emaciation, diarrhea, recumbency, and oral ulceration. The heifer's problem was representative of a herd problem involving pastured replacement heifers. Euthanasia was elected due to the heifer's moribund state and poor prognosis. Gross necropsy revealed subcutaneous edema and diffuse edema of the colon, with hundreds of adult Trichuris discolor in the cecum and colon. Histologic examination revealed multifocal subacute necrotizing colitis, with many adult Trichuris discolor embedded in the mucosa. Treatment instituted on the farm consisted of levamisole hydrochloride at a dosage of 6 mg/kg of body weight. Favorable response was documented by clinical improvement and elimination of fecal shedding of trichurid eggs.
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PMID:Whipworm (Trichuris discolor) infection in dairy replacement heifers. 371 Aug 97

VP 16-213 (etoposide, abbr. to VP), an oncostatic drug, was administered orally to Crj : CD (Sprague-Dawley) rats of both sexes at dose levels of 3, 10, 30 and 100 mg/kg/day for one month with the object of examining its subacute toxicity and the reversibility of toxic effects. The summarized results obtained are as follows: VP 30 mg/kg suppressed body weight increase and feed intake, and brought soft stool. VP 100 mg/kg decreased body weight and feed intake, and induced diarrhea, depilation and so forth. Furthermore, half of the animals at this dose level died showing systemic debility and emaciation. VP 30 and 100 mg/kg predominantly decreased red blood cell count as well as white blood cell count accompanied with lowered lymphocyte fraction. VP 10 mg/kg and higher lowered total serum protein content and serum alkaline phosphatase activity, and elevated A/G ratio. VP 10 mg/kg and higher caused thymic atrophy and a decrease in testicular weight; 30 and 100 mg/kg brought suppression of spermatogenesis; and 100 mg/kg predominantly induced appearance of giant cells in epididymis, hypoplasia of bone marrow, ileocecitis, and atrophy of prostate, seminal vesicle and splenic germinal centers. Above-described changes excluding exacerbation of the findings on testis and epididymis were shown to be generally reversible. Based on these results, the no-effect dose level of VP under the present experimental condition was estimated to be 3 mg/kg/day against rats of both sexes.
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PMID:[Toxicity studies of VP 16-213 (II)--Oral one-month subacute toxicity in rats]. 376 92

VP 16-213 (etoposide, abbr. to VP), an oncostatic drug, was administered orally to Crj : CD (Sprague-Dawley) rats of both sexes at dose levels of 1, 3, 10 and 30 mg/kg/day for six months with the object of examining its chronic toxicity and the reversibility of toxic effects. The summarized results obtained are as follows: VP 30 mg/kg suppressed body weight increase and feed intake, and brought transient diarrhea, anemia and depilation. Some animals receiving this dose died showing systemic debility, emaciation and ataxia. VP 3 mg/kg and higher predominantly decreased red blood cell count as well as white blood cell count accompanied with lowered lymphocyte fraction. VP 30 mg/kg lowered total serum protein content and elevated A/G ratio in males, and lowered serum alkaline phosphatase activity in females. VP 10 and 30 mg/kg predominantly induced thymic atrophy, testicular atrophy with suppression of spermatogenesis and tubular atrophy, a decrease in epididymal weight, and splenic erythropoiesis. Above-described changes excluding the findings on testis and epididymis in VP 30 mg/kg group were shown to be generally reversible. Based on these results, the non-effect dose level of VP under the present experimental condition was estimated to be 1 mg/kg/day against rats of both sexes.
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PMID:[Toxicity studies of VP 16-213 (III)--Oral six-month chronic toxicity in rats]. 376

The histopathological changes and the course of graft-versus-host (GVH) disease were studied in the rat model of small-bowel transplantation using the Lewis----LBN-F1 strain combination. Allograft-induced GVH disease led to the recipients' death from enteritis, dermatitis and emaciation after 14.4 +/- 2.9 days (heterotopic grafts) and 14.0 +/- 0.7 days (orthotopic grafts). Histologic evidence of dermatitis (epidermal hyperkeratosis and cutaneous infiltration by mononuclear and polymorphonuclear cells) and enteritis (villous blunting and sloughing, inflammatory infiltrate of the recipient's own intestine) appeared on the 9th to 13th postoperative days, and these changes became fulminant within 2-3 days. The lymphatic tissues of the Lewis grafts and the LBN-F1 host underwent a course of progressive lymphoid depletion and loss of follicular architecture beginning on the 5th postoperative day. Throughout the postoperative course, the small-bowel graft remained intact. The relative spleen weight progressively increased until shortly before death, when a marked reduction was observed. The clinical triad of diarrhea, diffuse dermatitis, and hypertrophy of the lymphoid organs followed by their atrophy suggests a diagnosis of GVH disease rather than rejection of the small-bowel allograft. The diagnosis can be confirmed by biopsy of a recipient lymph node or the intestinal allograft (cave perforation) if it is accessible.
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PMID:Graft-versus-host disease induced by small bowel allografts. Clinical course and pathology. 395

In recent years cryptosporidia have often been identified in diarrheic calves of under one month old, either as the sole pathogenic agent or in combination with other diarrhea-causing infectious agents. In 203 cases of bovine cryptosporidiosis, recorded over a period of two years, cryptosporidia were present in such great numbers that they would seem to be of causal significance. The calves were from three days to five weeks old. In 111 cases (55%) a monoinfection with cryptosporidia occurred, while in the rest of the cases mixed infections with other agents associated with calf diarrhea were demonstrated, especially rotavirus (61 cases) and coronavirus (32 cases); in addition, mixed infections with ETEC (four cases), septicaemic E. coli (two cases), salmonellosis (11 cases), and BVD and coccidiosis (one case each) were seen. In 87 (10%) of 849 4-21-day-old dead calves a massive occurrence of cryptosporidia was demonstrated. Extreme emaciation was noted in 36 of 122 autopsied calves. Most of these calves were more than 14 days old, and mono-infection with cryptosporidia was demonstrated in two thirds of them. In younger calves, more acute cases of cryptosporidiosis were commoner, often in connection with concomitant infections with rota- or coronavirus.
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PMID:Bovine cryptosporidiosis in Denmark. 2. Cryptosporidia associated with neonatal calf diarrhea. 399 54

Clinical and laboratory findings are recorded from a series of 15 cases (aged one to 16 years) of sudden-onset chronic diarrhoea with weight loss, progressing in many cases to emaciation and death, associated with the emergence of fourth stage cyathostome (trichoneme) larvae in large numbers through the colonic and caecal mucosae. Apart from a single incident in mid-October, disease only occurred in winter and spring (January to May). Characteristic features included hypoalbuminaemia, increased alpha and beta plasma globulin levels and neutrophilia without left shift. Faecal egg counts were frequently negative and eosinophilia and anaemia were not features. Horses treated in the early stages responded well to larvicidal doses of fenbendazole (60 mg/kg bodyweight) but in cases where this therapy was delayed for weeks or months the prognosis was poor.
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PMID:Larval cyathostomiasis (immature trichonema-induced enteropathy): a report of 15 clinical cases. 407 27

A case of WDHA syndrome accompanied by a pancreatic tumor in a 44-year-old Japanese male is presented, the 6th case in Japan. Clinically, the patient suffered from unremitting watery diarrhea, hypokalemia and achlorhydria with marked anemia and jaundice. The patient died of emaciation, dehydration and bronchopenumonia, and an autopsy was performed. Autopsy examination revealed a hen's egg-sized tumor in the tail of the pancreas with metastases in liver, lungs and lymph nodes. In addition, bronchopneumonia and diabetic nephrosclerosis were present. Histologically, the tumor had the characteristics of an islet cell tumor, and histochemically the tumor cells were positive to Grimelius' stain which revealed non-B-islet cell features. Electron-microscopically, the tumor cells had electron dense round membrane-bounded granules resembling non-B-granules of pancreatic islet cells. With the immunoperoxidase procedure (PAP method), tumor cells nearly almost reacted to anti-vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) serum, which suggested that the tumor of the present case had the capability to produce VIP.
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PMID:Watery diarrhea, hypokalemia and achlorhydria syndrome. Morphological and immunohistological study. 625 96


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