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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (
gastroenteritis
)
11,398
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Stool specimens from children with
gastroenteritis
and their household contacts were cultured for Yersinia enterocolitica by direct plating onto routine laboratory media. These stools were also inoculated into phosphate-buffered saline and subcultured to the same media after 1 day or 3 weeks of incubation at 4 degrees C. Y. enterocolitica was isolated from 174 index cases and 34 household contacts. One hundred eighty-one isolates were of serotype O:3, and the remaining 21 belonged to other serotypes. Eighty-one percent (147/181) of O:3 isolates were recovered by direct plating, and 6.1% (11/181) and 13% (23/181) were recovered by 1-day and 3-week
cold
enrichment, respectively. For other serotypes, 26% (7/27), 0%, and 74% (20/27) were isolated by direct plating, 1-day
cold
enrichment, and 3-week
cold
enrichment, respectively. The efficacy of the
cold
enrichment for the patients were still symptomatic, 94 and 6% of Y. enterocolitica were identified by direct plating and
cold
enrichment, respectively. Isolation rates were 66% by direct plating and 34% by
cold
enrichment when stools were obtained from asymptomatic carriers or from those convalescing from Y. enterocolitica
gastroenteritis
. These results indicate that the
cold
enrichment methods increase the sensitivity of Y. entercolitica culture methods considerably in convalescent and asymptomatic subjects but only minimally in patients with diarrhea caused by serotype O:3.
...
PMID:Efficacy of cold enrichment techniques for recovery of Yersinia enterocolitica from human stools. 38 18
Vibrio parahaemolyticus was isolated in two subjects with acute
gastroenteritis
. The patients history included stay in Pakistan or India. They probably contracted the infection on board an aeroplane where they ingested
cold
meal containing sea products. The possibility of this conditioned pathogen occurring also in an inland country is pointed out.
...
PMID:Human infections caused by V. parahaemolyticus in Czechoslovakia. 103 28
Vibrio parahaemolyticus was isolated in two subjects with acute
gastroenteritis
. The patients' history included stay in Pakistan or India. They probably contracted the infection on board an aeroplane where they ingested
cold
meal containing sea products. The possibility of this conditioned pathogen occurring also in an inland country is pointed out.
...
PMID:Human infections caused by V. parahaemolyticus in Czechoslovakia. 103 57
Of 34 non-bacterial
gastroenteritis
outbreaks which occurred at day-care centers, kindergartens, elementary and secondary schools in Tokyo during the period from February 1985 to June 1991, 28 outbreaks from which small round structured viruses (SRSV) were detected in the patients' stool specimens by electron microscopy were subjected to an epidemiological investigation. The outbreaks tended to occur frequently in the
cold
season; twenty-two (79%) of these outbreaks from November through April. Though detailed epidemiological informations was not obtained from all outbreaks, the common source of infection were presumed to be present in many of the outbreaks, judged from the incidence as to time course of patients. Food doubted to be incriminated as transmission vehicles in these outbreaks was served at schools, kindergartens, and lodgings. In some outbreaks, SRSV was detected from stool specimens of food handlers, or they were seroconverted to SRSV, suggesting that food was incriminated as a transmission vehicle. The symptoms of patients differ slightly from age to age: in the age range of 0 to 6 years, vomiting 90%, fever 41% and diarrhea 32%; in the 6 to 12 year-olds, nausea 61%, vomiting 48%, abdominal pain 65%, diarrhea 20% and fever 29%; and in the 12 to 15 year-olds, nausea 69%, vomiting 42%, abdominal pain 60%, diarrhea 30% and fever 34%. The lower the age of patient vomiting was more frequently observed. In these lower age groups, the frequency of nausea and vomiting tended to exceed that of diarrhea.
...
PMID:[Outbreaks of acute gastroenteritis caused by small round structured viruses in Tokyo]. 133 Dec 65
Several reports have described an inverse relationship between the frequency of infections and various malignancies. In this paper results of a hospital-based case control study on 139 melanoma patients and 271 suitable selected controls are presented, addressing the question of whether this relationship exists with respect to malignant melanoma while simultaneously controlling for the effects of other risk factors. Data on childhood diseases (group I), febrile diseases of adulthood (group II) and common febrile infections within a 5-year period prior to the diagnosis of melanoma (group III) were collected using a standardized interview. Group I diseases did not show a marked influence on the risk of malignant melanoma. Considering group II diseases, a significant protective effect was determined for chronic infectious diseases (OR = 0.32) and also for wound infections, abscesses and furunculosis (OR = 0.21). In group III, herpes simplex infections (OR = 0.45) and influenza/
common cold
(OR = 0.32) substantially reduced the melanoma risk. This effect was less pronounced for
gastroenteritis
(OR = 0.52). Analysis of the cumulative influence of infections pointed to a strong dose-response relationship between the frequency of febrile infections in adulthood and malignant melanoma. In particular, the risk reduction was striking when two or more febrile infections were compared to no febrile infections in group II (OR = 0.09) and group III (OR = 0.20). The study confirms the hypothesis that an inverse relationship exists between febrile infections and malignant melanoma, but these results have to be interpreted cautiously due to the inherent limitations of the case-control design.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Febrile infections and malignant melanoma: results of a case-control study. 145 Jun 74
The epidemiology of diarrhea among Filipino pediatric patients, representing a cross-section of socioeconomic strata, was investigated over a one year period. Rotavirus was detected in 33.9% of the diarrhea stools examined and was the leading cause of diarrhea in the study population. Although proportionately more rotavirus was found during the
cold
season, most children became infected with rotavirus during the rainy season, when diarrheal disease was at its peak in Metropolitan Manila. Enteric adenovirus types 40 or 41 were associated with only 5.4% of the diarrhea cases. Overall, one or more etiologic agents of diarrhea were detected in 67.2% of the stools examined. Many of these positive stools (21.6%) contained multiple diarrheogenic agents. Bacterial enteric pathogens were isolated from 32.3% of the cases. Nearly 70% of these patients with bacterial
gastroenteritis
became ill during the rainy season. Etiology specific and general risk factors associated with diarrheal illness in the study population are discussed.
...
PMID:A comprehensive survey of pediatric diarrhea at a private hospital in Metro Manila. 165 49
The results of a sanitary virological survey of the prevalence of rotaviruses in water objects in relation to
gastroenteritis
incidence are presented. Some regularities of the epidemic process of rotavirus infection were discovered: a high portion of infants involved, occurrence of cases of the disease predominantly in the
cold
periods of the year, a significant portion (23.8%) of rotavirus
gastroenteritis
in the total incidence of acute intestinal infections, etc. Besides, comparison of the data on the dynamics of rotavirus infection incidence and on the contamination of water objects with rotaviruses revealed a strong correlation between these data. The possibility of using this information for the evaluation of the epidemiological situation is discussed.
...
PMID:[The results of a study of the contamination of bodies of water by rotaviruses against a background of gastroenteritis morbidity]. 166 77
Commercial production data base records from 2 Illinois farms, on which epizootic or enzootic transmissible
gastroenteritis
(TGE) was experienced, were accessed for an epidemiologic study. Risk factors investigated were sow parity, source of sows, location of farrowing crates, and breeding practices. At farm 1, an epizootic was experienced; at farm 2, an epizootic of TGE followed by enzootic TGE was experienced. Initially, crude risk ratios were calculated for these risk factors, and the crude risk ratios were subsequently adjusted for confounders and interactions, using multiple logistic regression techniques. After adjustment, parity-3 sows were 2.3 times more likely to have litters with TGE than were sows of all other parities on farm 1, and parity-1 sows were 2.6 times more likely to have litters that experienced TGE than were sows of all other parities on farm 2. A single boar on each farm was linked to increased likelihood of a sow's litter contracting epizootic TGE on each farm. Enzootic TGE was maintained by the periodic influx of outside-source gilts on farm 2; these gilts were 2.2 times more likely to have litters with TGE than were sows derived from farm 2. Sows housed in farrowing crates located under the
cold
air inlet of farm 2 were 1.7 times as likely as sows located in other rows to have litters with enzootic TGE.
...
PMID:Risk factors associated with transmissible gastroenteritis in swine. 177 40
In developing countries rotavirus infections account for nearly 6% of all diarrheal episodes and for 20% of diarrhea-associated deaths of young children. Even in industrialized countries rotavirus diarrhea in the young is among the leading causes of hospitalization. In temperate regions institutional outbreaks of the disease occur mainly in
cold
dry weather, whereas in tropical settings the seasonality is less well defined. Waterborne outbreaks of rotavirus
gastroenteritis
have been recorded; air, hands, fomities, and food may also act as vehicles for this infection. Rotaviruses can survive for weeks in potable and recreational waters and for at least 4 hours on human hands. In air and on nonporous inanimate surfaces, the survival of rotaviruses is favored by a relative humidity of less than or equal to 50% and viral infectivity can be retained for several days. Rotaviruses are relatively resistant to commonly used hard-surface disinfectants and hygienic hand-wash agents.
...
PMID:Survival and vehicular spread of human rotaviruses: possible relation to seasonality of outbreaks. 186 49
Epidemiological studies on SRSVs, human calicivirus and astroviruses have been limited by the problems of establishing them in cell culture and the inability to transmit them to animals or to use strains from animals as a source of antigen for diagnostic tests. The use of EM and the subsequent development of RIAs and EIAs in a few research centres has shown that they are a cause of outbreaks and sporadic cases of diarrhoea and vomiting. SRSVs have increasingly been recognized as a major cause of outbreaks of
gastroenteritis
in the community and in hospital wards. The symptoms of illness are generally mild and of short duration and patients seldom require medical attention. However, because of the high attack rates and large numbers of persons of all age groups involved, there is often considerable economic loss and disruption of services. Evidence is accumulating that polluted water, molluscan shellfish, and contaminated
cold
foods are major sources of infection. Recently a SRSV has been shown to be the cause of epidemics and sporadic cases of waterborne enterically transmitted non-A, non-B hepatitis (hepatitis E virus) which have occurred in the USSR, India, Mexico and Africa. Astroviruses and human caliciviruses are occasional causes of outbreaks of vomiting and diarrhoea in infants and the elderly which can necessitate the closure of hospital wards and cause considerable disruption. Symptoms are generally mild and of short duration and therefore the majority of cases are unlikely to be investigated by laboratories. Diagnosis of infections is at present limited to the few laboratories that have developed their own assays or have access to electronmicroscopy facilities.
...
PMID:Human, small round structured viruses, caliciviruses and astroviruses. 196 28
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