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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (
gastroenteritis
)
11,398
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During the period January 1969 through October 1973, rectal swabs from 13,947 diarrhea patients of all ages at
infectious disease
hospital and children hospital in Saigon were examined. From these specimens 610 strains of Salmonella of all group were isolated. A total of 46 serologic types were encounted. The most commonly encounted were S. paratyphi B, S. java and S. typhimurium (group B). Most of Salmonella isolated were obtained from adult
gastroenteritis
. We have also studied the possible relation between human and animal salmonellosis. The rodents trapped from different aera in Saigon, fish and clams collected from different markets were examined by bacteriological surveys. From these specimens, 42 strains of Salmonella were isolated for a 2,2 percent isolation rate. Our study showed that Salmonella types which were isolated frequently from animal were encounted in man.
...
PMID:[Digestive salmonellosis in South Vietnam]. 110 11
During the period from September 8 to October 2, 1970, 44 of the 120 children and 78 of 141 adults questioned at the Children's Asthma Research Institute and Hospital experienced
gastroenteritis
characterized by nausea, vomiting, and fever and/or chills. Diarrhea was rare in children (4.5%) and common in adults (74%). The median duration of illness for children, 18 hours, was significantly shorter than the 48 hours for adults. All viral and bacterial cultures of 30 stool specimens were negative for viruses and bacterial pathogens. A retrospective survey of 28 ill employees revealed a secondary attach rate of 46% of 76 family contacts. A bacteria-free filtrate prepared from stool swab specimens of 2 ill adults by a team at the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases
was administered orally to 3 adult volunteers. One of the 3 vomited and had 4 watery diarrheal stools on the third post-inoculation day. Diarrheal stool filtrates from this person were then given orally to 8 others; 1 became ill. Although the epidemiologic features point to the respiratory route of infection, the probably successful serial transmission of disease via bacteria-free stool filtrates through 2 generations of volunteers also suggests that the "Denver agent" is a virus-sized particle that replicates in the gastrointestinal tract.
...
PMID:Epidemic acute infectious nonbacterial gastroenteritis at the Children's Asthma Research Institute and Hospital. 116 30
A hypothesis which explains disease prevalence among different socio-economic groups following early infantile modulation of cell-mediated immunity by infection and nutrition related stress is presented. Wealthy populations living under highly hygienic circumstances can develop their cell-mediated immunity to genetic expectation while their humoral systems remains unstimulated. Primitive populations protect the infant's immune development by breast feeding and suffer from temporary cell-mediated immune deficiencies due to intercurrent
infectious disease
and famine later on. Intermediary populations harbour a small percentage of people, whose cell-mediated immune system has been permanently damaged by infection in early childhood, leading to a high incidence of diseases linked to cell-mediated immune deficiency. The possible cocarcinogenesis of the cell-mediated immune deficiency following repeated
gastroenteritis
and persistent stimulation of B cells, leading to alpha heavy chain disease and primary intestinal lymphoma, or due to falciparum malaria in newborns and its impact on the EB virus genome in development of Burkitt's lymphoma, are discussed.
...
PMID:Immune modulation and disease patterns in population groups. 122 70
Antibody-dependent enhancement of virus infection is a process whereby virus-antibody complexes initiate infection of cells via Fc receptor-mediated endocytosis. We sought to investigate antibody-dependent enhancement of feline infectious peritonitis virus infection of primary feline peritoneal macrophages in vitro. Enhancement of infection was assessed, after indirect immunofluorescent-antibody labelling of infected cells, by determining the ratio between the number of cells infected in the presence and absence of virus-specific antibody.
Infection
enhancement was initially demonstrated by using heat-inactivated, virus-specific feline antiserum. Functional compatibility between murine immunoglobulin molecules and feline Fc receptors was demonstrated by using murine anti-sheep erythrocyte serum and an antibody-coated sheep erythrocyte phagocytosis assay. Thirty-seven murine monoclonal antibodies specific for the nucleocapsid, membrane, or spike proteins of feline infectious peritonitis virus or transmissible
gastroenteritis
virus were assayed for their ability to enhance the infectivity of feline infectious peritonitis virus.
Infection
enhancement was mediated by a subset of spike protein-specific monoclonal antibodies. A distinct correlation was seen between the ability of a monoclonal antibody to cause virus neutralization in a routine cell culture neutralization assay and its ability to mediate infection enhancement of macrophages.
Infection
enhancement was shown to be Fc receptor mediated by blockade of antibody-Fc receptor interaction using staphylococcal protein A. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that antibody-dependent enhancement of feline infectious peritonitis virus infectivity is mediated by antibody directed against specific sites on the spike protein.
...
PMID:Monoclonal antibodies to the spike protein of feline infectious peritonitis virus mediate antibody-dependent enhancement of infection of feline macrophages. 130 22
Three hundred sixty-three fecal specimens were collected from infants and young children with
gastroenteritis
over a 13-month period in Jeddah, western Saudi Arabia. Rotavirus was detected in 46% of the 363 specimens tested using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and in 40.7% of 113 specimens using a latex agglutination test. One hundred nine of the 113 specimens that were positive by the latex agglutination test were also positive by ELISA. Electron microscopy was used to examine some specimens to demonstrate the presence of the virus. Rotavirus was detected throughout the 13-month study period, with an increase in the frequency of infection in the cooler months.
Infection
with this virus was more frequent among infants and children less than two-years old, with a maximum incidence among children 13-15 months old. In the 363 stool specimens tested, rotavirus was found in mixed infections with bacteria in 0.44%, with parasites in 1.31%, and with yeast in 0.66%.
...
PMID:Rotavirus infection in children in Saudi Arabia. 131 55
There are an estimated 2 million cases of salmonellosis in the United States every year. Unlike the incidence of many
infectious diseases
, the incidence of salmonellosis in the United States and other developed countries has been rising steadily over the past 30 years, and the disease now accounts for 10 to 15% of all cases of acute
gastroenteritis
in the United States. The infecting organism is ingested and must traverse the intestinal epithelium to reach its preferred site for multiplication, the reticuloendothelial system. Despite several recent studies, the genetic basis of the invasion process is poorly understood. An emerging theme from these studies is that wild-type Salmonella organisms probably have several chromosomal loci that are required for the most efficient level of invasion. In this study, we have identified and characterized 13 TnphoA insertion mutants of Salmonella enteritidis CDC5 that exhibit altered invasion phenotypes. The mutants were identified by screening a bank of TnphoA insertions in S. enteritidis CDC5str for their invasion phenotype in three tissue culture cell lines (HEp-2, CHO, and MDCK). These 13 mutants were separated into six classes based on their invasive phenotypes in the tissue culture cell lines. Several mutants were defective for entry of some cell lines but not for others, while two mutants (SM6 and SM7) were defective for entry into all three tissue culture cell lines. This suggests that Salmonella spp. may express more than one invasion pathway. Southern analysis and chromosomal mapping indicated that as many as nine chromosomal loci may contribute to the invasion phenotype. It is becoming clear that the invasive phenotype of Salmonella spp. is multifactorial and more complex than that of some other invasive members of the family Enterobacteriaceae.
...
PMID:Identification of novel loci affecting entry of Salmonella enteritidis into eukaryotic cells. 131 43
Rotavirus is the major cause of severe, dehydrating infantile
gastroenteritis
.
Infection
is limited to the gut, but the relative roles of serum and secretory copro-immunoglobulin A (IgA) in protection are unclear. Specific copro-IgA is predictive of duodenal antirotaviral IgA and correlates with virus-neutralizing coproantibody. Copro-IgA conversion is a more sensitive marker of rotavirus reinfection than seroconversion. We measured rotavirus reinfections by copro-IgA conversion prospectively in 35 children recruited at a time of severe rotavirus illness. The children were followed up longitudinally for 14 to 31 months to determine whether high coproantibody levels correlated with clinical protection against rotavirus disease. Ninety-four percent of the children experienced reinfection, and 38% developed persistent elevations in specific copro-IgA termed plateaus. Plateau children had a higher mean annual rate of rotavirus infection and a lower ratio of symptomatic to total number of rotavirus reinfections than did nonplateau children. The annual rates of rotavirus infection and disease were significantly higher outside the plateau than inside it in children experiencing antirotavirus copro-IgA plateaus. Frequent rotavirus infection of children appears to stimulate production of a specific copro-IgA plateau which correlates with protection against an excess of infection and symptomatic disease.
...
PMID:Role of coproantibody in clinical protection of children during reinfection with rotavirus. 132 Nov 67
Rota viruses are the most frequent cause of acute
gastroenteritis
of infants and toddlers. Small epidemies occur enlarged in institutions for newborns and toddlers. The infection occurs normally via faeces. An aerogenes infection is in discussion. In case of a suspected Rota-Virus-
Infection
in an infant- or toddler care unit the patients have to be isolated immediately or quarantined. Further essential precautions preventing the spreading are mentioned. With this regime we could only see individual Rota-Virus-Infections in infant care units.
...
PMID:[Possibilities for preventing the epidemic spread of rotavirus infections on neonatal wards]. 132 47
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
A retrospective and descriptive study was done in a general pediatric training site with the purpose of identifying the diagnoses to which the trainees have been exposed, as well as the changes in the pattern of these diagnoses. The number of patient-doctor contacts, type of patient visit, and frequency of diagnoses were compared. A total of 66,054 patient-doctor contacts occurred during the years 1979 to 1989, comprising 79.6 percent scheduled health visits and 20.4 percent emergency visits. The main diagnoses were: healthy child/adolescent (HV), well baby (WB), upper respiratory infection, skin diseases, bronchial asthma, acute
gastroenteritis
, otitis media, anemia, incomplete immunization, psychosocial problems, nutritional/linear growth problems, psychosomatic disturbances, parasitosis, and pneumonia. There was a significant decrease (P < .005) in the diagnosis of
infectious diseases
and a significant increase (P < .005) in the proportion of WB and HV. The latter were the two most common diagnoses in the year 1989.
...
PMID:Diagnostic exposure in a primary care clinic during pediatric training. 147 42
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