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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (
gastroenteritis
)
11,398
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Laboratory reports and data on hospital admissions were used to estimate the number of hospitalizations due to group A rotavirus infection in England and Wales. Between January 1990 and December 1994, there were 75,059 laboratory reports of rotavirus infection, and 66,062 of these were in children <5 years old; rotavirus represented 39% of all pathogens identified in fecal specimens from this age group. Between April 1993 and March 1994, 1904 hospital admissions coded as "infectious intestinal disease" and 2354 coded as "noninfective gastroenteritis" occurred in children <5 in the North Thames region (a health authority representing 13% of the population in England and Wales). By modeling admission and laboratory reporting data, it was estimated that 54% of hospitalizations for intestinal
infectious disease
and 34% for noninfective
gastroenteritis
were attributable to rotavirus. By extrapolation of the North Thames data, it was estimated that 17,810 rotavirus-related hospitalizations (5/1000 children <5 years old) occurred in England and Wales during the same period. Effective vaccines have the potential to substantially reduce the number of hospital admissions due to group A rotavirus infection.
...
PMID:Hospital admissions attributable to rotavirus infection in England and Wales. 875 85
To study the epidemiology of small round-structured viruses (SRSV) in the Netherlands, all outbreaks of
gastroenteritis
that were reported to the Research Laboratory for
Infectious Diseases
, Department of Virology, National Institute of Public Health and the Environment (RIVM) in 1994 and 1995 were examined using electron microscopy (EM), single-round reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), and sequencing. To enable this, a generic SRSV-specific primer pair was developed that could detect 85% of a panel of antigenically diverse SRSV. By EM, SRSV could be detected in 86% and by RT-PCR in 91% of the reported
gastroenteritis
outbreaks. Partial sequence analysis of the polymerase region of these viruses revealed that two different clusters of viruses were responsible for the majority of the outbreaks. This strongly suggests epidemic spread of SRSV in the Netherlands.
...
PMID:Molecular detection and epidemiology of small round-structured viruses in outbreaks of gastroenteritis in the Netherlands. 876 21
Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) is a viral infection from a new strain of Hantavirus. The Hantavirus was first discovered in North America in 1993 after an outbreak of fatal illness on a Navajo Indian reservation in New Mexico. Since then, 122 cases of HPS (with a high mortality rate of more than 50%) have been reported in 23 states, with the highest prevalence in the Four Corners area. The reservoir for Hantavirus is small rodents, mostly field mice, vole, and chipmunks. It is transmitted through inhalation of airborne virus from dry rodent excreta and saliva. A North American strain of Hantavirus, named ain nombre virus (SNV), primarily affects the lungs, causing rapid accumulation of fluids and leading to noncardiogenic pulmonary edema, pleural effusion, and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). In the prodromal stage, HPS presents with flu-like symptoms, nausea, vomiting, and gastrointestinal pain and is often mistaken on the first visit for other
infectious diseases
or
gastroenteritis
. In the second acute stage, rapid respiratory deterioration begins: HPS is often misdiagnosed for pneumonia, idiopathic ARDS, and pulmonary edema. HPS treatment with an experimental antiviral intravenous drug, ribavirin, is under investigation. Practitioners must possess through clinical knowledge on the diagnoses, pathology, treatment, and course of the disease to reduce the mortality and morbidity rate of this rare but serious infection. A case report based on a recent HPS death in New York State on Long island in April 1995 is presented.
...
PMID:Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome: epidemiology, prevention, and case presentation of a new viral strain. 878 77
The molecular epidemiology of a large, multistate outbreak of oyster-associated
gastroenteritis
[Kohn et al. (1995): Journal of the American Medical Association 273:466-471. Dowell et al. (1995): Journal of
Infectious Diseases
171:1497-1503.] was examined using new methods to detect small round structured viruses (SRSVs) by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and to characterize strains by Southern hybridization and nucleotide sequencing of 81-bp of a PCR product amplified from the RNA polymerase gene. Of 37 stool specimens examined from patients in eight clusters of the multistate outbreak, 32 (86%) gave RT-PCR products specific for SRSVs of P1-A phylogenetic group. Nineteen PCR products from the eight clusters were confirmed to have the identical sequence, indicating that this large outbreak was attributed to a single strain of SRSV. In one of the eight clusters, five (63%) of eight patients had a mixed infection with a second SRSV strain that belonged to P2-B phylogenetic group. Of 12 specimens from patients in five other outbreaks and one sporadic case which occurred at the same time as the multistate outbreak, 10 (83%) gave products specific for SRSVs representing four phylogenetic groups (P1-A, P1-B, P2-A, and P2-B). The sequences of the P1-A products from two outbreaks and that of the P2-B product from another outbreak were identical to the P1-A sequence from the eight clusters and the P2-B sequence from the one cluster of the multistate outbreak, respectively. These results demonstrate the first application of these methods to enhance our understanding of the molecular epidemiology of SRSVs and provide answers of public health interest that could not have been obtained using classical epidemiologic methods alone.
...
PMID:Epidemiologic applications of novel molecular methods to detect and differentiate small round structured viruses (Norwalk-like viruses). 883 Jan 18
We audited the use of ciprofloxacin, before and after the introduction of simple clinical guidelines, in adults admitted to a regional
infectious diseases
unit with presumed
gastroenteritis
. The case notes of 128 consecutive adult admissions over 6 months in 1993 were reviewed and a comparable group of 125 adults in 1994 were prospectively followed. The discharge diagnosis was infective
gastroenteritis
in 73% of the 1993 admissions and 75% of the 1994 admissions, of whom 42% and 51% had confirmed bacterial enteropathogens. The 1994 cohort appeared to be more ill, with longer duration of symptoms prior to admission, more patients with profuse diarrhoea prior to admission, and longer mean duration of hospital stay. The proportion of patients with a discharge diagnosis of
gastroenteritis
who received ciprofloxacin did not change (64% in 1993, 67% in 1994) but the proportion of these patients who were subsequently found to be culture-positive rose from 54% to 68%. The proportion of patients receiving intravenous ciprofloxacin fell from 20% to 10% and the total number of doses (intravenous and oral) fell from 1027 in 1993 to 768 in 1994, with cost savings of pound 1465 over 6 months. The benefits and drawbacks of empirical use of ciprofloxacin are discussed. Our audit suggests that simple clinical guidelines can assist in identifying suitable patients for empirical antimicrobial therapy, and result in substantial cost savings.
...
PMID:Clinical audit of ciprofloxacin use in adults admitted to hospital with gastroenteritis. 884 93
Vibrio vulnificus has been associated with three main clinical syndromes; primary septicemia; wound infection, and
gastroenteritis
. This organism has increased virulence for persons with underlying medical conditions that predispose to iron overload or an impaired immune system. Since the organism proliferates more readily in warm, coastal waters, such infections are more commonly found in those regions.
Infection
can result from the ingestion of contaminated, undercooked seafood; contact of a wound with seawater; or a puncture wound sustained from a contaminated surface. Vibrio infections rarely occur in inland areas, but when they do occur, they are usually a result of the contact of wounds with contaminated, brackish water or the ingestion of raw shellfish. Because infections with this organism occur less frequently in non-coastal regions, the diagnosis may not be suspected initially in susceptible individuals and a delay of treatment may result. We present a case of V. vulnificus sepsis occurring in a man with underlying liver disease and a history of row oyster consumption in Oklahoma and discuss the clinical manifestations of primary sepsis with this organism as well as prevention strategies.
...
PMID:Overwhelming sepsis with Vibrio vulnificus: a coastal pathogen in Oklahoma. 893 53
For feeding purposes shellfish filter large amounts of water but also concentrate infectious agents and toxins that are present in the marine environment either naturally or because of pollution. Thus, the consumption of raw or undercooked shellfish is a substantial source of foodborne poisoning, mostly epidemic and sometimes sporadic. Most of shellfish-borne
infectious diseases
are linked to fecal contamination of the marine environment; they include: thyphoid fever, salmonellosis, shigellosis, campylobacteriosis, cholera, Norwalk or Norwalk-like
gastroenteritis
and hepatitis A. In warm climates, shellfish contains naturally occurring halopilic Vibrios and may cause severe sporadic infections (septicemias) among very susceptible consumers (immunocompromised). Shellfish also causes outbreaks of paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) and diarrheic shellfish poisoning (DSP) when they are contaminated by toxins produced when Dinophisis, a marine plancton, proliferates. Chemical compounds (heavy metals and organic toxins) that are dumped in the environment (soil, air, and water) also reach shellfish harvesting waters where they are cocentrated. Although acute or chronic effects of the chemical contamination of shellfish have not been clearly documented, the cadmium pollution of some shellfish harvesting waters raises a serious problem. Since it is impossible to prevent completely the contamination of coastal waters by any of the agents cited above, the prevention of shellfish-borne diseases requires monitoring of the marine environment and shellfish flesh (coliform count, Dinophysis toxins, heavy metals...). This surveillance allows the classification of growing areas as suitable or not for harvesting and distribution of shellfish. However, this surveillance is not always sensitive enough. Indicators of fecal pollution are particularly not reliable for shellfish viral contamination. A better knowledge of marine biology, the limitation of coastal waters pollution, improved surveillance, the development of more sensitive indicators, the responsabilisation of the industry and the information of the public on the health hazards associated with shellfish consumption are the key issues for the improvement of shellfish-borne disease prevention.
...
PMID:[Epidemiology of toxic and infectious risk related to shellfish consumption]. 896 39
Three hundred and seventy-eight passengers reported
gastroenteritis
during four cruises in the western Mediterranean on consecutive weeks of 1995. The rate at which cases were reported each day increased on the fourth cruise. The ship's owner commissioned an epidemiological investigation from the PHLS
Communicable Disease
Surveillance Centre. Cases reported explosive vomiting and diarrhoea, which lasted from 24 hours to five days, and were suggestive of viral gastroenteritis. No food handlers reported illness, but enquiries suggested that some had been ill and treated themselves. No bacterial pathogens were isolated from faecal specimens provided by cases or from water, food, and environmental samples taken from the galley. Small round structured viruses (SRSV) were identified by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction in two faecal specimens and one specimen of vomit from people who became ill during the fourth cruise. SRSV was also identified in one faecal specimen by electron microscopy. Environmental inspection revealed inappropriate food handling, hygiene, and storage. During one 24 hour period no chlorine was detectable in the water. A case control study conducted on the fourth cruise sought details of exposure to various foodstuffs, unbottled water, and various parts of the ship. No significant associations were found between illness and any exposures. The evidence strongly suggested a continuing outbreak of SRSV infection transmitted from person to person. Some passengers remained on board for a second week and could have transmitted their infection to new arrivals. The ship was cleared and disinfected at the end of the fourth cruise in order to interrupt transmission. Fewer than 10 cases presented in each of the fifth and sixth cruises.
...
PMID:An outbreak of viral gastroenteritis on a cruise ship. 899 May 76
This section focuses on issues in
infectious disease
that are commonly encountered in pediatric office practice. Paul McCarthy discusses recent literature regarding the evaluation and management of acute fevers without apparent source on clinical examination in infants and children and the evaluation of children with prolonged fevers of unknown origin. Jean Klig reviews recent literature about lower respiratory tract infection in children. Jeffrey Kahn and Eugene Shapiro discuss literature concerning several
infectious diseases
commonly seen in office settings and concerning which recent developments are of interest. Michael Baron reviews recent literature about
gastroenteritis
and diarrhea of infancy and early childhood.
...
PMID:Fever without apparent source on clinical examination, lower respiratory infections in children, other infectious diseases, and acute gastroenteritis and diarrhea of infancy and early childhood. 908 64
Children at summer camp are at risk of injury and illness. The American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Camping Association have specific guidelines for the medical care of children in summer residential camps. This report describes the types of illnesses and injuries seen in 730 children attending camp for 2 weeks, use of the infirmary, and difference in the onset of
infectious diseases
compared with injuries during the camp session. During the month studied, there were 921 infirmary visits. The most common diagnoses were injuries and
infectious disease
. Girls and boys were equally likely to be seen in the infirmary and had the same distribution of diagnoses.
Infectious disease
(
gastroenteritis
) had a later mean day of onset during the camp session than did injuries and was increasing in frequency at the end of each session. Potential common camp medical problems (sunburn, otitis externa) were prevented by simple medical preventive care.
...
PMID:Illness and injuries at summer camp. 916 64
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