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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (gastroenteritis)
11,398 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Followed up were the appearance and accumulation of the transmissive gastroenteritis (TGE) virus antigen in infected cells of pig kidney and thyroid. Used were specific conjugates, such introduced by the authors and some imported from Czechoslovakia. The cell cultures were infected with strains of the TGE virus, isolated in Bulgaria or supplied from Czechoslovakia. It was found that the Bulgarian strains were the same as those from Czechoslovakia and the United States. A viral antigen was found as early as the sixth hour following the infection of the cell cultures and it appeared under the form of cytoplasmatic yellow-green fluorescence. By the 12th, and up to the 18th hour the number of the specifically fluorescing cells as well as the intensity of fluorescence itself increased. Highest values in this respect were noticed in the interval between the 36th and 48th hour after the cultures had been infected.
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PMID:[Use of the direct immunofluorescence method for determination of the TGE viral antigen in swine]. 17 79

Transmissible gastroenteritis or TGE is a virus diarrhoea which occurs in pigs of all ages and is associated with high mortality rates in the young piglets. Growth of virus in the columnar epithelium of the small intestine causes atrophy of the intestinal villi, malabsorption, watery diarrhoea and dehydration. Faecal excretion of virus usually continues up to fourteen days after infection but chronic carriers have been found to occur. TGE is self-limiting on the majority of pig-breeding farms but the virus may persist in particular conditions and an enzootic form of the disease will appear in this case. In typical outbreaks, the diagnosis can usually be based on clinical symptoms. When the disease runs an enzootic course, a clinical diagnosis will be out of the question. TGE should be differentiated from colibacillosis and from another virus diarrhoea, the aetiology of which is not precisely known. A rapid and correct diagnosis may be established by direct fluorescent antibody studies of frozen sections of the small intestine in infected piglets. When sows have been spontaneously infected, their offspring will be protected by lactogenic immunity. The presence of TGE antibodies of IgA class in the milk is required to ensure complete immunity of the piglets lasting for weeks on end. Intramuscular inoculation of a commercially available vaccine in sows will only stimulate the production of antibodies of the IgG class in the milk. These antibodies will merely afford short-lived immunity. The vaccine cannot prevent symptoms of disease from appearing in piglets following infection with virulent TGE virus but it does reduce mortality
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PMID:[Transmissible Gastroenteritis in Swine (author's transl)]. 17 23

Strains of the swine transmissive gastroenteritis (TGE) virus were isolated for the first time in Bulgaria in 1972. The dynamics was followed up of some strains' propagation in primary cell cultures of kidney tissue and subcultures of the thyroid of pigs. The intracellular virus reached highest titers at the 24--48th hour in the kidney cells, and at the 24--36th hour in the thyroid cells, while the extracellular virus was subjected to inactivation by the 2nd hour after infecting the cultures, by the 4--6th h its titer dropped up to 50 per cent of its initial value, and by the 24th h it was completely inactivated. The viability of the virus was tested after freeze-drying and after it had been stored at 4degreesC and--20degreesC. It was found that chloroform fully inactivates the virus at 4degreesC for 24 hours. The same results were obtained with the use of sodium desoxycholate. The strains isolated in this country form plaques, and with some strains the plaques are of a varying size. Halogenic desoxyuridines (IUDR, BUDR), as well as 8-azoridine do not suppress the multiplication of the tested TGE strains even in high concentrations. Inhibitory effect has 5-bromurazyl which in given concentrations affects the titer of the virus and the size of the plaques formed. Two Bulgarian and two reference strains have lowered their plaque-forming titer by 2 log after being treated with rifamycin-B or rifampicin.
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PMID:[Some properties of strains of the transmissible gastroenteritis virus of swine (TGE) isolated in Bulgaria]. 17 55

In the course of a six-month-study of acute gastroenteritis in children of ages up to six years, a reo-like virus was found in 54 per cent of the faecal specimens obtained at an early stage of the disease, using electron microscopy as screening test. By means of a concentrated complement fixation antigen, composed of a related calf diarrhoea virus cultivated in tissue culture, the rise in titre was found to be significant in 96 per cent of the patients whose faeces contained the reo-like virus. Antibodies were present in the remaining 4 per cent without rise in titre. In 10 per cent of the cases with gastroenteritis infection was caused by adenovirus or Salmonella. A probable aetiological agent was found in 71 per cent of the patients. It applies to 33 per cent of all cases caused by the reo-like virus that they were nosocomial infections.
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PMID:Occurrence of reo-like calf viruses in young children with acute gastroenteritis. Diagnoses established by electron microscopy and complement fixation, using the reo-like virus as antigen. 17 39

We found a human reovirus-like agent in the stools of 42 per cent of 143 infants and young children hospitalized with acute gastroenteritis between January, 1974, and June, 1975. Half the patients studied by electron microscopy and serologic technics had evidence of infection with the agent. The infection had a seasonal pattern: 59 per cent of those admitted during the cooler months (November to April) shed the agent, with a peak of 78 per cent in December, 1974, and January, 1975, combined. None of the patients admitted during the warmer months (May to October) shed the agent. None of 275 Escherichia coli isolates from 32 patients with diarrhea produced heat-labile enterotoxin, whereas 17 of the 32 had evidence of infection with the reovirus-like agent. In addition, 14 of 40 parents of 37 patients with diarrhea associated with the reovirus-like agent were also infected, but most infectious were inapparent. This agent appears to be the major cause of diarrheal illness in the young during the cooler months.
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PMID:Human reovirus-like agent as the major pathogen associated with "winter" gastroenteritis in hospitalized infants and young children. 17 86

The pathogenicity of a cell culture-attenuated strain of transmissible gastroenteritis virus for newborn pigs was investigated. Newborn (1- to 2-day-old) pigs were orally given 2 x 10(6) plaque-forming units of attenuated virus. All pigs developed mild diarrhea, but deaths did not occur. As determined by immunofluorescence and villous atropy, infection of the small intestine was limited to the caudal 50 to 66%. Fluorescing cells and atrophic villi were seen from 2 to 3 days until 6 to 7 days after exposure. Attenuated virus-exposed pigs produced circulating virus-neutralizing antibodies detectable as early as 5 days after exposure. By contrast, all pigs orally given 1 x 10(2) pig infective doses of virulent transmissible gastroenteritis virus developed severe diarrhea, and almost all of those not killed died within 2 to 5 days after exposure. In the latter pigs, the entire length of the small intestine, except for the first 4 to 5 cm, was infected with virus by 24 to 36 hours after exposure.
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PMID:Pathogenicity of an attenuated strain of transmissible gastroenteritis virus for newborn pigs. 17 6

A microtiter complement fixation (CF) test to detect transmissible gastroenteritis (TGE) viral antigen was developed, using TGE hyperimmune pig serum as an antibody source. Sera from TGE covalescent pigs did not fix complement by this test. Maximal virus and soluble antigen (SA) titers were obtained 36 to 48 h after inoculation of swine testes cells. Cell-associated virus and SA titers were higher than those in the culture fluid, which had to be concentrated 20X before use as antigen in agar immunodiffusion tests (ID). By sucrose density-gradient centrifugation, the SA had a buoyant density of 1.10 g/ml and could be separated from the virus that banded in the 1.19-g/ml region. Virus and SA from three different isolates of TGE had the same buoyant densities. Heating and proteolytic enzyme digestion established the protein nature of the SA. As assayed by CF and ID, there were stability differences between crude and purified preparations of SA. Antibody prepared in rabbits against the SA neutralized the TGE virus.
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PMID:Partial characterization of the principal soluble antigens associated with the coronavirus of transmissible gastroenteritis by complement fixation and immunodiffusion. 17 69

A reovirus-like agent (rotavirus) was detected in 26 children (44%) when fecal specimens from 59 children with acute gastroenteritis were examined by electron microscopy. No rotavirus was detected in the feces of 49 children with other diseases. Sera from the acute and the convalescent phase from 40 children with acute gastroenteritis and from 18 other patients were examined for antibodies against a bovine rotavirus by an indirect fluorescent antibody test. 26 of the patients with gastroenteritis (65%) developed antibodies during their disease, whereas none of the other patients showed a rise in antibody titre. The specimens were submitted to the laboratory from hospitalized children during the period January 1973 through March 1975. Most of the cases of rotavirus gastroenteritis occurred during late autumn and early winter among children between 0.5 and 3 years of age. It is concluded that electron microscopy is a sensitive diagnostic technique during the acute phase of the disease, and that the serological test with bovine rotavirus antigen served as a useful diagnostic tool.
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PMID:A reovirus-like agent (rotavirus) in gastroenteritis of children. Virus detection and serological studies. 17 49

Newborn piglets were found to be more resistant to infection with attenuated transmissible gastroenteritis virus when maintained at higher temperatures. This was attributed to a decreased rate of virus propagation and spreading in the bodies of the infected animals. The highest virus levels were detected in the tissues of piglets maintained at 8 to 12 C. In contrast, no virus was recovered from piglets maintained at 35 to 37.5 C. The virus was found only in the lymph nodes and respiratory organs in the piglets maintained at 20 to 23 C.
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PMID:Effect of ambient temperatures on multiplication of attenuated transmissible gastroenteritis virus in the bodies of newborn piglets. 17 1

Similar immunoglobulin (Ig) classes were obtained from porcine colodtral whey by either column or batch chromatographic procedures; a stepwise buffer elution technique was used. Specific transmissible gastroenteritis virus neutralizing antibody was found in the 4 major fractions eluted comprising of IgG1, IgG2, IgA, and IgM. The IgG1, and IgG2 were essentially homogeneous, and the IgA- AND IgM-rich fractions had to be recycled several times through Sephadex G-200 to obtain pure IgA and IgM that had specific virus neutralizing activities per mg of protein of 342.1 and 302. 4, compared with 7.6 for IgG. By a combination of the batch chromatographic procedures and gel filtration, gram amounts of specific Ig could be fractionated from the same colostrum.
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PMID:Chromatographic separation of gram quantities of immunoglobulins from porcine colostrium against transmissible gastroenteritis virus. 18 Jan 83


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