Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (gastroenteritis)
11,398 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An outbreak of necrotizing enterocolitis and hemorrhagic gastroenteritis occurred in two nurseries during 25 days in August 1982. Eleven of the 40 patients in these nurseries during that time developed disease (attack rate 27.5%). In seven of the 10 patients with gastrointestinal disease, stool samples tested for human rotavirus were positive by ELISA, whereas in 20 unaffected infants, no stools tested demonstrated HRV (P = 0.0001). Eleven staff members had serologic evidence of recent HRV infection. Comparison of risk factors traditionally associated with the development of NEC between the affected and unaffected infants revealed no significant differences. Rotavirus infection was the only finding that was highly correlated with this epidemic.
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PMID:An outbreak of rotavirus-associated neonatal necrotizing enterocolitis. 631 72

Random fecal alpha-1-antitrypsin concentration was measured in children with various gastrointestinal diseases and in normal subjects. One hundred fifteen subjects were evaluated: controls (39); chronic inflammatory bowel disease (20); chronic diarrhea (18); acute gastroenteritis (17); allergic gastroenteropathy (5); chronic pancreatic exocrine insufficiency (4); acute gastrointestinal bleeding (4); nonspecific colitis (4); celiac disease (3); and intestinal lymphangiectasia (1). Mean fecal-alpha-1-antitrypsin for the controls was 0.98 mg/g lyophilized stool. All children with celiac disease, allergic gastroenteropathy, lymphangiectasia, nonspecific colitis, acute gastrointestinal bleeding, and 19 of 20 patients with active chronic inflammatory bowel disease had fecal alpha-1-antitrypsin concentrations greater than 2.6 mg/g stool (mean of the controls + 2 SD). These disorders have all been previously documented to cause protein-losing enteropathy by 51Cr-labeled albumin excretion tests. The other study patients had normal fecal alpha-1-antitrypsin excretion when compared with controls. Serial fecal antitrypsin concentrations paralleled disease activity and clinical response to therapy. The results suggest that random fecal antitrypsin concentration is a valuable screening test for mucosal disorders associated with abnormal transmucosal serum protein loss.
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PMID:Random fecal alpha-1-antitrypsin concentration in children with gastrointestinal disease. 697 Jul 2

Sixty cattle (12 first season and 48 second season grazing animals) were allocated to three groups according to age and bodyweight. Each group was divided into "control" and "treated" subgroups. Before turnout, a morantel sustained release bolus (MSRB) was administered to each animal in the "treated" category. The groups were moved from field to field according to the farmer's normal rotational grazing policy. Each field was, however, divided into two equal halves, one of which was reserved for the MSRB treated cattle, while the other was used exclusively for the controls. Severe parasitic gastroenteritis occurred in the first season controls during early September, while milder disease affected the untreated animals in the smaller of the second season groups. No gastrointestinal disease was apparent in the corresponding MSRB treated cattle. A mild outbreak of parasitic bronchitis occurred in the first year controls during October; there was evidence of less sever lungworm infection in the matching MSRB treated animals. The larger second season group showed no signs of parasitic disease.
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PMID:Control of bovine parasitic gastroenteritis and parasitic bronchitis in a rotational grazing system using the morantel sustained release bolus. 709 Jan 51

In this review of the protective properties of human breast milk, a new perspective is taken to underscore the passive and active protection properties of breast milk in providing specific protection against selective gastrointestinal disease affecting the neonate and preterm infant. The normal protective properties of the gastrointestinal epithelial barrier (immunologic and nonimmunologic) are considered as is the development of barriers to antigen absorption in the immature infant human intestine as a background for considering three accelerated gastrointestinal diseases-necrotizing enterocolitis, intestinal allergy, and bacterial gastroenteritis. In each of these conditions, the developmental protective defect is considered and the role of breast milk plays in filling the protective void discussed. Besides considering passive protection of breast milk including the new roles assigned to nutrients such as lactoferrin and nucleotides, and importance of active substances in breast milk such as growth factors, cytokines and hormones are discussed in the context of actively stimulating the infant's own intestinal defenses to function as a protective barrier. Future studies at the cellular and molecular level should be helpful in designing both preventative and treatment strategies to deal with these diseases.
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PMID:Breast milk and the prevention of neonatal and preterm gastrointestinal disease states: a new perspective. 940 Nov 74

Waterborne gastroenteritis outbreaks have often gone undetected or been incompletely defined in terms of source and extent. Methods which allow detection or clarification of such events are therefore useful. We describe the methods used to detect and investigate such an outbreak. In autumn 1996 high school absence rates and the rate of parents absent from work to care for sick children suggested a health problem in a Swedish town which had a history of unexplained outbreaks of gastrointestinal disease. A systematic sample of 300 households was surveyed by post. Respondents represented 10% of the total population of the town. Questions concerning symptoms and exposures were included. The same questionnaire was used in a nearby town as a control. Sixty four percent of respondents reported an acute gastrointestinal illness during a two month period. Diarrhoea (90%) and abdominal pain (88%) were the most frequent symptoms among the sick. Two percent of those sick sought medical care. Exposures associated with disease were being a member of a large household, young age, and consumption of water from the community water supply. Attack rate showed a dose response relationship with increasing frequency of water consumption. The peak incidence of gastrointestinal illness occurred shortly after raw water quality control data had shown a rise in indicator bacteria. Further analysis, dividing those infected into groups according to when they became ill and whether they were the first member of their household to fall ill, supported the hypothesis of primary cases being infected from the water supply with some secondary person to person spread.
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PMID:Epidemiological explanation of an outbreak of gastro-enteritis in Sweden in the absence of detailed microbiological information. 984 33

Cytomegalovirus (CMV) can be an important opportunistic infection in HIV-1-infected patients, particularly when the CD4+ T-cell count drops below 50 lymphocytes/mm3. CMV-associated disease, including retinitis, pneumonitis, gastroenteritis, and encephalitis, is estimated to affect up to 40% of AIDS patients. We have studied the cellular immune response to CMV in gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) of HIV-1-infected patients. Two patients with chronic diarrhea of unknown etiology were examined by flexible sigmoidoscopy and upper endoscopy. Biopsy specimens were obtained from lymphoid-associated tissue sites in rectum and duodenum. Both patients were seropositive for CMV IgG, but had not been treated with ganciclovir, and neither had clinical signs of CMV disease. Mononuclear cell cultures were established from GALT and blood and assayed for the presence of CMV-specific CD8+ T cells. CD8+ T-cell phenotype and function were assessed by MHC Class I tetramer staining, using an HLA-A*0201 tetramer complex specific for peptide 495-503 (NLVPMVATV) of CMV lower matrix protein pp65, and by a standard 51Cr release assay. CMV pp65-specific cytotoxic lymphocytes (CTL) were detected in GALT and blood MNC from both patients. These results demonstrate that HIV-1-infected subjects seropositive for CMV, but without active CMV gastrointestinal disease, harbor CMV-specific CTL in intestinal lymphoid tissue. This is the first report of isolation of CMV-specific CTL in GALT and will lead to greater understanding of the pathogenesis of CMV disease in human mucosal tissue.
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PMID:Isolation of cytomegalovirus-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocytes from gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) of HIV type 1-infected subjects. 1095 91

Viral agents are one of the main causes of acute diarrhea, particularly in infants and young children. Astrovirus, coronavirus, torovirus, and picobirnavirus are increasingly being identified as causative agents of gastroenteritis. Astroviruses have been detected in the stools of between 1.2% and 20% of children with diarrhea requiring medical care in a variety of geographical areas. Outbreaks have been described in schools, day care settings and pediatric wards. Children younger than 3 years old are the most frequently affected. In temperate climates incidence is greater in winter whereas in tropical areas infection occurs throughout the year. Transmission is mainly through the fecaloral route. At least seven serotypes of human astroviruses have been recognized and serotype 1 is more common than the other serotypes. Astroviruses are often shed in stools during long periods and can be detected by electron microscopy. An enzymeimmunoassay technique that detects the astrovirus group antigen has been widely used in epidemiological studies. Nucleic acid hybridization and polymerase chain reactionbased techniques have also been used. Enteric coronaviruses have most frequently been associated with gastrointestinal disease in neonates and children younger than 12 years old. The role of toroviruses and picobirnaviruses as causative agents of gastroenteritis is still emerging. Further epidemiological studies to determine the frequency of these viruses in the community and to identify their mechanisms of transmission are needed, as are further studies to elucidate the pathophysiology of diseases due to these agents.
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PMID:[Emergent riboviruses implicated in gastroenteritis]. 1118 Dec 10

Over the last years the important role of nitric oxide (NO) as endogenous modulator of numerous physiological functions has been shown. NO is involved in the regulation of blood flow, maintenance of vascular tone, control of platelet aggregation, and modulation of the activity of the mastocytes. It also plays a key role as neurotransmitter in the central and peripheric nervous system (non adrenergic non colinergic, NANC, neurons), in the nervous control of the cerebral blood flow and in the neuroendocrine regulation or synaptic plasticity. However, NO shows a dual behavior: at physiological concentrations, released through the constitutive synthase (cNOS), it regulates house-keeping functions, whereas its overproduction by the inducible isoenzyme (iNOS) exhibits cytotoxic activity because interacting with reactive species producing peroxinitrites (ONOO) and other compounds, which are highly damaging for the tissues. In the gastrointestinal tract (GIT) NO participates in the modulation of the smooth musculature tone, such as the regulation of intestinal peristaltism, gastric emptying and antral motor activity. It also regulates acid and gastric mucus secretion, alkaline production, and is involved in the maintenance of mucosal blood flow. In physiological conditions, NO acts as an endogenous mediator modulating both, the repairing and integrity of the tissues, and exhibits gastroprotective properties against different types of aggressive agents. However, high concentrations of NO are related to numerous pathological processes of GIT including peptic ulcer, chronic gastritis, gastrointestinal cancer, bacterial gastroenteritis, celiac or chronic inflammatory bowel diseases. Recently, this hypothesis that cNOS is always beneficial and iNOS is always deleterious, has been questioned, since that a series of data suggest that the increase of cNOS activity could be responsible for the derived pathological changes and, by contrast, NO liberated by the inducible isoenzyme might play a repairing effect in certain pathological disorders. The pharmaceutical industry is really interested in proving the clinical benefits of the mediator. Numerous NO-donor drugs, nitrate derivatives, have been frequently used in the cardiovascular diseases due to their vasodilating properties, which allow an enhancement of coronary blood flow. More recently, the protective effect of NO against non steroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAID)-gastroenteropathy has been shown, because its vasodilating and antioxidant properties render it a potentially useful agent. Different NSAID, including acetyl salicylic acid, diclofenac or naproxen, have been formulated by attaching a NO releasing-moiety. These NO-NSAID, antiinflammatories combined with precursors of the mediator, or with inhibitors of the inducible synthase, are currently being evaluated. However, although the pharmacotherapeutical possibilities of NO are considerable, it is necessary to elucidate the exact mechanisms derived from stimulation/inhibition of the isoenzymes in order to determine the clinical utility of NO-donors.
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PMID:New issues about nitric oxide and its effects on the gastrointestinal tract. 1147 46

There are few data available on the incidence of endemic waterborne disease in the developed world. This study aims to determine if there was a measurable decline in gastroenteritis related faecal specimens following the introduction of water treatment. The rate of faecal specimens for gastroenteritis was obtained for 17 communities one year before and after the introduction of water treatment in two states of Australia between 1992 and 1996. Of these 17 systems, 10 had filtration added to existing disinfection, while seven had both disinfection and filtration or disinfection alone added to no existing treatment. The rate of faecal sampling varied from a reduction of 55% to an increase of 198%. Large changes in water quality parameters occurred following treatment but there was no significant correlation between these changes and changes in the rate of faecal specimens. In this study there was no consistent change in gastrointestinal related faecal specimens despite marked changes in water quality. This suggests that the reduction in endemic gastrointestinal disease as a result of the introduction of water treatment was small as a percentage of all gastroenteritis. However, water treatment remains essential to protecting public health.
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PMID:Changes in the incidence of gastroenteritis and the implementation of public water treatment. 1179 17

Previous studies have shown that gastrointestinal disease in women during pregnancy may be a risk factor for low-birthweight infants. In the present study, the prevalence of gastroenteritis during pregnancy and its effect on neonatal outcome was examined for each gestational month in 10,597 single-birth mother-infant pairs in the ABIS Project (All Babies in Southeast Sweden). After exclusion of mothers with inflammatory bowel disease, celiac disease, lactose intolerance, or cow's milk allergy, data on the remaining 10,229 mother-infant pairs were compiled. Overall, 32.5% of the mothers suffered from gastroenteritis during pregnancy (95% confidence interval [CI], 32.5-32.5%). Risk factors included young maternal age (P for trend, <0.001), previous infants (P<0.001), work in a pediatric day-care facility (P=0.004), and experience of a major life event (P=0.027). Binary logistic and multiple linear regression analyses were adopted for the following variables of neonatal outcome: birth week, preterm birth (<37 weeks), birthweight, low birthweight (< or = 2,499 g), birth length, cesarean section, and hospitalization in a neonatal care unit. Maternal gastroenteritis during month 4 (-0.18 week; 95%CI=-0.36, -0.01 week), month 5 (-0.30 week; 95%CI=-0.49, -0.11 week), or month 7 (-0. 18 week; 95%CI=-0.35, -0.01 week) of pregnancy was associated with a shorter pregnancy (adjusted for confounders). Gastroenteritis during part of the pregnancy was associated with a shortened pregnancy, but it had no other adverse effects on neonatal outcome. The reduction in the duration of pregnancy is probably of little clinical relevance. These findings should be confirmed in a prospective study.
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PMID:Effect of gastroenteritis during pregnancy on neonatal outcome. 1183 34


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