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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (
gastroenteritis
)
11,398
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The diuretic effect of high doses of furosemide alone and furosemide plus mannitol was analysed retrospectively in 30 children with acute renal failure. In 10 children (Group 1) renal failure developed mainly during
glomerulonephritis
, and in 20 children (Group 2) the cause was
gastroenteritis
. The diuretic effects of furosemide and furosemide plus mannitol were evaluated measuring the 24-hour urine volume at the time of anuria, oliguria or normal diuresis. The highest mean single intravenous doses of furosemide were 6.5 and 14 mg/kg in Groups 1 and 2, respectively; the highest average daily doses were 10.1 and 25.5 mg/kg, respectively. A broad relationship was observed between single i.v. dose and diuretic response following administration of furosemide (1.2 to 30.8 mg/kg). In both groups of patients a statistically significant negative linear correlation was found between the daily intravenous dose of furosemide and the 24-hour urine volume. Calculations based on the obtained regression equations showed that the expected 24-hour urine volumes corresponding to daily diuresis normal for age could be obtained after administration of daily 2.8 to 1.4 mg/kg furosemide in Group 1 and 9.3 to 2.3 in Group 2. It is therefore suggested that the total daily dose of furosemide should not exceed 100 mg in children with acute renal failure. Administration of furosemide plus mannitol did not result in higher daily diuresis as compared to 24-hour urine volume obtained when furosemide was given alone. Furosemide was well tolerated. Electrolyte disturbances, especially in Group 2, were the most frequent side effects due to high doses of furosemide.
...
PMID:High doses of furosemide in children with acute renal failure. A preliminary retrospective study. 193 35
The spectrum and outcome of acute renal failure (ARF) were studied in 205 children aged between 1 month and 12 yr. There were 145 boys and 60 girls; 23 per cent were below 1 yr and 49 per cent between 1 and 4 yr. The main causes of ARF were haemolytic uraemic syndrome (HUS) in 36 per cent, serious infections in 19 per cent, acute
gastroenteritis
and dysentery in 17 per cent,
glomerulonephritis
(GN) in 13 per cent and intravascular haemolysis (IVH) in 6 per cent. Most patients with HUS, serious infections and
gastroenteritis
were below 5 yr, whereas GN and IVH occurred in older children. HUS was mostly associated with dysentery; Shigella and several other pathogens were isolated from stools in 35 per cent. In most patients with HUS disseminated intravascular coagulation and renal cortical necrosis were present, with a high mortality. The outcome was also poor in infants with serious infections. IVH occurred in patients with G-6-PD deficiency. In such patients and in those with post-streptococcal GN the prognosis was good. Crescentic GN had a poor outcome. Our observations highlight the common and serious nature of ARF in India. However, most of the underlying causes are preventable.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure in north Indian children. 207 54
One hundred and twenty patients with a mean age of 38 years (range 12-85 years; M 91, F 37) were studied over a period of 5 years in a teaching hospital in Dhaka. Sixty-two patients presented with probable anuria with 1-4 days' duration, 63 patients presented with oliguria, and 3 were nonoliguric. The causes of acute renal failure were medical (94), surgical (22), obstetrical (13). Of the medical cases, the causes were
gastroenteritis
in 42 cases,
gastroenteritis
with CNS involvement in 11 cases, rapidly progressive
glomerulonephritis
in 10 cases, acute viral hepatitis in 8 cases, and septicemia in 8 cases. Of 22 surgical cases, postoperative acute renal failure was the cause in 9, road traffic accident in 6, and renal calculus disease in 7. There were 13 cases in the obstetrics group, of whom 9 were due to abortion, 2 were due to preeclampsia, and the other 2 were postoperative. The mean blood urea of all cases was 35 mmol/L and serum creatinine was 988 mumol/L. Dialysis was required in 105 cases; of these, 72 were medical cases, 21 were surgical cases, and 12 were obstetric cases. The overall survival rate was 75%. The improved survival is probably due to timely referral and prompt medical management.
...
PMID:Outcome of acute renal failure in adults in a teaching hospital in Bangladesh. 829 Jul 6
A previously healthy 7-year-old white boy presented to St. Louis Children's Hospital with a 1-day history of headache, malaise, temperature of 38.7 degrees C, and a progressively erythematous, tender calf with central dusky purpura. On the morning of admission, his mother noticed a 2-mm crust on the patient's right calf with a 3-cm x 3-cm area of surrounding erythema. No history of recent trauma or bite was obtained. He had suffered two episodes of nonbloody, nonbilious emesis during the last day. In addition, over the previous 12 h, he presented brown urine without dysuria. His mother and brother had suffered from
gastroenteritis
over the previous week without bloody diarrhea. On initial physical examination, there was a 6-cm x 11-cm macular tender purpuric plaque with a central punctum on the right inner calf, which was warm and tender to the touch, with erythematous streaking towards the popliteal fossa (Fig. 1). The inguinal area was also erythematous with tender lymphadenopathy and induration, but without fluctuance. Laboratory studies included an elevated white blood cell count of 20, 800/microL with 6% bands, 86% segs, and 7% lymphocytes, hemoglobin of 12.5 g/dL, hematocrit of 35.1%, and platelets of 282,000/microL. The prothrombin time/activated partial tissue thromboplastin was 10. 4/28.0 s (normal PT, 9.3-12.3 s; normal PTT, 21.3-33.7 s) and fibrinogen was 558 mg/dL (normal, 192-379 mg/dL). Urinalysis showed 1+ protein, 8-10 white blood cells, too numerous to count red blood cells, and no hemoglobinuria. His electrolytes, blood urea nitrogen (BUN), and creatine were normal. The urine culture was negative. Blood culture after 24 h showed one out of two bottles of coagulase negative Staphylococcus epidermidis. The patient's physical examination was highly suggestive of a brown recluse spider bite with surrounding purpura. Over the next 2 days, the surrounding rim of erythema expanded. The skin within the plaque cleared and peeled at the periphery. The coagulase negative staphylococci in the blood culture were considered to be a contaminant. Cefotaxime and oxacillin were given intravenously. His leg was elevated and cooled with ice packs. The patient's fever resolved within 24 h. The lesion became less erythematous and nontender with decreased warmth and lymphadenopathy. The child was discharged on Duricef for 10 days. Because the patient experienced hematuria rather than hemoglobinuria, nephritis was suggested. In this case, poststreptococcal
glomerulonephritis
was the most likely cause. His anti-streptolysin-O titer was elevated at 400 U (normal, <200 U) and C3 was 21.4 mg/dL (normal, 83-177 mg/dL). His urine lightened to yellow-brown in color. His blood pressure was normal. Renal ultrasound showed severe left hydronephrosis with cortical atrophy, probably secondary to chronic/congenital ureteropelvic junction obstruction. His right kidney was normal.
...
PMID:A child with spider bite and glomerulonephritis: a diagnostic challenge. 1080 79
The major health problems in Africa are AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria,
gastroenteritis
and hypertension; hypertension affects about 20% of the adult population. Renal disease, especially glomerular disease, is more prevalent in Africa and seems to be of a more severe form than that found in Western countries. The most common mode of presentation is the nephrotic syndrome, with the age of onset at five to eight years. It is estimated that 2 to 3% of medical admissions in tropical countries are due to renal-related complaints, the majority being the glomerulonephritides. There are no reliable statistics for ESRD in all African countries. Statistics of the South African Dialysis and Transplant Registry (SADTR) reflect the patients selected for renal replacement therapy (RRT) and do not accurately reflect the etiology of chronic renal failure (CRF), where public sector state facilities will offer RRT only to patients who are eligible for a transplant. In 1994,
glomerulonephritis
was recorded as the cause of ESRD in 1771 (52.1%) and hypertension in 1549 (45.6%) of patients by the SADTR. In a six-year study of 3632 patients with ESRD, based on SADTR statistics, hypertension was reported to be the cause of ESRD in 4.3% of whites, 34.6% of blacks, 20.9% mixed race group and 13.8% of Indians. Malignant hypertension is an important cause of morbidity and mortality among urban black South Africans, with hypertension accounting for 16% of all hospital admissions. In a ten-year study of 368 patients with chronic renal failure in Nigeria, the etiology of renal failure was undetermined in 62%. Of the remaining patients whose etiology was ascertained, hypertension accounted for 61%, diabetes mellitus for 11% and chronic glomerulonephritis for 5.9%. Patients with CRF constituted 10% of all medical admissions in this center. Chronic glomerulonephritis and hypertension are principal causes of CRF in tropical Africa and East Africa, together with diabetes mellitus and obstructive uropathy. The availability of dialysis and transplantation is quite variable in Africa: treatment rates in North Africa are 30 to 186.5 per million population (pmp) in countries with more established programs: Algeria 78.5; Egypt 129.3; Libya 30; Morocco 55.6; Tunisia 186.5 pmp. In South Africa, treatment rates of 99 pmp were reported; Dialysis and transplant programs in the rest of Africa are dependent on the availability of funding and donors. Services are still predominantly urban and therefore generally inaccessible to the poorer, less educated rural patient. There is not enough money for healthcare in the developing world, particularly for expensive and chronic treatment such as RRT. The goal should be to have a circumscribed chronic dialysis program, with as short a time on dialysis as possible, and to increase the availability of transplantation (both living donor and cadaver). Efforts should be made to optimize therapy of renal disease and renal failure globally and particularly in developing countries. Strategies should be developed to screen for and manage conditions such as hypertension and diabetes mellitus at the primary healthcare level in an effort to decrease the incidence of chronic renal failure. Increasingly, health is influenced by social and economic circumstances. Any improvements in health thus demand integrated, comprehensive action against all the determinants of ill health.
...
PMID:End-stage renal disease in sub-Saharan and South Africa. 1286 89
From July 1998 to July 1999, 45 cases of acute renal failure were treated at Bir Hospital, Kathmandu. Out of which 24 were male and 21 were female. Age ranged from 11 months to 84 years with mean age being 35 years and 9 cases were below 10 years. Four cases with pre-renal azotaemia and twenty five cases of acute tubular necrosis (ATN) accounted for 64% of all cases. These were due to
gastroenteritis
10, sepsis 6, post surgical 1, trauma 1 and obstretical complications 5. Multiple hornet stings were responsible for acute renal failure in 3 cases, acute urate nephropathy in 1 case and miscellaneous causes in 2 cases.
Glomerulonephritis
/ vasculitis accounted for 17.7%, acute interstitial nephritis 4.4%, haemotytic uraemic syndrome (HUS) 6.6%, and post renal azotaemia in 6.6% of all cases. Mean serum creatinine was 8 mg/dl, mean blood urea 190 mg/dl. Eight cases were treated only conservatively, eighteen received haemodialysis, fourteen received peritoneal dialysis, three received both and two refused for dialysis. Average duration of hospital stay was 13.6 days. Out of the forty-five cases twenty-nine recovered normal renal function, ten expired, two recovered partially, two progressed to chronic renal failure and two left against medical advice. Overall mortality was 22.2%. Common causes of acute renal failure in our setting were
gastroenteritis
(22%) and sepsis (20%). HUS was exclusively seen in children following bacillary dysentery. Multiple hornet stings is an important cause of acute renal failure in our country.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure in a tertiary care center in Nepal. 1655 67
The aim of this study was to determine the pathogenicity of an Indian bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) 1b isolate in 7-9-months-old male calves. Infected (four) and control (two) calves were bled at three days interval for hematological, virological and serological studies until day 27. All infected calves developed respiratory illness, biphasic pyrexia, mild diarrhea, leucopenia and mild thrombocytopenia. Viraemia was demonstrated between 3 and 15dpi and the infected calves seroconverted by 15dpi. Prominent kidney lesions were endothelial cell swelling, proliferation of mesangial cells and podocytes leading to glomerular space obliteration. Degeneration and desquamation of cells lining seminiferous tubules were observed in two infected calves. Consolidation of lungs with interstitial pneumonia, mild
gastroenteritis
and systemic spread were also evident. It was concluded that Indian BVDV isolate induced moderate clinical disease in calves and
glomerulonephritis
resulting from acute BVDV infection was observed for the first time.
...
PMID:Pathogenicity of an Indian isolate of bovine viral diarrhea virus 1b in experimentally infected calves. 1738 93
Postinfectious
glomerulonephritis
(PIGN) is primarily a disease of childhood. It occurs after upper respiratory tract infection or skin infections. Streptococcus is the most common causative agent, but in the elderly, staphylococcus is the main culprit. In adults, PIGN is more common in immunocompromised patients, particularly diabetics and alcoholics. Here, we report the case of an elderly diabetic male who presented with severe acute kidney injury with active urinary sediment after acute
gastroenteritis
. Additional analyses revealed a very low serum C3 level and a normal serum C4 level. Renal biopsy showed diffuse proliferative
glomerulonephritis
with crescents. Direct immunofluorescence showed mesangial and capillary wall staining for C3 and IgG (2+, mesangial and segmental capillary wall, granular). Renal electron microscopy showed subepithelial hump-like electron-dense deposits. The role of steroid in the treatment of PIGN is controversial and there is no standard protocol, but our patient responded very well to steroid as he did not require hemodialysis after 2 weeks of initiation of steroid therapy. We should be aware of an atypical presentation of PIGN in elderly to ensure correct diagnosis.
...
PMID:Postinfectious Glomerulonephritis with Crescents in an Elderly Diabetic Patient after Acute Gastroenteritis: Case Report. 3119 29