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)

The optimum conditions for handling and storage of canine sera for total hemolytic complement assays were assessed. Sera from 113 normal dogs and 217 clinical admissions to the University of Pennsylvania Veterinary Hospital were assayed for total hemolytic complement levels. Normal sera had a mean value of 185 CH50 units. Sera from animals with systemic lupus erythematosus and hemorrhagic gastroenteritis, had significantly lower mean levels of complement than the normal group. Sera from dogs with generalized demodectic mange, tumors, various inflammatory diseases, hypothyroidism, seborrhea, and rheumatoid arthritis had values significantly higher than the normal population.
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PMID:Total hemolytic complement values in normal and diseased dog populations. 1561 62

A 16-year-girl, a known case of hyperthyroidism since last 6 months, presented to the emergency with complaints of acute gastroenteritis of 5 days duration. At admission the child was found to be hypovolemic with acidotic breathing, which was thought to be due to dehydration. However, despite fluid correction she remained acidotic. A diagnosis of distal renal tubular acidosis (RTA) was suspected when her renal scan, for the cause of metabolic acidosis, revealed nephrocalcinosis. This was later confirmed by relevant investigations. She was started on treatment for distal RTA on which she symptomatically improved. The association of distal RTA and thyroid disorders is rarely reported in children. Till date there is only one report of distal RTA and hypothyroidism, but none with hyperthyroidism in this age group. The authors chose to report this case to highlight the fact that one should have a high index of suspicion for renal tubular disorders in children with thyroid hormone abnormalities, as these are treatable conditions if diagnosed early.
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PMID:Unusual renal manifestations in a girl with hyperthyroidism. 2161 1

Main progresses in endocrinology, gastroenterology, hemato-oncology, infectious diseases, otolaryngology, pharmacotherapy, and respiratory tract illnesses selected from articles published in The Italian Journal of Pediatrics in 2011 were reviewed. Risk factors for gastroenteritis and appendicitis in developing countries may be useful in improving our understanding of these diseases. Childhood hearing impairment is a world-wide problem which continues to have an high prevalence in newborns. Among the mechanisms of diseases, obese children often have asthma and high hepcidin levels that may reduce serum iron concentrations. In cystic fibrosis, 18q distal deletion has been described as a novel mutation. Hypothyroidism in children with central nervous system infections may increase mortality rates. Infrared tympanic thermometer (IRTT) in oral mode for the measurement of body temperature may be useful in fever screening in a busy setup. In newborns, the transmission of CMV infection through breast milk may be prevented through freezing or pasteurization. Recent advances in treatment of constipation, urinary tract infections, leukemia, pain in children with cancer, neonates with sepsis or difficult weaning from mechanical ventilation will likely contribute towards optimizing management of these common disorders. The work of the Family Pediatricians Medicines for Children Research Network aims to develop competence, infrastructure, networking and education for pediatric clinical trials.
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PMID:Progress in pediatrics in 2011. Choices in endocrinology, gastroenterology, hemato-oncology, infectious diseases, otolaryngology, pharmacotherapy and respiratory tract illnesses. 2268 13

Kidney transplant patients (KTPs), and particularly those with advanced chronic kidney rejection, may be affected by opportunistic infections, metabolic alterations and vascular and oncologic diseases that promote clinical conditions that require a variety of treatments, the combinations of which may predispose them to hyponatremia. Salt and water imbalance can induce abnormalities in volemia and/or serum sodium depending on the nature of this alteration (increase or decrease), its absolute magnitude (mild or severe) and its relative magnitude (body sodium:water ratio). Hyponatremia appears when the body sodium:water ratio is reduced due to an increase in body water or a reduction in body sodium. Additionally, hyponatremia is classified as normotonic, hypertonic and hypotonic and while hypotonic hyponatremia is classified in hyponatremia with normal, high or low extracellular fluid. The main causes of hyponatremia in KTPs are hypotonic hyponatremia secondary to water and salt contraction with oral hydration (gastroenteritis, sepsis), free water retention (severe renal failure, syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone release, hypothyroidism), chronic hypokalemia (rapamycin, malnutrition), sodium loss (tubular dysfunction secondary to nephrocalcinosis, acute tubular necrosis, tubulitis/rejection, interstitial nephritis, adrenal insufficiency, aldosterone resistance, pancreatic drainage, kidney-pancreas transplant) and hyponatremia induced by medication (opioids, cyclophosphamide, psychoactive, potent diuretics and calcineurinic inhibitors). In conclusion, KTPs are predisposed to develop hyponatremia since they are exposed to immunologic, infectious, pharmacologic and oncologic disorders, the combinations of which alter their salt and water homeostatic capacity.
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PMID:Hyponatremia in kidney transplant patients: its pathophysiologic mechanisms. 3009 23