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 presence of antibodies to two influenza viruses of the type A (H1N1 and H3N2) and to a porcine respiratory coronavirus was investigated in a study lasting a year. 735 blood serum samples were collected from 79 closed pig fattening farms in the province Segovia (Spain). Hemagglutination inhibition was used with influenza viruses. The percentage of positive results was 78.5% and 62.5% respectively for the serotypes H1N1 and H3N2. A clear reduction in the spread of antibodies was observed in the autumn. The ELISA technique was used with the porcine respiratory coronavirus. As antigen we used the antigenically related transmissible porcine gastroenteritis virus. Using this technique 87% of the sera were positive. Some of these sera with representative ELISA values were confirmed by means of serum neutralisation and radioimmune precipitation of the viral proteins. The incidence of these antibodies remained unchanged over the whole year of the investigation.
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PMID:[The prevalence of antibodies to influenza virus and respiratory coronavirus in fattening pigs in Spain]. 255 24

Rapid air travel has increased the potential for international transmission of infectious diseases. Important aspects of this problem include the transmission of foodborne and waterborne illnesses, the translocation of insect vectors, the rapid transport of individuals with incubating illnesses, the direct transmission of diseases inside aircraft and the transmission of zoonoses through animal transport. Infectious outbreaks on aircraft and in the vicinity of airports have included influenza, staphylococcal gastroenteritis, salmonellosis, cholera and malaria.
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PMID:International spread of disease by air travel. 268 87

The authors describe the results of observation and clinico-laboratory examination of patients during seasonal rises of the rotavirus infection incidence in 5 districts of the Moscow region in 1984-1987. The diseases ran their courses in the form of gastroenteritis and enteritis and were marked by a great number of the grave patterns (42-46%), mainly in children of the first three years of life, by a high percentage (77.5%) of the aggravated premorbid status of patients with the grave patterns. The rotavirus nature of diarrheas was supported by the data of direct electron microscopy, ELISA, and solid-phase coagglutination test. The symptom-complex of the clinical manifestations of rotavirus infection was characterized in detail. The histologic and morphometric data pertaining to two lethal outcomes were discussed. It has been demonstrated that respiratory viral infections, primarily influenza, produced an adverse effect, promoting the formation of the severe patterns and the onset of unfavourable outcomes of rotavirus infection in children.
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PMID:[Severe form of Rotavirus infection during the period of seasonal rise of its incidence]. 278 Jan 58

Population density and immune status, vectors and virulence of infection, nutritional status, sanitation, genetic susceptibility and medical management of cases, are important factors influencing the incidence and/or severity of virus infections. Thus, the prevalence and clinical importance of virus infections and the need for antiviral drugs differ from place to place and from time to time. National and World Health Statistics of notifications of disease give some index of the incidence of infections but not all virus infections are notifiable. Such statistics can be misleading also through failures to notify from sloth on the part of the physician or, in the absence of pathognomonic symptoms or signs, from errors in diagnosis. Any assessment of the need for new antiviral drugs should consider the availability, safety, effectiveness and cost of alternative measures, including prevention of spread of infection by control of vectors, immunization by use of viral vaccines, or treatment with existing antiviral drugs. Early start of treatment of acute virus infections with existing drugs gives the best results and, where the clinical diagnosis is uncertain, accurate rapid virus diagnosis is of paramount importance. Many virus infections are asymptomatic or of trivial importance and without sequelae. However, new or improved antiviral drugs are needed for the prevention and/or treatment of a number of significant conditions caused by viruses which are not at present adequately controlled. These include upper and lower respiratory tract infections, influenza, chronic hepatitis, gastroenteritis, infectious mononucleosis, measles, rabies, haemorrhagic fevers and warts. Furthermore, such drugs might prove of therapeutic value in the prevention or treatment of virus-associated tumours, such as hepatoma, nasopharyngeal carcinoma, Burkitt's lymphoma, Kaposi's sarcoma and possibly carcinoma of the cervix.
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PMID:The need for new antiviral agents. 300 26

Infants and young children with rotavirus (RV) or visualized adenovirus in their stools were tested for the simultaneous presence of a respiratory viral pathogen in their upper respiratory tract. Overall, at least 10.7% of 484 study subjects had such dual infections, including 8.3% of 385 RV-positive gastroenteritis patients and 24.3% of 37 RV-positive respiratory disease patients. Respiratory syncytial virus was present in 34.1% of 41 dual infections with RV and at least 40% of the 12 to 15 dual infections with visualized fecal adenovirus. Other pathogens found in the respiratory tract of patients with RV or visualized fecal adenovirus infections included influenza viruses, adenoviruses, parainfluenza viruses, rhinoviruses, and a cytomegalovirus.
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PMID:Simultaneous infections with different enteric and respiratory tract viruses. 300 27

During 1984, 118 patients with echovirus type 7 infection were diagnosed. The incidence in Northern Ireland was more than three times higher than the rest of the United Kingdom. The outbreak peaked in June and July, with the highest incidence in Belfast and the eastern part of Northern Ireland. All patients were sufficiently unwell to require hospital admission. Aseptic meningitis was the commonest illness (54.2%) followed by gastroenteritis (22.0%), respiratory tract infections (11.9%) and influenza-like illnesses (8.5%). Males (62%) were affected more than females and 50 patients (42%) were less than one year old. The present epidemic had features in common with four previous enterovirus epidemics, except that the under one year age group was predominantly affected and no family or street outbreaks were detected.
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PMID:Echovirus type 7 outbreak in Northern Ireland during 1984. 409 9

The data presented indicate that the disturbing upward trend in infant mortality in North Carolina has been arrested and possibly reversed during the 1959 through 1963 period. Information obtained from death certificates indicates that infections accounted for slightly more than half (52.4%) of the postneonatal deaths occurring in the study periods. The most common type of infection was influenza and pneumonia, followed by gastroenteritis and colitis, infective and parasitic disease, meningitis, and acute respiratory infections, in that order of frequency. Infections were responsible for a greater percentage of the postneonatal deaths among nonwhite (58.5%) than amon white infants (40.7%). the postneonatal death rate from infections was 13.4 for nonwhite infants and 2.2 for white infants. The next most common cause of postneonatal mortality -- congenital malformations -- was relatively more important in the white race, being responsible for approximately 25% of white deaths and only 6% of nonwhite deaths. I11 defined and unknown causes ranked 3rd in importance, with postneonatal death rates of 3.0 for nonwhite and .4 for white infants. Accidents, wich ranked 4th, were responsible for approximately 10% of the postneonatal deaths in each race. In both races, the risk of postneonatal death was greater in infants born to younger mothers, partiuclarly those under age 20. For the infants of mothers under age 15, the postneonatal death rate was 3 times as high as for those of 20-24 year old mothers. Beginning with age 20, the risk of postneonatal mortality decreases gradually as maternal age increases up to 35 years, when it begins to rise again in the white race. In nonwhite races, the decline continoues to age 40. Infants born to young mothers of nonwhite races suffer relatively higher postneonatal mortality than do their white counterparts. The postneonatal mortality rate is lowest for 1st born infants of both races. Among nonwhites, it is highest for the 2nd born; in the white race, it rises with each successive birth, with the exception of the 5th. Postneonatal mortality among very small white infants (those weighing less thatn 1500 gm at birth) was some 7 times that of infants weighing more than 2500 gm; it was even higher in nonwhite races being nearly 2 1/2 times that of the white group and appoproximately 4 times higher than the rate for nonwhite infants weighing more than 2500 gm at birth. The risk of postneonatal death for nonwhite infants born illegitimately was 1 1/2 times as great for those born in wedlock. Among white infants, the risk was almost twice as great for those born out of wedlock.
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PMID:Postneonatal deaths in North Carolina, 1959-1963. 523 49

Recombinant DNA technology appears to be on the verge of producing safe and effective protein vaccines for animal and human diseases. The procedure is applicable to most viruses because their isolated surface proteins generally possess immunogenic activity. Strategies used for the preparation and cloning of the appropriate genes depend on the characteristics of the viral genomes: whether DNA or RNA; their size, strandedness, and segmentation; and whether messenger RNA are monocistronic or polycistronic. Cloned surface proteins of foot-and-mouth disease and hepatitis B viruses are being tested for possible use as practical vaccines. Two doses of the cloned foot-and-mouth disease viral protein have elicited large amounts of neutralizing antibody and have protected cattle and swine against challenge exposure with the virus. Surface proteins have also been cloned for the viruses of fowl plague, influenza, vesicular stomatitis, rabies, and herpes simplex. Cloning is in progress for surface proteins of viruses causing canine parvovirus gastroenteritis, human papillomas, infectious bovine rhinotracheitis, Rift Valley fever, and paramyxovirus diseases. In addition, advances in recombinant DNA and other facilitating technologies have rekindled interest in the chemical synthesis of polypeptide vaccines for viral diseases. The bioengineering of bacterial vaccines is also under way. Proteinaceous pili of enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli are being produced in E coli K-12 strains for use as vaccines against neonatal diarrheal diseases of livestock.
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PMID:Recombinant DNA technology for the preparation of subunit vaccines. 612 35

Three cases of Aeromonas hydrophila septicaemia are reported. The first case concerned a 51 years old patient suffering from drowning who had previously been in good health and who died after a few days of refractory hypoxaemia. The second case was an 8 years old child with trisomy 21 operated for a congenital cardiac defect. The portal of entry was a catheter and the septicaemia was complicated by A. hydrophila mediastinitis, a complication which has not been described previously. The third case was a 75 years old man with no previous medical history, whose hobby was gardening. He developed septicaemia after a flu-like illness. A. hydrophila is a mobile Gram negative bacillus whose natural habitat is water. It appears to be an exceptional and temporary contaminant of the human G I tract. Clinical infection is rare and usually focal: gastroenteritis, infection of soft tissues after trauma in aquatic surroundings. In 60 out of 82 cases there was a documented deficiency in the patient's immune defenses. A digestive portal of entry was suspected in 63 cases but only rarely proved. In one of our cases the portal of entry was septic thrombophlebitis induced by an indwelling catheter; this complication has not previously been reported. The clinical picture of A. hydrophila septicaemia is characterised by the relative high incidence of Echtyma gangrenosum. The lethal outcome in 50 p. 100 of cases is often related to the patient's general condition. The sensitivity of the three cultures isolated was tested against third generation cephalosporins: they were effective in each occasion.
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PMID:[Aeromonas hydrophila septicemia: 3 cases, 1 with mediastinitis]. 647 65

The prevalence of infections with H1N1- and H3N2-influenza viruses, porcine respiratory coronavirus (PRCV), transmissible gastroenteritis virus (TGEV) and porcine epidemic diarrhoea virus (PEDV) in feeder pigs shortly after their entry into fattening units was examined. Ten groups of pigs with acute respiratory disease during the months September to October 1991 and seven groups of pigs with acute diarrhoea during the months February to March 1992 were investigated. On arrival in the fattening herds, more of the pigs were negative for antibodies against H1N1-influenza virus and against PRCV during September to October (61 and 50 per cent, respectively) than in February to March (51 and 34 per cent, respectively). There was serological evidence of a triple infection with PRCV and both influenza viruses in seven of the 17 groups; dual infections with PRCV and H1N1-influenza virus occurred in nine groups and with H1N1- and H3N2-influenza viruses in one group. Seroconversion against TGEV was not detected in any of the 17 groups, but seven of them had seroconverted to PEDV. Multiple infections with PRCV and either one or both of the influenza viruses were thus very common shortly after the introduction of feeder pigs into the fattening herds. There was no association between the type and/or multiplicity of these infections and respiratory disease, but infections with PEDV were clearly associated with outbreaks of diarrhoea.
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PMID:Prevalence of infections with enzootic respiratory and enteric viruses in feeder pigs entering fattening herds. 790 Feb 43


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