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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (
gastroenteritis
)
11,398
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Eosinophilic enteritis is a rare condition of unknown aetiology, although it is generally believed to be due to intestinal allergy. It may mimic peptic ulcer, subacute (or chronic) intestinal obstruction,
gastroenteritis
,
irritable bowel syndrome
, and inflammatory bowel disease. The diagnosis is often difficult to make and most cases are only diagnosed after laparotomy/ laparoscopy and biopsy. It can be successfully treated with corticosteroids. We report a case of Eosinophilic enteritis in a 27 year old woman the symptoms of which appeared within six weeks of childbirth. With repeated episodes of abdominal pain, vomiting, occasional loose stools with weight loss, she was investigated and treated for many weeks in three hospitals without success. All investigations were inconclusive. Finally laparotomy revealed inflamed segments of small bowel, a biopsy of which showed Eosinophilic enteritis. The patient was subsequently treated successfully with Prednisolone.
...
PMID:Eosinophilic enteritis--a diagnostic dilemma. 1274 85
A small but significant subgroup of patients with
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) report a sudden onset of their
IBS
symptoms after a bout of
gastroenteritis
. Population-based surveys show that although a history of neurotic and psychologic disorders, pain-related diseases, and
gastroenteritis
are all risk factors for developing
IBS
,
gastroenteritis
is the most potent. More toxigenic organisms increase the risk 11-fold, as does an initial illness lasting more than 3 weeks. Hypochondriasis and adverse life events double the risk for postinfective (PI)-
IBS
and may account for the increased proportion of women who develop this syndrome. PI-
IBS
is associated with modest increases in mucosal T lymphocytes and serotonin-containing enteroendocrine cells. Animal models and some preliminary human data suggest this leads to excessive serotonin release from the mucosa. Both the histologic changes and symptoms in humans may last for many years with only 40% recovering over a 6-year follow-up. Celiac disease, microscopic colitis, lactose intolerance, early stage Crohn's disease, and bile salt malabsorption should be excluded, as should colon cancer in those over the age of 45 years or in those with a positive family history. Treatment with Loperamide, low-fiber diets, and bile salt- binding therapy may help some patients. Serotonin antagonists are logical treatments but have yet to be evaluated.
...
PMID:Postinfectious irritable bowel syndrome. 1276 24
Irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) is one of the most common functional gastrointestinal disorders. The prevalence rate is 10-20% and women have a higher prevalence.
IBS
adversely affects quality of life and is associated with health care use and costs.
IBS
comprises a group of functional bowel disorders in which abdominal discomfort or pain is associated with defecation or a change in bowel habit, and with features of disordered defecation. The consensus definition and criteria for
IBS
have been formalized in the "Rome II criteria". Food, psychiatric disorders, and
gastroenteritis
are risk factors for developing
IBS
. The mechanism in
IBS
involves biopsychosocial disorders; psychosocial factors, altered motility, and heightened sensory function. Brain-gut interaction is the most important in understanding the pathophysiology of
IBS
. Effective management requires an effective physician-patient relationship. Dietary treatment, lifestyle therapy, behavioral therapy, and pharmacologic therapy play a major role in treating
IBS
. Calcium polycarbophil can benefit
IBS
patients with constipation or alternating diarrhea and constipation.
...
PMID:Management of irritable bowel syndrome. 1520 45
Little is known about the prevalence and risk factors for development of
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) in Japan. In the United States, it is reported that heredity and social learning contribute to the development of
IBS
. Our aims were (1) to estimate the prevalence of
IBS
, (2) to confirm that subjects with
IBS
are more likely to have parents with a history of bowel problems, (3) to confirm that
gastroenteritis
is a risk factor for
IBS
, and (4) to determine whether these two risk factors interact with psychological distress. Prevalence was estimated from a sample of 417 young adults seen for annual health screening examinations. To evaluate risk factors related to consulting physicians, the 46 subjects who fulfilled Rome II diagnostic criteria for
IBS
but denied ever having seen a physician about these symptoms (
IBS
non-consulters) were compared to the 317 subjects who did not meet the criteria for
IBS
(controls) and to a group of 56 patients diagnosed with
IBS
by gastroenterologists (
IBS
patients). All subjects completed the Gastrointestinal Symptoms Rating Scale, the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, the Self-Rating Depression Scale, the Perceived Stress Scale, and the SF-36 quality of life scale. Fourteen and two-tenths percent (15.5% of females and 12.9% of males) of the community sample met the criteria for
IBS
diagnosis, of whom 22% consulted physicians.
IBS
patients and
IBS
nonconsulters were more likely than controls to have a parental history (33.9 vs. 12.6%, P < 0.001, for patients and 26.1 vs. 12.6%, P < 0.01, for nonconsulters) and were more likely to report an infective history compared to controls (44.6 vs. 16.1%, P < 0.001, for patients and 32.6 vs. 16.1%, P < 0.01, for nonconsulters). Two-way analysis of variance showed that the parental history was associated with a significantly greater impact on symptoms of indigestion, diarrhea, constipation, state and trait anxiety, and the SF-36 scales for social functioning and role emotional and that an infective history was associated with a greater impact on bodily pain. Both a parental history of bowel problems and a history of acute
gastroenteritis
are significant risk factors for development of
IBS
in Japan, as reported for the United States. Moreover, patients with such a family history show more psychological distress than other patients.
...
PMID:Patients and nonconsulters with irritable bowel syndrome reporting a parental history of bowel problems have more impaired psychological distress. 1530 99
Probiotics have been defined by The Food Agricultural Organization/World Health Organization (FAO/WHO) as "live microorganisms which when administered in adequate amounts confer a health benefit to the host." They have been used for centuries in the form of dairy-based fermented products, but the potential use of probiotics as a form of medical nutrition therapy has not received formal recognition. A detailed literature review (from 1950 through February 2004) of English-language articles was undertaken to find articles showing a relationship between probiotic use and medical conditions. Medical conditions that have been reportedly treated or have the potential to be treated with probiotics include diarrhea,
gastroenteritis
,
irritable bowel syndrome
, and inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis), cancer, depressed immune function, inadequate lactase digestion, infant allergies, failure-to-thrive, hyperlipidemia, hepatic diseases, Helicobacter pylori infections, genitourinary tract infections, and others. The use of probiotics should be further investigated for possible benefits and side-effects in patients affected by these medical conditions.
...
PMID:Probiotics and medical nutrition therapy. 1548 39
The observation that the symptoms of
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) in some patients might follow an episode of acute
gastroenteritis
came from epidemiological studies. Both retrospective and prospective studies suggest that between 4% and 26% of patients develop
IBS
for the first time after
gastroenteritis
. The diagnosis of post-infectious
IBS
is typically made from the history. In addition, as with the diagnosis of
IBS
more generally, it is important to exclude other clinical causes for persistent bowel dysfunction. There is little, if any, evidence to support the widely-held view that patients with post-infectious
IBS
carry a better prognosis than
IBS
patients more generally. The management of patients with post-infectious
IBS
is the standard approach that might be applied to all patients with
IBS
. Post-infectious
IBS
patients may differ from
IBS
patients in general in having a low-level of intestinal inflammation. Work in animal models, and detection of low-grade inflammation in intestinal biopsies combined with markers of intestinal inflammation such as faecal calprotectin all indicate a strong possibility that persisting inflammation after the acute infection may be important in the pathogenesis of post-infectious
IBS
.
...
PMID:Intestinal infection and irritable bowel syndrome. 1564 32
Abnormal fermentation may be an important factor in
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
).
Gastroenteritis
or antibiotic therapy may damage the colonic microflora, leading to increased fermentation and the accumulation of gas. Gas excretion may be measured by whole-body calorimetry but there has only been one such study on
IBS
to date. We aimed to assess the relationship between
IBS
symptoms and fermentation rates in
IBS
. A purpose-built, 1.4-m3, whole-body calorimeter was used to assess excretion of H2 and CH4 in
IBS
subjects while consuming a standard diet and, again, after open randomization on either the standard diet together with the antibiotic metronidazole or a fiber-free diet to reduce fermentation. Metronidazole significantly reduced the 24-hr excretion of hydrogen (median value compared to the control group, 397 vs 230 ml/24 hr) and total gas (H2 + CH4; 671 vs 422 ml/min) and the maximum rate of gas excretion (1.6 vs 0.8 ml/min), as did a no-fiber polymeric diet (hydrogen, 418 vs 176 ml/min; total gas, 564 vs 205 ml/min; maximum rate of gas excretion, 1.35 vs 0.45 ml/min), with a significant improvement in abdominal symptoms.
IBS
may be associated with rapid excretion of gaseous products of fermentation, whose reduction may improve symptoms.
...
PMID:Do interventions which reduce colonic bacterial fermentation improve symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome? 1584 15
Irritable Bowel Syndrome
(
IBS
) is multifactorial in its etiology and heterogeneous in its clinical presentation and pathogenesis. It is recognized that inflammation plays an important role in symptom generation, at least in a subset of patients with
IBS
. Previous
gastroenteritis
has been identified as the most important risk factor for
IBS
, and several studies reported that a substantial proportion of patients with gastrointestinal infection develops
IBS
symptoms,which can persist for several years. Recent studies have demonstrated that a proportion of
IBS
patients without any history of enteritis has signs of immune activation in the gut. There is clinical overlap between
IBS
and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), with
IBS
-like symptoms frequently reported in patients before the diagnosis of IBD, and a higher than expected percentage reports of
IBS
symptoms in patients in remission from established IBD. Thus,these conditions may coexist with a higher than expected frequency, or may exist on a continuum, with
IBS
and IBD at different ends of the same spectrum. This article examines these relation-ships using immune activation and inflammation as a common pathogenic process to IBD and a subset of
IBS
patients.
...
PMID:Is irritable bowel syndrome a low-grade inflammatory bowel disease? 1586 32
While
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) is common in the West, early studies suggest that the prevalence is low in developing countries. However, recent studies point to increasing prevalence in newly developed Asian economies. The presentation appears to differ from the West, with a lack of female predominance, a greater frequency of upper abdominal pain and defecatory symptoms perceived as being less bothersome. This difference, together with the preoccupation with organic disease, could explain why we may be missing
IBS
in Asia and also why excess surgery has been observed in some Asian countries. While a recent study from China, consistent with western studies, support an important role for infection and inflammation, early studies from India reporting no association between amoebic infection and
IBS
appear to dispute this observation. To reconcile these seemingly contradictory observations, an hygiene hypothesis model is proposed. Exposure to a variety of microorganisms early in life could result in the colonization of the intestine with microflora that can respond more efficiently to an episode of
gastroenteritis
. Together with the changes with evolution of Asian economies such as westernization of the diet and increased psychosocial stress, it is proposed that loss of this internal protective effect, could give rise to a more uniform worldwide prevalence of
IBS
.
...
PMID:Irritable bowel syndrome in developing countries--a disorder of civilization or colonization? 1633 5
Irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) usually is considered a functional gastrointestinal disorder characterized by pain, bloating and either diarrhea or constipation, but a small subgroup of patients report a sudden onset of their
IBS
symptoms after
gastroenteritis
, that is named postinfectious
IBS
.
IBS
can be diagnosed with confidence when a patient fulfills the Rome II criteria for
IBS
and displays no warning signs, as determined by a careful history and physical examination. In the past numerous test were considered routine for patients with suspected
IBS
, however, available data do not support this approach. The etiology of
IBS
remains unknown and therefore the treatment is focused on relieving symptoms rather than curing the disease. The patient main complaints such as constipation, diarrhea or bloating-pain-gas, determine the therapies of choice, according the severity of them.
...
PMID:[Irritable bowel syndrome: a concise diagnostic and pharmacological therapy review]. 1602 Dec 5
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