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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (
gastroenteritis
)
11,398
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The primary gastrointestinal lymphomas in Shiraz, Iran, and Richmond, Virginia, USA were compared. Upper duodenojejunal
lymphoma
is always associated with atrophy of the surrounding nonlymphomatous mucosa, plasma cell infiltration and formation of lymph follicles. This is frequently linked to repeated
gastroenteritis
leading to mucosal atrophy, mutation of plasma cell precursors and secretion of alpha-heavy-chain. Gastrointestinal lymphoma in the USA and other industrialized countries is found in the stomach, where it is accompanied by superficial perifoveolar plasma cell gastritis of the surrounding mucosa, or in the performed lymphoid tissue of the ileocolon, surrounded usually by normal mucosa. A hypothesis for the pathogenesis of the different types of primary gastrointestinal
lymphoma
, considering the geographic distribution, and mucosal and immunologic antecedents, is presented.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal mucosa and primary gastrointestinal lymphoma. 10 21
Yersinia infections in 16 adults and 9 children are reported. 15 cases were caused by Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, 8 of them were proved by serological findings. In 4 cases the infection by Yersinia pseudotuberculosis was likely, in 3 other cases possible only. Real infections caused by serotype IV are demonstrated too. Furthermore there were 10 cases caused by Yersinia enterocolitica, 3 of them were proved by bacterial, the other ones by serological findings. Both germs caused identical symptoms: fever (80%), abdominal pains (56%), diarrhoea (52%), erythema nodosum (44%), arthritis (40%), vomiting (16%), weight loss (16%),
lymphoma
(12%) and others. In children 50% of erythema nodosum was produced by intestinal yersiniosis. The beginning with
gastroenteritis
and fever mostly was followed by a second phase with returning fever, abdominal pains, erythema nodosum and/or arthritis. Antibiotic therapy had a definite effect only in the first phase of
gastroenteritis
and in the two possibly relapsing cases. In two of 5 patients with long standing arthritis the HL-AB 27 was present.
...
PMID:[Intestinal yersiniosis: 25 cases of infections with Yersinia pseudotuberculosis and Yersinia enterocolitica (author's transl)]. 20 60
A hypothesis which explains disease prevalence among different socio-economic groups following early infantile modulation of cell-mediated immunity by infection and nutrition related stress is presented. Wealthy populations living under highly hygienic circumstances can develop their cell-mediated immunity to genetic expectation while their humoral systems remains unstimulated. Primitive populations protect the infant's immune development by breast feeding and suffer from temporary cell-mediated immune deficiencies due to intercurrent infectious disease and famine later on. Intermediary populations harbour a small percentage of people, whose cell-mediated immune system has been permanently damaged by infection in early childhood, leading to a high incidence of diseases linked to cell-mediated immune deficiency. The possible cocarcinogenesis of the cell-mediated immune deficiency following repeated
gastroenteritis
and persistent stimulation of B cells, leading to alpha heavy chain disease and primary intestinal
lymphoma
, or due to falciparum malaria in newborns and its impact on the EB virus genome in development of Burkitt's lymphoma, are discussed.
...
PMID:Immune modulation and disease patterns in population groups. 122 70
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) can present as either disseminated disease, pneumonitis, retinitis,
gastroenteritis
, neuropathy, or a subclinical infection. We report a patient whose initial manifestation of CMV infection was severe central airways obstruction due to necrotizing tracheitis. At bronchoscopy, the lesion appeared deeply ulcerated, distinctly different from previously described airway lesions in patients with AIDS. Mucosal biopsies showed characteristic intranuclear and intracytoplasmic inclusions and cultures yielded only CMV. The patient responded partially to ganciclovir, steroids, and antibiotics against suspected anaerobic superinfection but died as a result of central nervous system disease believed due to toxoplasmosis or
lymphoma
. CMV infection of the upper airway should be considered in the patient with AIDS presenting with atypical cough or stridor and ulcerated endobronchial lesions.
...
PMID:Central airway obstruction due to cytomegalovirus-induced necrotizing tracheitis in a patient with AIDS. 217 87
To focus attention on the problem of infant mortality in Lebanon, data were compiled on infant mortality from 1978 to 1986 at the American University of Beirut Medical Center. Causes of death are analyzed for 602 males and 398 females. 54.9% deaths occurred at 1 month of age and 77.4% died within the 1st year. Autopsies were performed on .7%. 37.7% of all neonatal deaths were due to neonatal diseases such as hyaline membrane disease, asphyxia neonatorum, immaturity, necrotizing enterocolitis, hemorrhage, hemolysis, meconium aspiration, and kernicterus. Better prenatal care would reduce this group, or the administration of corticosteroids to the mother 24-48 hours prior to delivery, as well as rapid resuscitation at birth and prevention of the 5 curses: hypoxemia, hypoglycemia, hypothermia, hypotension, and acidosis. Although unavailable in Lebanon, administration of surfactants through an endotracheal tube would also help. Infections constitute 25.1% of deaths; many are preventable through adequate public health measures and strict personal hygiene, i.e., diseases such as sepsis, pneumonia, meningitis,
gastroenteritis
, hepatitis, encephalitis, and 1-2 cases of the following: diphtheria, measles, peritonitis, tetanus, tuberculosis, cytomegalis inclusion, herpes, parathyphoid, pertussis, poliomyelitis, and shigellosis. Congenital diseases were 21.6%. In utero diagnosis could prevent some diseases and in utero treatment is possible for hydrocephalus and hydronephrosis. Screening programs postnatally could lead to treatment. 5.9% were malignancies such as leukemia,
lymphoma
, brain tumors, histocytosis, Wilm's tumor, Ewing sarcoma, and Hodgkin's disease. Early diagnosis is critical if mortality is to be reduced in this group, but medical advances are still needed. 2.9% are miscellaneous diseases such as poisoning, rheumatic diseases, marasmus, Reye's syndrome, nephrosis, rickets, and epilepsy. Most of these diseases are preventable, except for rheumatic inflammation of the heart. Recommended necessary steps to reduce infant mortality are: prenatal care, diagnosis and screening, intrauterine surgery; resuscitation and intensive care centers with modern equipment and trained personnel; national vaccination and screening programs; adequate public health measures and hygiene; parental education; and well-equipped hospitals to serve all regardless of income level.
...
PMID:Pediatric mortality: an avoidable tragedy. 251 28
We report the pathologic findings in specimens submitted for histologic and cytologic evaluation from 67 patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. A wide variety of opportunistic pathogens were identified in 41 patients. Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare evoked only a mild host response: granulomas, if present, were poorly formed. Biopsy specimens showing cytomegalovirus
gastroenteritis
required sections at multiple levels to demonstrate inclusions. Combined histologic and cytologic evaluation can increase the diagnostic yield in pulmonary and esophageal infections. Kaposi's sarcoma was found in biopsy specimens from 29 patients. Early lesions were often extremely subtle, yet distinct from, benign vascular proliferations in involuted lymph nodes.
Malignant lymphoma
was diagnosed in ten homosexual men who were suspected of having the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. The lymphomas were characterized by B-cell origin, a diffuse pattern, frequent extranodal presentations, and an aggressive clinical course with prominent central nervous system involvement.
...
PMID:Diagnostic pathology in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Surgical pathology and cytology experience with 67 patients. 298 18
Salmonellae have demonstrated an extraordinary capacity to adapt to a wide range of ecologic niches and to the peculiarities of modern society, such as the mass production of food products. The vast majority of infections in the United States are caused by serotypes not specifically adapted to human or animal hosts, whereas the most frequent isolate in developing countries is S. typhi, which is highly adapted to human hosts. The number of isolates reported in the United States has been increasing steadily since 1975, largely a result of outbreaks associated with the mass production of food products, particularly poultry, which is frequently contaminated. Salmonella infection occurs when ingested organisms bypass gastric defenses, multiply within the intestinal lumen, penetrate the intestinal mucosa, and multiply within macrophages of the reticuloendothelial system. They may then disseminate via the systemic circulation. Several virulence factors have been identified. The wide range of pathologic and clinical manifestations are subdivided into four syndromes, each requiring a distinct diagnostic and therapeutic approach: (1)
gastroenteritis
, (2) enteric fever, (3) bacteremia with or without metastatic disease, and (4) asymptomatic carriage. Although any serotype can cause any of these syndromes, certain serotypes are associated with specific presentations. Serious complications of bacteremic infection include infections of the aorta, endocardium, bone, and meninges. Salmonella infection is particularly severe in patients who have AIDS, leukemia,
lymphoma
, immunodeficiency of other causes, inflammatory bowel disease, schistosomiasis, and macrophage dysfunction. Diagnosis is based on culture of the organism from appropriate sites. Several serologic tests have been developed that warrant further evaluation. Chloramphenicol, ampicillin, amoxicillin, and trimethoprimsulfamethoxazole have clearly established efficacy. Experience with third generation cephalosporins and quinolones is preliminary and fragmentary, but results suggest that they may prove to be efficacious in certain clinical circumstances. Antibiotic resistance has become a major problem in certain geographic areas. The three vaccines for S. typhi that are currently in use internationally provide only moderate protection for short periods of time.
...
PMID:The spectrum of Salmonella infection. 307 16
We describe a 4-month-old girl with Estren-Dameshek variant of Fanconi's anemia (FA) presenting with a pancytopenia secondary to extranodal bone marrow malignant
lymphoma
as the first hematologic manifestation of the syndrome. Although she was phenotypically normal, her cultured lymphocytes showed an increased spontaneous chromosome breakage, which was enhanced by diepoxybutane (DEB). Cytogenetic studies showed that 7 of her 12 relatives, including both parents, were heterozygote carriers of the FA gene. This confirms the diagnosis of FA of the Estren-Dameshek variant. A complete hematologic remission was attained within 28 days, and she remained in continuous bone marrow remission till the age of 14.5 months, when she developed acute
gastroenteritis
and died. No unusual sensitivity to chemotherapy was experienced, though leukopenia and recurrent infections proved troublesome. FA has an incidence many times higher in the Orange Free State region of South Africa than reported elsewhere in the world.
...
PMID:Pancytopenia secondary to primary malignant lymphoma of bone marrow as the first hematologic manifestation of the Estren-Dameshek variant of Fanconi's anemia. 343 83
Pharmacokinetic, bacteriological and clinical studies on SY5555 were performed in children. The results were as follows: 1. A total of 15 patients considered to have bacterial infections were treated with SY5555. Each dose, 5 mg/kg, was orally administered 3 times daily, for 4-11 days. Clinical efficacies of SY5555 in 13 patients with bacterial infections (1 with pneumonia, 2 with bronchitis, each 1 with maxillary sinusitis, 2 with otitis media, 5 with pharyngitis, 1 each with
gastroenteritis
and pyelonephritis) were evaluated as excellent in 10 patients and as good in 3 patients with an efficacy rate of 100%. Two patients with viral infection and malignant
lymphoma
were not evaluated. Thirteen causative strains in 7 species were found in 10 patients. Streptococcus pneumoniae in 1/3, Haemophilus influenzae in 2/2, Streptococcus pyogenes 4/4, Salmonella spp. in 1/1, Escherichia coli in 1/1 were eradicated. Only one patient developed mild diarrhea as an adverse reaction. Another patient showed elevated GPT (glutamate pyruvate transaminase). The abnormality was mild and the patient recovered after the cessation of SY5555 administration without specific treatment. 2. MICs of SY5555 were examined against 33 clinical isolates. SY5555 has low MICs against Enterococcus faecalis and other Gram-positive cocci. 3. Pharmacokinetic studies Peak plasma concentrations of SY5555 was 1.15 micrograms/ml at a dose level of 4.9 mg/kg orally administered at fasting. Based on the above results and the broad spectrum of the anti-bacterial activities, SY5555 appears to be a promising antibiotics that is usable as a single agent for the primary therapy of respiratory tract infections, skin soft tissue infections and urinary tract infections in children.
...
PMID:[Pharmacokinetic, bacteriological, and clinical studies on SY5555 in children]. 769 43
The histology from rectal biopsy specimens taken 1980-1990 on 131 occasions from 116 horses, age 1-18 years, with clinical signs of intestinal disease was evaluated and classified retrospectively. In 40 horses, autopsy results were studied for comparison. Biopsy specimens (21 horses) and post mortem rectal tissue (9 horses) from 30 healthy horses, age 4-22 years, were used as controls. In 105 clinical cases, a biopsy was performed on only one occasion, while repeat biopsy was performed in 11 cases. Specimens showed pathological changes in 60 horses. The findings were classified into acute, chronic or chronic active simple proctitis, granulomatous enteritis, eosinophilic granulomatosis/
gastroenteritis
, eosinophilic proctitis, erosive/ulcerative proctitis, pseudomembranous proctitis, proctitis with vasculitis and malignant
lymphoma
. Mild scattered neutrophil infiltration in the lamina propria was found in controls, but neutrophils in crypt or surface epithelia were abnormal findings. Depletion or hyperplasia of goblet cells sometimes accompanied inflammation. Simple proctitis occurred in association with malignant
lymphoma
and various inflammatory disorders of the gastrointestinal tract apparent at autopsy. Eosinophilic granulomatosis/
gastroenteritis
and granulomatous enteritis were diagnosed from biopsy specimens in 6 of 12 and 4 of 9 cases, respectively, of these diseases confirmed at autopsy. Reduction of acid mucins in goblet cells was a prominent feature of eosinophilic granulomatosis. Rectal biopsy was found to be a useful adjunct for evaluation of intestinal disease in the horse.
...
PMID:Rectal biopsy diagnosis in horses with clinical signs of intestinal disorders: a retrospective study of 116 cases. 881 89
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