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)

Forty-seven common dolphins (Delphinus delphis ponticus) were stranded on the northern shores of the Black Sea between mid-July and early September 1994, more than in previous or subsequent years. Two of the 47 dolphins were examined in detail to try to determine the cause of the increased stranding rate. Their lesions included broncho-interstitial pneumonia with type II epithelial cell hyperplasia and multinucleate syncytial cells, neuronal necrosis, gliosis, and non-suppurative meningitis of the brain, necrotic stomatitis, gastroenteritis and cholangitis, and lymphoid depletion of the spleen and lymph nodes. The diseased tissues stained positive in an immunoperoxidase test, using a polyclonal antiserum to measles virus as the primary antibody, and electron microscopy showed that they contained regularly-shaped intranuclear particles about 22 nm in diameter. They were positive by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for the nucleoprotein gene of morbillivirus. However, there was no evidence of morbillivirus in frozen tissues either by virus isolation or by antigen capture ELISA. The concentration of sigma DDTS in the blubber of both dolphins was about 50 to 100 times higher than the levels in toothed cetaceans from the North Sea, North Atlantic Ocean, and Baltic Sea. The lesions were consistent with those found in other species with morbilliviral disease, and the positive immunoperoxidase test, PCR and electron microscopical examination confirmed a morbillivirus as the primary cause of these lesions.
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PMID:Epizootic of morbilliviral disease in common dolphins (Delphinus delphis ponticus) from the Black sea. 1009 12

Campylobacter jejuni is an important pathogen that causes gastroenteritis, as well as other disease states such as meningitis and septic arthritis. In this study, the Etest (AB BIODISK, Solna, Sweden) results were compared to a reference agar dilution method using gatifloxacin, a new 8-methoxyfluoroquinolone. A total of 53 strains of C. jejuni initially isolated from patients in California and Mexico were tested. Results demonstrated a high correlation (r = 0.88) between the two utilized in vitro dilution methods. In addition, gatifloxacin activity was compared to that of ciprofloxacin, metronidazole, amoxicillin, erythromycin, chloramphenicol, gentamicin, tetracycline, and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole using the Etest. Gatifloxacin (MIC90, 4 micrograms/ml) was approximately eight- to 16-fold more potent than ciprofloxacin (Mic90, > 32 micrograms/ml), a commonly used fluoroquinolone for Campylobacter infections. Eight strains highly resistant to ciprofloxacin (MIC90, > 32 micrograms/ml) were tested for cross resistance against the newer fluoroquinolones (gatifloxacin, levofloxacin, trovafloxacin) and the rank order of potency was: gatifloxacin (MIC50, 16 micrograms/ml) > trovafloxacin = levofloxacin (MIC50, > 32 micrograms/mL). However, only 25% ciprofloxacin-resistant strains were inhibited by < or = 1 microgram/mL of gatifloxacin or trovafloxacin. These results for gatifloxacin against C. jejuni strains must be further assessed in the context of in vivo trials before the clinical role of this new fluoroquinolone can be determined. The Etest appears to be a simple and precise susceptibility test method for testing C. jejuni isolates against fluoroquinolones and other alternative therapeutic agents.
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PMID:Comparative antimicrobial activity of gatifloxacin tested against Campylobacter jejuni including fluoroquinolone-resistant clinical isolates. 1035 58

Plesiomonas shigelloides, a member of the family Vibrionaceae, is a Gram negative rod associated with several gastroenteritis outbreaks, especially in tropical and subtropical countries. In same way, it has been related to some septicemia, meningitis and cholecystitis cases. The microorganism is normally found in water, fish and birds. The aim of this work was to study the incidence of Plesiomonas shigelloides in tetrahybrids of Oreochromis sp. (Pink Tilapia) located at the central region of Venezuela. Once the samples were homogenized, the techniques of enrichment and direct streaking were used simultaneously for the isolation of the microorganism. A high incidence of P. shigelloides was determined (73%), being higher in the intestinal tract (60%), followed by the skin (36.7%) and the gills (26.67%), without any correlation among them. In the fish pond, the microorganism isolation frequency was 41.67%. The direct streaking technique presented the highest isolation values in the different Tilapia tissues (60%) and in the water as well (41.60%). No significant differences were observed on the effectivity of the selective agars used for the isolation of P. shigelloides (Plesiomonas Agar and Inositol-Brilliant Green-Bile Salts Agar). A positive correlation was observed between the microorganism incidence and the pluviosity levels. A high incidence of E. coli was observed in the samples of Tilapia tissues and the water pond. No correlation was observed between incidence of P. shigelloides and E. coli. Due to the high prevalence of P. shigelloides found in the present study, it is important to assure a proper evisceration, washing and storage at temperatures lower than 8 degrees C, and a proper product cooking to diminish the customeris risk.
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PMID:[Incidence of Plesiomonas shigelloides in tilapia tetrahibrids (Oreochromis sp.)]. 1041 9

Clinical and morphological features were studied of the course of gastrointestinal and generalized forms of salmonellosis. The grave gastrointestinal form runs its course against the unfavourable premorbid background getting associated with other flora: Proteus, Citrobacter, Klebsiella, Staphylococcus aureus. A distinguishing feature of the generalized form is its variegated clinical symptomatology. Noted in some instances is an acute onset of the illness with a clinical picture of purulent meningitis, but it happens that it runs a little-by-little, and a wave-like course presenting with poorly manifest phenomena of gastroenteritis and subsequent development of meningitis. Morphological changes in Salmonella enterocolitis are characterized by macrophagal infiltration of the mucosal lamina proper and by disordered hemomicrocirculation in postcapillaries and venules. The generalized form is associated with profound irreversible processes in the brain, liver, kidneys, and myocardium.
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PMID:[The clinico-morphological characteristics of salmonellosis typhimurium in children]. 1042 15

Bacterial pathogens use novel mechanisms to vary their surface structures. Three new genome sequences provide a perspective on these mechanisms in Borrelia burgdorferi, Neisseria meningitidis, and Campylobacter jejuni, which cause lyme disease, meningitis and gastroenteritis, respectively.
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PMID:The controlled chaos of shifty pathogens. 1089 67

Listeria monocytogenes causes sepsis and meningitis in immunocompromised hosts and a devastating maternal/fetal infection in pregnant women. In recent years a more benign gastroenteritis in normal hosts has been described. Listeria has been increasingly identified as a food-borne pathogen, and large-scale contamination of processed foods with resulting outbreaks has occurred in recent years, possibly as a result of consolidation of the food industry. Experimental listeriosis in mice has proven to be an extraordinarily useful model for analyzing cell-mediated immune host defenses. Contrary to original concepts, we found that neutrophils, not macrophages, are the prime effectors during early infection. CD8+ T cells are then responsible for lysing infected hepatocytes through perforin-related (early primary and secondary infection) or Fas-L/Fas mechanism (late primary). Of interest, non-classical MHC class Ib restricted recognition mechanisms exist early, whereas MHC class Ia mechanisms can be detected throughout infection.
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PMID:An updated model of cell-mediated immunity--listeriosis: clinical and research aspects. 1095 86

7 cases of listeriosis were diagnosed here between 1988-1997 (6 in last 3 years), or 2.94/100,000 admissions. 2 elderly patients suffered from meningitis and 2 pregnant women presented with premature contractions, 1 of whom delivered a premature, infected baby. 2 other patients had fever and gastroenteritis. Listeria monocytogenes was isolated from blood in 4, CSF in 2 and the placenta in 1. It was isolated from those with bacterial meningitis. All patients recovered. Both increased awareness for prevention and better diagnosis are essential to reduce morbidity from this unusual pathogen.
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PMID:[Listeria monocytogenes infections--ten years' experience]. 1095 37

The clinical spectrum of extraintestinal salmonellosis comprises enteric fever (typhoid and paratyphoid) and invasive infections due to nontyphoidal salmonellae. This study describes the clinical spectrum, management and outcome of all confirmed cases of extraintestinal salmonellosis in patients admitted to University Hospital, Nottingham, UK, between 1980 and 1997. There were 142 cases (children, 42; adults, 100) of extraintestinal salmonellosis, of which 38 (children, 20; adults, 18) were enteric fever, consisting of 21 cases of typhoid, 12 of paratyphoid A and five of paratyphoid B. All patients with typhoid and paratyphoid A fever were from Indian or Pakistani families and, except for two adults, all were considered to be previously fit. The outcome in patients with enteric fever was excellent, and there were no complications. Of the 104 patients (children, 22; adults, 82) with nontyphoidal salmonellosis, 69 were bacteraemic secondary to gastroenteritis, 10 were bacteraemic without an obvious focus of infection and 25 had focal infections. The three major sites of focal infections were meningitis in five infants, osteomyelitis in two children and three adults, and arterial infections in ten adults. The three most frequently isolated organisms were Salmonella enteritidis (40%), Salmonella typhimurium (25%) and Salmonella virchow (14%). Sixty-seven percent of these patients had underlying disease(s)/risk factors. In contrast to the outcome of enteric fever, there were 19 deaths (children, 2; adults, 17) in patients with nontyphoidal salmonellosis. Sixteen of the 17 adults who died were over the age of 60 years. Eight (25%) of 32 males over the age of 60 years with nontyphoidal Salmonella bacteraemia had arterial infections. In some patients, the diagnosis of Salmonella arterial infection is likely to be delayed or missed altogether if blood cultures are not obtained. Mortality in patients over the age of 60 years with nontyphoidal Salmonella infections was 28%.
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PMID:Enteric fever and other extraintestinal salmonellosis in University Hospital, Nottingham, UK, between 1980 and 1997. 1105 1

Infection with Echovirus 11 is mostly asymptomatic, but it may cause a wide variety of clinical diseases, from gastroenteritis to serious diseases such as meningitis and myocarditis. In small infants, especially during the first days of life, echovirus infection may appear as a sepsis-like illness, and cause disseminated intravascular coagulopathy and shock. We present 2 infants with severe Echovirus 11 infections. A 3.5-month-old died within 24 hours of shock and probably myocarditis. The other, 6-days old, presented with meningitis, hepatitis and disseminated intravascular coagulopathy. It recovered after treatment with intravenous immunoglobulin. Echovirus 11 may cause life-threatening infections in small infants. Pediatricians should be alert to the special characteristics of this disease.
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PMID:[Life-threatening echovirus 11 infection during first month of life]. 1106 68

Citrobacter species are motile Gram-negative bacilli that cause disease in humans, such as urinary tract infection, pneumonia, superficial and deep wound infections, gastroenteritis, meningitis, bacteremia, and rarely endocarditis. In those cases of endocarditis, intravenous drug use has been associated with Citrobacter species. Gram-negative organisms are present in less than 10% of cases of endocarditis in intravenous drug users. We present a case of tricuspid valve endocarditis in an intravenous drug user caused by Citrobacter diversus alone.
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PMID:Citrobacter diversus endocarditis. 1114 56


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