Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0017160 (
gastroenteritis
)
11,398
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Following a community gathering held in early September 1991, an outbreak of
gastroenteritis
occurred in Galena, Alaska. We conducted an epidemiologic investigation to determine the cause of the outbreak. A case of
gastroenteritis
was defined as diarrhea or at least 2 other symptoms of gastrointestinal illness occurring in a Galena resident within a week of the gathering. Control subjects included asymptomatic residents who either resided with an affected person or were contacted by us during a telephone survey. Of 25 case-patients, 23 had attended the gathering compared with 33 of 58 controls. Among persons who attended the gathering and from whom we obtained a food consumption history, 17 of 19 case-patients and 11 of 22 controls ate moose soup. No other foods served at the gathering were associated with illness. Ten case-patients had culture-confirmed Shigella sonnei. Many pots of moose soup were served each day, and persons attended the gathering and ate moose soup on more than 1 day. Moose soup was prepared in private homes, allowed to cool, and usually served the same day. We identified 5 women who had prepared soup for the gathering and in whose homes at least 1 person had a gastrointestinal illness occur at the time of or shortly before soup preparation. This investigation suggests that eating contaminated moose soup at a community gathering led to an outbreak of shigellosis and highlights the risk of eating improperly prepared or stored foods at public gatherings.
West
J Med 1994 May
PMID:Moose soup shigellosis in Alaska. 804 26
The distribution of rotavirus G (VP7) serotypes circulating in four locations in Malaysia, representing three geographical areas, was evaluated in 341 RNA-positive stool specimens obtained discontinuously between 1977 and 1988 from infants and young children under the age of five years who were hospitalized with acute
gastroenteritis
. A total of 306 specimens (256 stool suspensions and 50 that were adapted to growth in tissue culture) that were rotavirus positive by the confirmatory enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) were examined for serotype by ELISA utilizing monoclonal antibodies to rotavirus G serotype 1, 2, 3, 4, or 9. One hundred eighty (59%) of the 306 specimens could be serotyped; of these 180 specimens, 71% were serotype 4, 15% were serotype 1, 4% were serotype 2, and 4% were serotype 3. Serotype 9 rotavirus was not detected. Most (71%) of the specimens tested were obtained in 1988, when serotype 4 predominated in three locations in
West
Malaysia; no single serotype was predominant in a limited number of specimens from East Malaysia.
...
PMID:Serotype analysis of rotaviruses from different locations in Malaysia. 839 76
Samples of rotavirus from cases of acute
gastroenteritis
, occurring in the
West
Midlands region of the United Kingdom during the winter months of 1983 to 1994, were tested by enzyme-immunoassay for G-serotype (VP7). Statistically significant changes in the relative prevalence of serotypes occurred each year (p-values in chi-square tests were: p < 0.05 or p < 0.01). No consistent pattern was associated with these changes. G1, G2, G3, and G4 were the most common serotypes detected throughout the study period, accounting for 93.2%. Serotypes G5, G8, and G10 were detected in 0.4% samples, and serotypes other than G1 to G4 were detected in 6.8% samples. Thus, the rotavirus serotypes are less diverse here compared to other locations. These data are important for the development of an appropriate rotavirus vaccine.
...
PMID:Temporal distribution of rotavirus G-serotypes in the West Midlands region of the United Kingdom, 1983-1994. 883 27
An enquiry has been made into the causes of admission in 1994 of African patients to Gelukspan Hospital, North
West
Province, South Africa. The study concerned 3791 patients of whom 3533 (93.2%) were classifiable. Two groups were not included in this number, namely, 1584 'lodgers' (e.g. mothers of infants), and 1868 females admitted for normal pregnancy. Of the 3533 patients, 940 (26.6%) were aged 14 years and younger; 545 (58.0%) these were boys and 395 (42.0%) were girls. The main causes of their admission were pneumonia,
gastroenteritis
, trauma, poisoning, and infections. Of the 2593 adults, 1418 (54.7%) were males and 1175 (45.3%) females. Among males, chief causes were pulmonary tuberculosis, trauma and accidents, congestive cardiac failure, psychosis, cancer and diabetes. Of the females, chief causes were pulmonary tuberculosis, trauma and accidents, pregnancy related disorders,
gastroenteritis
, anaemia and pneumonia. Regarding other diseases, 4.5% of adults were admitted for cancer, and 1.8% for diabetes. The general pattern of admissions is similar to that reported in other rural hospitals. The causes of admissions are discussed, regarding; (i) public health improvements occurring, and (ii) means of promoting further improvements by community self-help, and by help from State health and other services.
...
PMID:Causes of admission of African patients to Gelukspan Hospital, North West Province, South Africa. 899 67
A surveillance system was used to detect births and deaths in children in a large, rural,
West
African population from 1989 to 1993. Cause of death was investigated using post-mortem questionnaires. Overall infant (age 0-11 months) and child (age 1-4 years) mortality rates of 80.1 and 18.8 per 1000 per year were recorded. These were reasonably consistent over the period of surveillance. The most frequent cause of death in infants was acute respiratory infection (ARI), whereas in children it was malaria: these two conditions accounted for 41% of the deaths in children under 5 years old. Other leading causes of death were acute
gastroenteritis
, malnutrition, and septicaemia. Deaths attributed to ARI decreased over the 5-year period, but mortality rates from other causes were either unchanged or increased slightly. Mortality from all causes peaked in the rainy season and was slightly higher in villages which were part of a primary health care programme than in those which were not. There were also no differences between male and female mortality rates beyond one year of age. Despite the introduction of a number of health interventions, there has been no major change in the overall pattern of mortality in children in a rural area of The Gambia. Malaria and ARI remain the main causes of death.
...
PMID:Changes in the pattern of infant and childhood mortality in upper river division, The Gambia, from 1989 to 1993. 901
The epidemiology of the small round-structured virus, Mexico virus (MxV), was investigated in North and
West
Yorkshire, United Kingdom, between January 1992 and March 1995 using a type-specific antigen ELISA. The results indicate that an epidemic of MxV occurred during the winter of 1993-1994, when this strain was associated with 45 of 99 outbreaks and sporadic childhood cases of
gastroenteritis
. Only 4 MxV-like isolates were found during the 1992-1993 winter season and none in the 1994-1995 season. This descriptive epidemiologic study suggests that MxV has an epidemic pattern of infection.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of Mexico virus, a small round-structured virus in Yorkshire, United Kingdom, between January 1992 and March 1995. 908 57
Childhood mortality and morbidity patterns in the English-speaking Caribbean have changed significantly over the past 40 years. Acute respiratory illness, physical injury and conditions originating in the perinatal period have replaced malnutrition,
gastroenteritis
and other infectious diseases as major causes of illness and death in Caribbean children. Although population growth has slowed down, about one-third of the population of the English-speaking Caribbean remains under the age of 15 years. Infant mortality rates have also fallen but the major contributor to this decline has been a reduction in post-neonatal deaths. The decrease in mortality and morbidity from infectious diseases has led to a prominence of disorders originating in the perinatal period, psychosocial problems and chronic childhood disorders. Adverse economic conditions are held culpable for the re-emergence of protein energy malnutrition (PEM) and pulmonary tuberculosis in some territories. There is an urgent need to focus attention on the areas of perinatal and adolescent health, childhood disability, accidental and non-accidental injury, sexual abuse and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Immunization programmes also require continuing support and expansion. These tasks cannot be accomplished without meaningful long term investment of financial and human resources in the health and educational services of the region.
West
Indian Med J 1999 Sep
PMID:The changing face of paediatrics in the English-speaking Caribbean. 1063 56
Norwalk-like viruses (NLV) are important economically as a cause of both sporadic
gastroenteritis
in the community and large outbreaks in hospitals and other institutional settings. Despite the description of several antigenic types relatively little is known about the epidemiology of these individual types. NLVs were detected by electron microscopy in faecal specimens from 706 outbreaks of
gastroenteritis
that represented 68% of all outbreaks of non-bacterial
gastroenteritis
. These outbreaks took place in the counties of
West
and North Yorkshire and Humberside during six winter seasons between July 1992 and June 1998. NLV strains from 671 outbreaks were typed by antigen capture enzyme linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) based on antisera made to recombinant virus-like particles of three antigenically distinct NLVs; Norwalk (NV), Mexico (MXV) and Grimsby (GRV) viruses. GRV was the predominant strain for five of the six winter seasons and overall was associated with 61% of NLV outbreaks. MXV was responsible for a single epidemic peak in the winter of 1993/94 but was also observed at other times throughout the study period. NV was only associated with two outbreaks in 1994 that were epidemiologically linked. Strains from the remaining 32% of outbreaks were non-reactive in all three ELISA. Thus, a single NLV antigenic type seems to have predominated during the period 1992 to 1998 in the UK.
...
PMID:Distinct epidemiological patterns of Norwalk-like virus infection. 1093 95
A protracted outbreak of Norwalk-like virus (NLV)-associated
gastroenteritis
occurred in a large hotel in North-
West
England between January and May 1996. We investigated the pattern of environmental contamination with NLV in the hotel during and after the outbreak. In the ninth week, 144 environmental swabs taken from around the hotel were tested for NLV by nested RT-PCR. The sites were categorized according to the likelihood of direct contamination with vomit/faeces. The highest proportion of positive samples were detected in directly contaminated carpets, but amplicons were detected in sites above 1.5 m which are unlikely to have been contaminated directly. The trend in positivity of different sites paralleled the diminishing likelihood of direct contamination. A second environmental investigation of the same sites 5 months after the outbreak had finished were all negative by RT-PCR. This study demonstrates for the first time the extent of environmental contamination that may occur during a large NLV outbreak.
...
PMID:Widespread environmental contamination with Norwalk-like viruses (NLV) detected in a prolonged hotel outbreak of gastroenteritis. 1105 64
Human enteric caliciviruses have been assigned to two distinct genera: the Norwalk-like viruses (NLVs) and the Sapporo-like viruses (SLVs). During a 3-year surveillance of
gastroenteritis
in the South
West
of England during November 1997-2000, a total of 27 clinical samples containing SLVs were collected. PCR amplicons covering a region of the RNA polymerase gene were obtained from 18 of the SLV samples. Sequence analysis of the PCR products indicated that the SLV isolates could be assigned to one of the two major genetic groups represented by Sapporo and London/92 caliciviruses. One of these isolates belonging to the London/92 group (Bristol/98) was subjected to a complete genome sequence analysis. The full genomic sequence of the Bristol/98 isolate was determined from RNA extracted from a single stool sample and consists of 7490 nucleotides, excluding the poly(A) tail. The genome is organised into two open reading frames (ORFs), similar to that of Manchester SLV although the small ORF overlapping the region encoding the capsid protein observed in Manchester SLV is absent in Bristol/98 SLV. The polyprotein (ORF1) of Bristol/98 SLV consists of 2,280 amino acids and, as observed in all SLVs, the structural protein is encoded in frame and contiguous with the 3' terminus of the ORF1. Phylogenetic studies based on complete capsid sequences and genome arrangements within the SLVs indicate that the human enteric viruses within the "Sapporo-like" virus clade should be divided into two distinct genetic groups analogous to the assignment of the Norwalk-like viruses.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of human Sapporo-like caliciviruses in the South West of England: molecular characterisation of a genetically distinct isolate. 1199 91
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Next >>