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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (
gastroenteritis
)
11,398
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The seroepidemiological survey of the population in four southern regions of the Komi Republic for the presence of pseudotuberculosis and enteric
yersiniosis
was carried out. The survey revealed a high level of seroconversions to with respect to enteric
yersiniosis
(26.2 +/- 2.7% with the average antibody titer being 2.6 +/- 0.2 log2) and rare contacts of the rural population with Y. pseudotuberculosis (0.4%). Moreover, the intensity of contacts of the population with the infective agent was found to be closely related to the type of cattle breeding farms: the highest level of the immune stratum (32.2%) was registered among those persons whose residence was situated near large cattle breeding complexes. The prevalence of Y. enterocolitica, serovar 0:5, has been noted: to this serovar 87% of all positive reactions were obtained. The study of medical histories revealed that is some cases the disease manifested itself in the form of acute
gastroenteritis
.
...
PMID:[The epidemiology of Yersinia infections in the central taiga subzone of the eastern European plain]. 806 89
Yersinia
enterocolitica is a significant cause of
gastroenteritis
in Norway. The infection may provoke a number of serious postinfectious complications, most notably non-purulent arthritis. This article reviews aspects of epidemiology, risk factors, and prevention of the disease, with special emphasis on a case-control study conducted in south-eastern Norway. The results indicate that the following preventive measures are likely to have the greatest impact on the occurrence of the infection: (a) reducing Y enterocolitica contamination of pork and pork products by changes in slaughtering procedures and improvement of hygiene during production and processing, (b) educating consumers about the importance of good hygienic practices during handling and preparation of food and sufficient cooking of meat products, and (c) providing the consumers with drinking water of adequate hygienic quality.
...
PMID:[Yersinia enterocolitica infection. Epidemiology, risk factors and preventive measures]. 807 61
Yersinia
enterocolitica is a recognized cause of
gastroenteritis
in northern Europe. During October 1988-January 1990, a prospective case-control study was performed to address risk factors associated with sporadic Y. enterocolitica infections in southeastern Norway. Sixty-seven case-patients (mean age 23.4 years, range 8 months-88 years) and 132 age-, sex- and geographically-matched controls were enrolled in the study. Multivariate analysis of the data showed that persons with Y. enterocolitica infection reported having eaten significantly more pork items (3.79 v. 2.30 meals, P = 0.02) and sausage (2.84 v. 2.20 meals, P = 0.03) in the 2 weeks before illness onset than their matched controls; only one patient had eaten raw pork. Patients were also more likely than controls to report a preference for eating meat prepared raw or rare (47 v. 27%, P = 0.01), and to report drinking untreated water (39 v. 25%, P = 0.01) in the 2 weeks before illness onset. Each of these factors was independently associated with disease, suggesting a link between
yersiniosis
and consumption of undercooked pork and sausage products and untreated water. Efforts should be directed towards developing techniques to reduce Y. enterocolitica contamination of pork and educating consumers about (1) proper handling and preparation of pork items and (2) the hazards of drinking untreated water.
...
PMID:Sources of sporadic Yersinia enterocolitica infections in Norway: a prospective case-control study. 811 53
The random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) fingerprinting method was used to distinguish between various strains of
Yersinia
pseudotuberculosis, a causative agent of
gastroenteritis
in humans. The RAPD test uses arbitrarily chosen DNA oligomers of 10 nucleotides to prime DNA synthesis from genomic sites to which they are accidentally matched or almost matched. Most 10-nucleotide primers yielded strain-specific arrays. Ten Y. pseudotuberculosis type strains were distinguishable from each other by analyzing the RAPD arrays produced by using primers with a 50% G+C content. The RAPD patterns of Y. pseudotuberculosis strains were found to be constant regardless of the presence or absence of the large plasmid. RAPD tests were subsequently used to identify 30 clinical isolates of Y. pseudotuberculosis that were collected as the causative agent of an outbreak of Izumi fever, a disease showing clinical symptoms characteristic of atypical scarlet fever, in Japan. The RAPD arrays from all of the isolates yielded common patterns that were unique to each primer used. Since those 30 isolates belonged to serotype 5a and the restriction digest patterns of their large plasmids were all the same, the results of the RAPD tests confirmed the view that those isolates were from a single source and indicated that the RAPD test can be practically applied to survey transmission of the bacterium in humans.
...
PMID:PCR-based random amplified polymorphic DNA fingerprinting of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis and its practical applications. 812 6
Post-transfusion bacterial sepsis is infrequent. It is, however, associated with a high mortality due to septic shock. This reflects the release of endotoxin from gram negative bacteria. Lesser transfusion reactions are usually under-reported. These are frequently caused by gram positive bacteria. Gram positive species such as staphylococci and other skin surface organisms may be cultured from platelets stored at room temperature. Typically, gram negative "psychrophyllic" species which survive storage at 4 degrees C are cultured from stored refrigerated blood implicated in transfusion reactions. These include
Yersinia
enterocolitica, Pseudomonas fluorescens etc. Bacterial contamination of the blood supply can occur via an endogenous or an exogenous source. Endogenous donor bacteraemia due to Y.enterocolitica may be asymptomatic or may follow an episode of
gastroenteritis
. Exogenous infections occur through some defect in the usual collection practice. Transfusion-acquired syphilis is now extremely uncommon. In the third world, beside the need for effective screening for viral pathogens, infections with protozoa, in particular plasmodia, trypanosoma and leishmania remain a major obstacle to ensuring safe blood supplies. Prevention of transfusion reactions demands rigorous attention to details of collection, storage, reissuing and infusion of blood products, as well as prompt treatment, testing and reporting of suspected reactions.
...
PMID:Hazards of bacterial contamination of blood products. 844 1
Traditionally the enteric pathogen
Yersinia
enterocolitica has been differentiated into biogroups. Despite being considered as non-pathogenic, biogroup 1A isolates have constituted a sizeable fraction of strains from patients with
gastroenteritis
in many reports. To establish a potential clinical significance for biogroup 1A isolates of Y. enterocolitica, clinical disease in patients with
gastroenteritis
excreting such isolates was compared with symptoms among patients found infected with pathogenic biogroups. Clinical data and isolates of 66 patients from whom Y. enterocolitica had been isolated by direct plating were available for study. There was an association between patient age below 3 years and infection with 'pathogenic' Y. enterocolitica. The severity of
gastroenteritis
and other symptoms, however, did not depend on the biogroup, or the presence of the virulence plasmid in the yersinia strain isolated from the patients. Strains belonging to biogroup 1A of Y. enterocolitica showed two clusters of ribotypes, one of which encompassed most isolates recovered from humans, the other being associated with environmental isolates. This might indicate the existence of human-adapted and potentially pathogenic strains among biogroup 1A of Y. enterocolitica.
...
PMID:Association between clinical presentation, biogroups and virulence attributes of Yersinia enterocolitica strains in human diarrhoeal disease. 862 1
We report the most frequent species and serovars of enteropathogenic organisms in Rosario from 1985 to 1993. Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli was the most prevalent agent affecting 144/570 (25.2%) children; 0111 represented 41.8%, 055: 13.6%, 0119: 12.7%. Among enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) the most frequent were ETEC-ST 0128:H21 and 0153:H45. Shigella spp were isolated in 8.8%; S. flexneri: 7%, principally type 2 (59.5%); S. sonnei: 1.6%, and S. dysenteriae type 2: 0.2%. Campylobacter spp were found in 6.1% of patients; C. jejuni: 4.6%; C. coli: 1.4% and C. lari: 0.2%; except groups 0 13.50 and 0 4 (2 cases each), no predominant serogroups were found. Salmonella was isolated in 2.8% of cases, being the predominant serovar S. typhimurium until 1986, but a dramatically increase of cases due to S. enteritidis was observed since 1987. There was 1.9% of Aeromonas spp and 2 cases due to Vibrio cholerae non 0-1. No
Yersinia
was found. In patients with
gastroenteritis
due to Shigella, Campylobacter, Salmonella, or EPEC as the unique pathogen, leukocytes were observed in the faeces in 70%, 50%, 20%, and 10% of cases respectively.
...
PMID:Species and serovars of enteropathogenic agents associated with acute diarrheal disease in Rosario, Argentina. 876 32
Yersinia
pseudotuberculosis and
Yersinia
enterocolitica are closely related human pathogens causing
gastroenteritis
. Invasin and YadA are two of the most extensively studied virulence factors of the
Yersinia
genus. Invasin is the primary invasion factor encoded by the inv gene on the chromosome and is required for the penetration of the epithelial cells. YadA is encoded by the yadA gene on the 70-kb virulence plasmid and has multiple functions. Previous studies indicate that an inv yadA double mutant of Y. enterocolitica is avirulent while an inv yadA mutant of Y. pseudotuberculosis is hypervirulent. In this study, we investigated this unexpected difference. New constructs of the inv yadA mutants of Y. pseudotuberculosis were made and tested in mice. These new constructs were not hypervirulent; rather, they maintained the same virulence as the wild-type strain. Further examination of the inv mutant used for the previous study revealed that it carries an aberrant inv phenotype and has an altered outer membrane profile and an altered colony morphology. Therefore, the mutants used previously were not isogenic to the parental wild-type strain, which may in part account for the difference in the results obtained.
...
PMID:Reevaluation of the virulence phenotype of the inv yadA double mutants of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis. 897 33
Yersinia
enterocolitica, a gram-negative coccobacillus, comprises a heterogeneous group of bacterial strains recovered from animal and environmental reservoirs. The majority of human pathogenic strains are found among distinct serogroups (e.g. O:3, O:5,27, O:8, O:9) and contain both chromosome- and plasmid (60 to 75 kb)-mediated virulence factors that are absent in "avirulent" strains. While Y. enterocolitica is primarily a gastrointestinal tract pathogen, it may produce extraintestinal infections in hosts with underlying predisposing factors. Postinfection sequelae include arthritis and erythema nodosum, which are seen mainly in Europe among patients with serogroups O:3 and O:9 infection and HLA-B27 antigen. Y. enterocolitica is acquired through the oral route and is epidemiologically linked to porcine sources. Bacteremia is prominent in the setting of immunosuppression or in patients with iron overload or those being treated with desferrioxamine. metastatic foci following bacteremia are common and often involve the liver and spleen. Of particular concern is blood transfusion-related bacteremia. Evidence has accumulated substantiating the role of Y. enterocolitica as a food-borne pathogen that has caused six major outbreaks in the United States. The diagnosis of Y. enterocolitica
gastroenteritis
is best achieved through isolation of the bacterium on routine or selective bacteriologic media. When necessary, serogrouping, biogrouping, and assessment for plasmid-encoded virulence traits may aid in distinguishing virulent from "avirulent" strains. Epidemiologically, outside of identified food-borne outbreaks, the source (reservoir) of Y. enterocolitica in sporadic cases is speculative. Therefore, prevention and control measures are difficult to institute.
...
PMID:Yersinia enterocolitica: the charisma continues. 910 54
We have studied the human gamma delta T-cell response to
Yersinia
enterocolitica, a facultative intracellular bacterium which causes
gastroenteritis
and, particularly in human leucocyte antigen (HLA)-B27+ individuals, reactive arthritis (ReA). A marked proliferation of that cytotoxic gamma delta T cells is seen when
Yersinia
-infected lymphoblastoid cell lines or fixed intact
Yersinia
are added to cultures of mononuclear cells derived from the synovial fluid of ReA patients or from the peripheral blood of healthy donors. In contrast, heat-inactivated
Yersinia
fail to stimulate the gamma delta T-cell response. The gamma delta T-cell lines generated killed both autologous and allogeneic infected cell lines. Interestingly, a T-cell line generated from synovial fluid mononuclear cells (SFMC) killed infected autologous cell lines and a cell line matched for HLA-B27 less well than infected allogeneic target cells. gamma delta T-cell clones isolated from this line were found to express V gamma 9V delta 2 T-cell receptor (TCR) and also killed infected mismatched cells more efficiently than autologous targets. Moreover, from experiments using major histocompatability complex (MHC)-deficient cell lines, it was apparent that target cell recognition was MHC independent. Our results suggest that gamma delta T cells can be involved in immunity to
Yersinia
enterocolitica and should be taken into account when considering immunopathological mechanisms leading to reactive arthritis.
...
PMID:Human gamma delta T-cell recognition of Yersinia enterocolitica. 937 87
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