Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0017160 (gastroenteritis)
11,398 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Salmonella johannesburg (1, 40: b: e, n, x), a previously rare salmonella serotype, has established itself rapidly as an important and highly prevalent cause of gastroenteritis among children. The clinical features of the infection are usually mild but chronic. It has been suggested that S. johannesburg was introduced into Hong Kong through imported foods but no common vehicle could be traced as the source of infection. A thorough investigation of one paediatric ward in a general hospital revealed that non-infected patients admitted to the ward usually acquired S. johannesburg infection within 3-7 days, with or without symptoms. Thus hospital cross-infection could be a significant factor in contributing to its rapid spread in the community. Furthermore, the rapidity with which S. johannesburg spread was facilitated by (a) its tendency to produce a chronic infection, (b) its multiple resistance to antibiotics, and (c) the higher infectivity of S. johannesburg over other salmonellas endemic in this locality. These factors combined with the overcrowded conditions in many of the hospitals in Hong Kong facilitated the occurrence of hospital infection, which in its turn contributed to the spread of the infection in the local community.
...
PMID:Hospital Salmonella johannesburg infection and its possible role in the community spread of the infection in Hong Kong. 26 95

The clinical features and X-ray manifestations of 50 cases of legionnaires disease were analysed. 8 cases might be due to nosocomial infection through breathing in flying particles of the saliva or phlegm. According to the main clinical features, this disease could be divided into common pneumonia type; acute gastroenteritis type; encephalopathy type; shock type; acute renal insufficiency type. The differential diagnosis of legionnaires disease with mycoplasmal pneumonia, pneumococcal pneumonia and infiltrative pulmonary tuberculosis was also discussed. The first choice for treatment is erythromycin or erythromycin with rifampicin.
...
PMID:[A clinical study of 50 cases of Legionnaires disease]. 130 5

Three full-term neonates contracted a hospital infection with Salmonella panama derived from the mother of one. Two had bacteraemia and meningitis; one developed a brain abscess and the other recurrent meningitis at two months. The third neonate had gastroenteritis only. Six months later they had developed normally and two were still excreting salmonellae in the stools.
...
PMID:Neonatal Salmonella panama infection with meningitis. 142

During a 2-year period from January 1988 to December 1989, 125 patients (68 boys, 57 girls), aged 30 days to 9 years, were diagnosed as rotavirus gastroenteritis at this hospital. Diagnosis was made by identification of the rotavirus antigen in stool samples by latex agglutination assay. Ninety-nine (79.2%) of them were under 2 years of age. The seasonal peak in incidence was from January to March. The most common clinical characteristics were watery diarrhea (100%), followed by vomiting (68.8%), fever (68.0%), cough (42.4%), rhinorrhea (17.6%), convulsions (6.4%) and moderate to severe dehydration (1.6%). Fecal occult blood was positive in 4 patients and fecal leukocytes were positive in one patient. Stool cultures revealed concomitant infections with enteropathogenic Escherichia coli in 4 patients. Of the 106 patients who underwent serum electrolyte examinations, serum sodium concentrations ranged from 135-145 meq/L in 81.9% (86/106) and serum potassium concentrations ranged from 3.5-5.0 meq/L in 86.8% (92/106). Leukocyte counts greater than 15,000/mm3 were found in 10.8% (13/120) of the patients. All 125 patients recovered from the diarrheal illness on follow-up. Our results showed a different seasonal distribution of this disease from that of a previous observation between 1983-1984 in Taipei City and provides original clinical information on rotavirus gastroenteritis in children living in an area of Taipei County. Using the simple and rapid latex agglutination assay, we can make early diagnosis of rotavirus gastroenteritis. Thus, early treatment and early isolation of patients to prevent nosocomial infection among hospitalized patients is possible.
...
PMID:Rotavirus gastroenteritis in children: a clinical study of 125 patients in Hsin-Tien area. 206 88

In a prospective study we performed small intestinal mucosal biopsies in 40 children with acute rotavirus diarrhoea. Biopsies were taken from these children between the 2nd to 10th day of acute phase. The children were at an age of less than 18 month. 95% of the patients had normal histological findings of the small intestinal mucosa. Only 2 children (5%) had well defined injuries of intestinal mucosa. Correlations were not found between clinical findings, morphological results and therapy. In one child with gastroenteritis and meningitis rotaviruses were found in cerebrospinal fluid. In 31.25% of all children rotavirus infection was acquired by a nosocomial infection. The treatment of rotavirus infection is symptomatic. Usually intestinal mucosal biopsy as a routine diagnostic method isn't recommended and it should be used only in intractable courses.
...
PMID:[Histological findings of the small intestinal mucosa in rotavirus infections in infants and young children]. 238 94

Antibiotics have an important place in the management of gastrointestinal disease. Recent studies have demonstrated efficacy in acute bacterial gastroenteritis caused by salmonellae and campylobacteriaceae, shigellae and enterotoxigenic strains of E coli (ETEC). Tetracycline remains effective in cholera. Antibiotic resistance is widespread amongst the enteric pathogens and can quickly spread during epidemics of infective diarrhoeas. It is important that antibiotics are reserved for the treatment of serious infections lest their effectiveness in these conditions be lost. Campylobacter pylori appears to be an important cause of chronic active gastritis and is amenable to treatment with antibiotics and bismuth salts. The role of C. pylori in the pathogenesis of peptic ulcer disease is not yet established but there is mounting evidence that antibiotic treatment will have a place in the treatment of this common condition. The effect of antibiotics on the normal intestinal microflora can have serious consequences. It is a major cause of resistance in urinary tract pathogens, can result in outbreaks of hospital infection with resistant organisms and frequently results in C. difficile associated diarrhoea.
...
PMID:Review article: antibiotics and the gut. 251 46

A two month study to investigate the incidence of nosocomial infection was conducted in a paediatric gastroenteritis ward of a black academic hospital. Enteric pathogens were identified on admission in 61 (47.2%) of 129 patients; 56 bacterial and 25 viral. Six per cent of patients had a combination of bacterial and viral pathogens. Enteric pathogens most frequently identified on admission were Campylobacter jejuni in 22%. Rotavirus in 19.3%, EPEC in 10.8% and Shigella spp. in 6.9% patients. Twenty six (20%) patients had more than 1 enteric pathogen. The nosocomial infection rate was recorded at 17.1%. EPEC occurred most commonly in 5.3% patients, Salmonella typhimurium in 4.6% and Shigella spp. in 2.3%. Nosocomial infections increased the mean length of hospital stay from 7.2-20.2 days. Contributory factors to the spread of nosocomial infection were the unsatisfactory methods of bathing patients and giving naso-gastric feeds.
...
PMID:Infection and cross-infection in a paediatric gastro-enteritis unit. 256 Oct 89

Between November 1982 and April 1985, 2228 children under the age of 5 years with acute gastroenteritis were admitted to the paediatric isolation ward of Queen Mary Hospital, Department of Paediatrics, University of Hong Kong. In 56.2% the causative agent was identified as rotavirus, Salmonella, Campylobacter, Shigella, Escherichia coli or a combination of these pathogens. Our isolation procedures included cohort nursing of all diarrhoeal patients in two separate rooms (each accommodating 6 patients), barrier gowns and stringent handwashing with chlorhexidine. A total of 163 cases (13.4% of all positive cases) were identified as nosocomial infections. Rotavirus was the responsible agent for nosocomial infection in 128 cases (20% of all rotavirus infection). There were 35 patients with bacterial nosocomial infection, (7% of all the bacterial positive cases). Nosocomial rotavirus gastroenteritis was 3.4 times more frequent than nosocomial gastroenteritis due to bacterial pathogens. We conclude that modification of our present isolation procedures is necessary in order to reduce rotavirus nosocomial infection.
...
PMID:Nosocomial gastroenteritis in paediatric patients. 257 34

The prevalence of hospital-acquired infection was measured in 47 hospitals in 14 countries in four continents. The aim was to establish the evidence that hospital infection is a common and serious problem throughout the world. Using a standard protocol, 28,861 patients were observed by local teams of doctors and nurses in their own hospitals. The prevalence rates in individual hospitals varied from 3% to 21% (median 8.4%). The highest rates were seen on intensive care (13.3%), surgical (13.1%) and orthopaedic wards (11.2%). Children under the age of 1 year (infection prevalence 13.5%) and adults over 64 years (prevalence 12.0%) suffered more infection than others. In children the commonest infections were of the lower respiratory tract, of the skin and gastroenteritis. In the elderly, urinary-tract infections predominated. The prevalence of postoperative wound infection in individual hospitals ranged from 5.2% to 34.4%, with even greater variation when the wounds were analysed as clean, clean-contaminated and contaminated. The micro-organisms isolated from infected patients were similar to previous surveys: Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus each caused a sixth of the infections with positive microbiological results. When examined, 30% of patients were on antimicrobial drugs. Penicillin, ampicillin/amoxycillin and gentamicin were the commonest antibiotics used.
...
PMID:An international survey of the prevalence of hospital-acquired infection. 289 44

A nosocomial infection in adults due to rotavirus is described. The identity of the infecting rotavirus strains was demonstrated by genomic dsRNA electrophoresis. At an interval of 19 days another patient in the same hospital developed a pararotavirus infection. Pararotaviruses or rotavirus-like agents are antigenetically distinct from rotaviruses and thus cannot be detected at present by the available antibody mediated antigen detection systems. The current prevalence of pararotavirus infections in adults is unknown in Switzerland. The question whether there is a relationship between the small nosocomial rotavirus epidemic and the sporadic pararotavirus infection remains speculative. We also performed microbiological workups of 394 fecal samples from outpatients with diarrhoea. During the study period from January to April 1984 rotaviruses were the third most frequent aetiological agent, after salmonella and campylobacter, in acute adult gastroenteritis. Selecting the bacteriologically negative fecal samples with a watery and non-bloody aspect, rotaviruses were found in 30%.
...
PMID:[Rotavirus and pararotavirus infections in adults. Analysis of a nosocomial infection and some sporadic cases]. 300 31


1 2 3 4 Next >>