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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (
gastroenteritis
)
11,398
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Only one of 167 separate isolates of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EEC) was shown to produce enterotoxin, and none of the 167 isolates were invasive. Clinical features of 123 hospitalized children with EEC were compared with those of 917 infants with nonbacterial
gastroenteritis
and 145 infants infected with Shigella. The average duration of diarrhea (five or more stools per day) in hospitalized children with EEC, nonbacterial
gastroenteritis
, Shigella flexneri, and
Shigella sonnei
was 4.6, 2.4, 5.1, and 2.5 days, respectively. The average duration of fever in these four groups was 1.4, 1.2, 2.1, and 1.2 days, respectively. The difference in duration of diarrhea between children with EEC and those with nonbacterial
gastroenteritis
was significant (P less than 0.001), even when age and rural/urban origin were controlled by analysis of variance. Nevertheless, the EEC group tended to be younger and to have a higher proportion of infants of rural origin. Although it appears that EEC serotypes rarely identify invasive or enterotoxin-producing organisms, clinical features of infants with EEC-associated
gastroenteritis
suggest that these infants may represent a distinctive and clinically important group with
gastroenteritis
of greater severity than nonbacterial
gastroenteritis
.
...
PMID:Clinical and laboratory assessment of the pathogenicity of serotyped enteropathogenic Escherichia coli. 32 79
In August 1988, an estimated 3,175 women who attended a 5-day outdoor music festival in Michigan became ill with
gastroenteritis
caused by
Shigella sonnei
. Onset of illness peaked 2 days after the festival ended, and patients were spread throughout the United States by the time the outbreak was recognized. An uncooked tofu salad served on the last day was implicated as the outbreak vehicle (odds ratio = 3.4, p less than 0.0001). Over 2,000 volunteer food handlers prepared the communal meals served during the festival. This large foodborne outbreak had been heralded by a smaller outbreak of shigellosis among staff shortly before the festival began and by continued transmission of shigellosis from staff to attendees during the festival. S. sonnei isolated from women who became ill before, during, and after the festival had identical antimicrobial susceptibility patterns and plasmid profiles. Limited access to soap and running water for handwashing was one of the few sanitary deficits noted at this gathering. This investigation demonstrates the need for surveillance and prompt public health intervention when Shigella infections are recognized in persons attending mass outdoor gatherings, the singular importance of handwashing in reducing secondary transmission of shigellosis, and the potential for explosive outbreaks when communal meals are prepared by large numbers of food handlers.
...
PMID:An outbreak of shigellosis at an outdoor music festival. 200 48
Shigella bacteremia is rare, occurring mainly in children. We describe five adult patients with Shigella bacteremia and review data on 22 cases reported in the English-language medical literature. Eighteen (67%) of 27 patients had either an underlying condition or were aged older than 65 years. Most patients had clinical signs of acute febrile
gastroenteritis
. However, in six patients, the organism was not isolated from stool. Species isolated from blood included Shigella flexneri in 11 patients,
Shigella sonnei
in eight, and Shigella boydii and Shigella dysenteriae in one patient each. Isolation of the bacterium from blood only was associated with a high mortality rate, in contrast to its isolation both from blood and stool. It is suggested that blood cultures should be obtained from elderly or immunocompromised patients with acute febrile
gastroenteritis
to detect shigellemia as well as bacteremia caused by other enteric pathogens, such as Salmonella or Campylobacter.
...
PMID:Shigella bacteremia in adults. A report of five cases and review of the literature. 331 66
A total of 1,203 unselected routine faecal samples from 1,006 patients were cultured for Yersinia species by a cold enrichment technique. Seventy-five specimens (6.1%) from 63 patients were culture-positive for Yersinia spp. Fifty-two were Yersinia enterocolitica, 22 Yersinia frederiksenii and 1 Yersinia intermedia. The predominant Y. enterocolitica isolates belonged to biotype 1 - serotype 0:6, 30 or serotype 0:5, 27. Y. frederiksenii strains were non-typable. Forty isolates were recovered from 33 patients with
gastroenteritis
. During the study period 83 Salmonella spp. from 33 patients, 17
Shigella sonnei
from 13 patients and 13 Campylobacter jejuni from 12 patients were cultured. Yersinia spp. was isolated in association with salmonella on three occasions, twice with rotavirus and once each with
Shigella sonnei
, Campylobacter jejuni and Trichuris trichiura.
...
PMID:Faecal carriage rate of Yersinia species. 378 82
In a study of production of the common enterobacterial antigen (CA) by members of the Aeromonas group, ten strains of A. shigelloides, nine strains of A. hydrophila, and nine strains of A. salmonicida were used. Passive hemagglutination and hemolysis tests as well as the hemagglutination-inhibition procedure revealed that all strains of A. shigelloides, in contrast to the strains of the other two species, produce this antigenic determinant. The antigen of A. shigelloides was demonstrated even when the supernatant fluids of agar-grown cultures were used in a dilution of 1:1,000, whereas 10-times concentrated supernatant fluids obtained from the other two species were negative. Supernatant liquids of cultures of A. shigelloides failed to induce a significant CA immune response in rabbits; nonetheless, the animals were primed immunologically and responded with prompt production of CA antibodies in significant titers to a booster injection of a subeffective dose of CA obtained from Salmonella typhimurium. Strains of A. hydrophila and A. salmonicida neither induced CA antibody formation nor primed the animals. It is concluded that of the three species of the Aeromonas group only A. shigelloides, which may produce O antigen cross-reacting with
Shigella sonnei
and which has been isolated from patients with dysentery or
gastroenteritis
, produces CA. Production of this antigen, therefore, may help to characterize microorganisms belonging or related to the family Enterobacteriaceae.
...
PMID:Production by Aeromonas of common enterobacterial antigen and its possible taxonomic significance. 411 67
In May 1980 an extensive outbreak of
gastroenteritis
occurred in a private school in the city of Rio de Janeiro. Examination of faeces and paired sera showed that this outbreak was caused by both rotavirus and a virulent strain of
Shigella sonnei
. In the first 19 stool samples collected seven (37%) had rotavirus only, six (32%) had Sh. sonnei only, while four (21%) had both agents. Examination of the second and third stool collections revealed only the presence of Sh. sonnei. The 18 paired sera showed seroconversion for rotavirus in four cases (22%) and in seven cases (39%) for Sh. sonnei. The overall attack rate of the disease was approximately 75%, the nursery and kindergarten having higher attack rates. Students in all grades became sick at the same time, and the unimodal curve of the onset dates of symptoms indicates a common source outbreak. Evidence suggested a contaminated water supply.
...
PMID:An outbreak of gastroenteritis caused by both rotavirus and Shigella sonnei in a private school in Rio de Janeiro. 627 17
Invasive enteric pathogens of the Salmonella or Shigella genera initiate infections by invading the intestinal epithelium. Depending on the species, salmonellae either translocate across the mucosa of the small intestine and cause a systemic febrile disease or they evoke a localized inflammatory response in discreet areas of the infected mucosa. The latter type of infection is characterized by
gastroenteritis
, and a choleragen-like enterotoxin may contribute to the symptomology. Shigellae can also evoke diarrheal episodes; however, classic shigellosis is characterized by localized invasion of the colonic epithelium, with inflammation and ulceration of the mucosa. Derangement of the colonic mucosa is manifested in the bloody, mucoid stool characteristic of bacillary dysentery. Genetic analysis of invasive enteric pathogens has shown that extrachromosomal elements (plasmids) are required for full expression of virulence in Salmonella typhimurium, Yersinia enterocolitica,
Shigella sonnei
, and Shigella flexneri. In the latter species, at least three chromosomal regions are also necessary for virulence.
...
PMID:Invasive enteric pathogens. 635 90
After oral therapy with ampicillin for an unrelated disorder, two patients developed
gastroenteritis
with an ampicillin-resistant strain of
Shigella sonnei
. Both patients recovered after treatment with antimicrobial agents to which the Shigella was susceptible by in vitro testing.
...
PMID:Shigella sonnei gastroenteritis after oral ampicillin therapy for an unrelated disorder. 700 28
The National Notification System for Infectious Diseases, in Norwegian abbreviated to MSIS, registered 110 cases of
Shigella sonnei
-infection in persons with debut of symptoms during weeks 21 to 25, 1994, and where we did not receive information that the patients had been abroad. We evaluated the notification system during this outbreak of infectious disease by looking at delays in the notification process and estimating the proportion of patients who received an etiological diagnosis. It took a median time of seven days from onset of illness until a faecal specimen was obtained and a further ten days (maximum 15 days) until the result was registered in MSIS. The time lapse between receiving the specimen until MSIS had registered the result varied from six to 15 days among the laboratories which sent more than four notifications. In the summarical notification system we registered an increase of 712 cases (86%) of acute
gastroenteritis
compared with the same week the previous two years.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of the National Notification System for infectious diseases during an outbreak of Shigella epidemic in Norway 1994]. 777 Aug 27
During a 2-year prospective study of children hospitalized with
gastroenteritis
, shigellosis was detected in 66 cases (9 per cent of 726 admissions). The age group for peak shigella incidence was 1-4 years. The incidence increased from 8 per cent in 1991, to 11 per cent in 1992. Shigella flexneri was the most common isolate (65 per cent), followed by
Shigella sonnei
(17 per cent), Shigella boydi (11 per cent), and Shigella dysenteriae (7 per cent). At presentation, 44 per cent had watery diarrhoea, followed by dysentery during hospitalization in the majority of cases. Seizures occurred in 27 per cent of cases and preceded diarrhoea in 15 per cent. Most Shigella flexneri and dysenteriae strains were resistant to co-trimoxazole, ampicillin, tetracyclin, and chloramphenicol. Nalidixic acid, gentamicin and cefotaxime were the most effective antibacterial agents. Case fatality was 3 per cent associated with strains resistant to the antibiotics used initially in the treatment.
...
PMID:Shigellosis in Jordanian children: a clinico-epidemiologic prospective study and susceptibility to antibiotics. 785 41
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