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)

Twenty-four hemolysin producing (Hly+) strains of Escherichia coli isolated from dogs with gastroenteritis were investigated for their virulence markers and their phenotypic properties. The strains were distributed over eleven known E. coli O-serogroups and most of them were heterogeneous for their phenotypes. All strains were found to produce alpha-hemolysin which was detected by Southern hybridization and colony immunoblotting using a specific gene probe and a monoclonal antibody. Eight strains were carrying plasmids encoding alpha-hemolysin sequences (hly-plasmids) and 16 strains carried chromosomal hly-determinants. Twelve of the strains showed enterotoxic activities which were tested for in different assays. Among these, three O42:H37 and two O70:H-strains carrying hly-plasmids were found to harbour other plasmids encoding the heat-stable enterotoxin STA1. The other seven strains showing enterotoxicity in the ileal loop or the suckling mouse assay were negative for STA1, STA2, or LT. None of the 24 strains were positive for invasiveness or for production of Vero (Shiga-like) toxins. The production of alpha-hemolysin was closely associated with the production of cytotoxic necrotizing factor (CNF), which was detected in 17 of 24 strains. Of these, 16 elaborated CNF1 and one strain produced an unknown CNF type. Surprisingly, all strains carrying ST-plasmids and six of eight strains carrying hly-plasmids were negative for CNF. Thus, in canine E. coli strains CNF production seems to be closely associated with production of chromosomally encoded alpha-hemolysin whereas hly-plasmids are more often associated with ST-producing, CNF negative isolates.
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PMID:Characteristics of alpha-hemolytic strains of Escherichia coli isolated from dogs with gastroenteritis. 194 55

We examined 1,266 fecal specimens from healthy cattle during the investigations of two sporadic cases of hemolytic uremic syndrome associated with raw milk consumption and an outbreak of gastroenteritis and hemolytic uremic syndrome caused by Escherichia coli serotype O157:H7. We collected specimens from heifers, calves, and adult cows on 22 farms, in a stockyard, and in a packing house. We also collected 3 raw hamburger specimens from a restaurant and 23 raw milk samples from two farms. All specimens were examined for E. coli O157:H7 by using sorbitol-MacConkey agar, H immobilization, O157 agglutination, and tissue culture cytotoxicity. E. coli O157:H7 was isolated from 16 heifers or calves and 1 adult cow on 22 farms, 1 stockyard calf, 2 beef specimens, and 1 raw milk sample. Selected fecal specimens were also examined for the presence of other Shiga-like-toxin-producing E. coli (SLTEC) by testing polymyxin B extracts of colony sweeps and then testing individual colonies for toxin production. SLTEC other than O157 was isolated from 8 of 10 farms investigated and from the stockyard; 8% of adult cows and 19% of heifers and calves were positive for SLTEC. Several animals were positive for SLTEC by colony sweep only. This investigation demonstrates that dairy cattle are a reservoir of E. coli O157:H7 and other SLTEC.
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PMID:Isolation of Escherichia coli serotype O157:H7 and other Shiga-like-toxin-producing E. coli from dairy cattle. 205 66

An outbreak of gastroenteritis involving a total of 256 patients (49.7%) among 515 persons occurred at a primary and secondary school in Agatsuma Town, Gunma Prefecture between the 23rd and 28th of June 1988. The majority of the cases occurred within the first 4 days. The main symptoms were abdominal pain (81.6%), diarrhea (57.0%) and headache (40.2%). In most cases, the stools were watery and occasionally mucous. Although food-borne infection was strongly suggested epidemiological evidence did not incriminate any foods as the cause of the outbreak. In the bacteriological study on stool specimens from 25 patients, Escherichia coli O167:H9 was isolated from 20 of these specimens, virtually in pure culture. The isolates of the E. coli serovar were negative for recognized diarrheagenic virulence properties: production of heat-labile and heat-stable enterotoxins, enteroinvasion, and production of Shiga-like toxin. When the HEp-2 cell-adherence test was used, however, they exhibited localized adherence. All the strains were demonstrated to carry 56 Md plasmids that presumably mediate the production of the adherence factor.
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PMID:[An outbreak of gastroenteritis possibly caused by Escherichia coli O167:H9]. 206 88

Between September and November 1988, six children (aged 4-17 months) from a parish in Upper Bavaria fell ill with a haemolytic-uraemic syndrome. The illness had been preceded by a gastroenteritis with at times haemorrhagic stools. All patients needed peritoneal dialysis for acute renal failure. A 12-month-old girl was left with statomotoric developmental impairment due to cerebral involvement, but the other five children were cured. In the first four children to be admitted stool examinations for the common enteritis-causing microorganisms had been negative. But in the following two, specific gene probes demonstrated enterohaemorrhagic E. coli O157: H- with formation of verotoxin 2 (Shiga-like toxin II). This group of microorganisms must be taken into account in the diagnosis of haemorrhagic enterocolitis, because they can cause severe complications.
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PMID:[Hemolytic-uremic syndrome in infants due to verotoxin-producing Escherichia coli]. 218 Jun 70

This study was aimed at identifying the relative importance of the various agents responsible for gastroenteritis and to contribute to the etiopathogeny of this condition. Four hundred and two samples of stools of patients and 209 of control subjects, all under 3 years of age, were submitted to bacteriological, parasitologic and virologic examinations. An enteral etiology of gastroenteritis was found in 50% of the children. It consisted of enteropathogenic bacteria in 11%, rotaviruses in 29% and both associated in 19% of cases. There was a significant difference between patients and controls for bacterial (p less than 0.0001) and viral (p less than 0.00001) infestation. The most frequently isolated bacteria consisted overall of Escherichia coli. Eighty-seven isolated strains of E. Coli were tested for their enterotoxinogenic capacities. Four strains were bearing the attachment factor (EAF) and 14 were toxinogenic. Shiga-like toxin (or vero toxin) was detected in 4 strains. Campylobacter was isolated as frequently in patients as in controls and was often associated with other bacteria or rotaviruses. The presence of parasites and candidas was not significantly different in patients and in controls. Giardia intestinalis was the most frequently isolated parasite.
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PMID:[Etiological study of acute gastroenteritis in children in Tunisia]. 339 99

Production of cytotoxin and enterotoxin by Aeromonas strains obtained from stools of 50 children in Mexico and Texas and from blood of 9 children with sepsis was determined. Results were correlated with clinical features of infected children as well as with biochemical traits of Aeromonas strains. Cytotoxin was produced by 40 of 42 Aeromonas strains (95%) isolated from stools of children with diarrhea, by all 8 isolates from stools of well children, and by all 9 isolates from children with sepsis. There was no difference in the quantities (amount of cytotoxin per milligram of protein required to kill 50% of the cells) of cytotoxin produced and in clinical manifestations among the groups. None of the isolates produced a toxin that could be neutralized by antiserum raised against Shiga toxin produced by Shigella dysenteriae 1 60R. Heat-labile-like enterotoxin (LT) was produced by 26 of 42 stool isolates (62%), while only 1 of the 42 isolates (2%) produced enterotoxinlike activity in suckling mice; 65% of the cytotoxin-producing strains also produced an LT-like material. All strains from blood produced LT-like material, and 2 of 6 (33%) produced activity in suckling mice. All strains produced hemolysin; 37 of 57 (65%) were Voges-Proskauer positive; 27 of 57 (47%) were lysine decarboxylase positive by API 20E strips, none were positive for lysine decarboxylose production by lysin-iron agar slants at 24 h, but 17 of 54 (31%) were positive at 48 h. There was no correlation between biochemical reactions and enterotoxin or cytotoxin production. There appears to be no correlation between toxin production by Aeromonas spp. and gastroenteritis.
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PMID:Clinical and biochemical significance of toxin production by Aeromonas hydrophila. 358 26

The mechanism by which enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) cause disease remains to be defined. We studied EPEC and non-EPEC strains of E. coli from stool specimens obtained from infants and adults for production of Shiga-like cytotoxin. Although it was common for healthy infants and adults to have cytotoxin-producing E. coli as part of the fecal flora, Shiga-like cytotoxin was detected more commonly and in greater amounts among EPEC than among other fecal E. coli. These results suggest a role for Shiga-like cytotoxin in the pathogenesis of EPEC-related gastroenteritis.
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PMID:Shiga-like cytotoxin production by enteropathogenic Escherichia coli serogroups. 388 Jul 27

Hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS) is usually preceded by enteric infection by Shiga-like toxin-producing Escherichia coli (SLT-EC), but most children with SLT-EC diarrhea do not develop HUS. SLT toxicity depends on entry into the target cell via its host cell glycolipid receptor, globotriaosylceramide (Gb3). The relationship between differential susceptibility to HUS and erythrocyte Gb3 levels, as measured by high-pressure liquid chromatography, was studied. Erythrocytes of children with histories of HUS had lower nonhydroxylated fatty acyl (NFA) Gb3 levels than did erythrocytes of controls (1.6 vs. 2.0 nmol/mL of packed cells); these erythrocytes had lower ratios of NFA-Gb3 to lactosylceramide (0.16) than did erythrocytes of SLT-EC diarrheal patients without subsequent HUS (0.30; P < .003) or of healthy controls (0.28; P < .001). The lower erythrocyte Gb3 levels associated with HUS may reflect a genetic predisposition for differential outcomes of SLT-EC gastroenteritis.
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PMID:Susceptibility to hemolytic-uremic syndrome relates to erythrocyte glycosphingolipid patterns. 833 90

Serum interleukin 6 (IL-6) and tumour necrosis factor (TNF) were measured in children with dysentery during an epidemic caused by Shigella dysenteriae 1. IL-6 and TNF were also measured in fresh stool filtrates from children with acute gastroenteritis. The median serum IL-6 concentration was raised significantly in the children with complications (haemolytic uraemic syndrome, leukemoid reaction, thrombocytopenia, thrombocytosis, and severe colitis lasting more than one week) during the first week (n = 18, 9-7728 pg/ml; median 107) and in the second week (n = 13, 5-312 pg/ml; median 77), compared with convalescent sera (n = 10, < 3-85 pg/ml; median 39; p < 0.02 and < 0.05 respectively). The median IL-6 concentration during the first week was significantly higher in the group with complicated disease than in those with no complications (n = 8, < 3-37 pg/ml; median 5; p < 0.001). Although serum TNF concentrations were significantly raised in the complicated group during the first and second weeks of the illness and in the uncomplicated group compared with convalescence, there was no significant difference in the TNF concentrations between the complicated and uncomplicated groups. IL-6 was detectable in stool filtrates from eight of 13 children with S dysenteriae 1 infection and four of eight children with S flexneri infection. It was not detectable in Cryptosporidia, rotavirus, or adenovirus infections, those with pathogen-negative acute diarrhoea or controls. Seven of 13 children with S dysenteriae 1 and three of nine children with S flexneri infections had TNF detectable in stools. None of the children with Salmonella, Cryptosporidia, rotavirus of children with pathogen-negative diarrhoea and controls had detectable TNF in stool filtrates. It is postulated that the local and generalised vasculitis observed in shigellosis may be related to a direct effect of Shiga toxin on endothelial cells or caused by cytokine production stimulated by endotoxin, or both.
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PMID:Concentrations of interleukin 6 and tumour necrosis factor in serum and stools of children with Shigella dysenteriae 1 infection. 830 92

We examined the possibility of an association between the bacterial genotype of Escherichia coli O157:H7 and the likelihood of progression to neurological complications in childhood gastroenteritis-associated haemolytic uraemic syndrome (D+HUS). Bacterial stool isolates were available from 51 patients with HUS; 11 of these patients suffered a neurological complication. Bacteria were assessed for plasmid content, verotoxin (Shiga-like toxin) profile, verotoxin 2 subtype, and presence of the eaeA (effacement and attachment) marker. No association of bacterial genotype with central nervous system (CNS) manifestations was observed. Whilst the cause of CNS manifestations may be multifactorial, there is no evidence at present to implicate specific bacterial traits.
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PMID:Bacterial genotype and neurological complications of Escherichia coli O157:H7-associated haemolytic uraemic syndrome. 964 46


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