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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (
gastroenteritis
)
11,398
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
For a minimum of one month (mean, 54 days), 287 infants and children less than 8 years of age were fed an isolated soy-protein formula. Prior to entry into the study, a cow's milk formula was being fed to 71%, a soy formula to 9%, and cow's milk or other formulas to 20%. Intolerance to cow's milk was reported in 35% of the patients, symptoms indicative of cow's milk intolerance in 23%, diarrhea or
gastroenteritis
in 18%, a family history of allergy in 13%, and insufficient weight gain, intolerance to other formulas, or
constipation
in 11%. The patients showed normal increases in weight and length during the study. A significant decrease in the following symptoms were reported in the patients from before to after treatment: abdominal cramps, bloating or gas, colic, diarrhea, fussiness, rashes or eczema, spitting up, waking up crying at night, wheezing, and vomiting. It is concluded that, while receiving soy formula, infants and children continued to thrive normally and that the formula was well tolerated. After receiving soy formula, the frequency of undesirable feeding-related symptoms was reduced in the majority of infants and children.
...
PMID:Tolerance of a soy formula by infants and children. 161 46
Acute abdominal pain (AAP) is one of the most frequent causes of admission to an emergency department of a childrens' hospital. The diagnosis viewed with the most apprehension is acute appendicitis. We present the results of a prospective study on the evaluation of the clinical and paraclinical symptoms generally observed in an AAP, and discuss the benefit of a diagnostic score for acute appendicitis. Twenty-five different diagnoses were observed, the 5 most frequent being: "non specific" (34.2%),
constipation
(16%), otorhinolaryngological infection (11.6%),
gastroenteritis
(10.7%) and acute appendicitis (10.5%). The study of 12 symptoms showed an elevated sensitivity for each one (92-50%), but a low positive predictive value (72-12%). Rigid adhesion to a diagnostic score would have led to unnecessary medical examination.
...
PMID:[Prospective evaluation of admission for acute abdominal pain in children]. 279 8
The natural history of a moderate intoxication with botulin (probably type B) in six patients is presented and discussed. All patients complained of a persistent and almost complete failure of accommodation, and marked dryness of the mouth. Reduced lacrimation was also noticeable. A disturbance of efferent pupillary reaction was noted only in four patients, and resolved relatively early. On testing with highly diluted pilocarpine solution, a denervation hypersensitivity reaction of the sphincter pupillae was seen. An optic nerve lesion could not be demonstrated in any of the cases. Manifest involvement of the striated musculature, such as a bilateral lateral rectus palsy and ptosis, was found in only one patient. In four patients the presenting symptom was
gastroenteritis
. Other systemic symptoms were dysphagia, persistent
constipation
, problems with micturition, general malaise and postural symptoms. All of the patients made a full recovery at the latest after 10 weeks.
...
PMID:[Botulism--observations on its course with emphasis on ophthalmologic symptoms]. 397 56
Two neonates with milk intolerance and two older infants, one with acute
gastroenteritis
and the other with prolonged malnutrition, developed chronic diarrhea. Despite bowel rest, total parenteral nutrition, and alterations in the protein and carbohydrate content of the milk preparations used, every attempt to feed them resulted in diarrhea. All four patients were given aluminum hydroxide because of its bile salt-binding activity and its tendency to cause
constipation
. Coincident with its administration the diarrhea stopped and the enteral feedings were successfully reinstituted. The only complication seen was the development of
constipation
in two of the infants; this responded to lowering of the dose of the aluminum hydroxide.
...
PMID:Aluminum hydroxide in the symptomatic treatment of infants with chronic diarrhea. 641 36
The effects of environmental factors in the morbidity pattern of 893 children under 5 years of age living in the urban, urban slum, and rural areas of Varanasi are investigated. 273 children belonged to an urban area, 284 to urban slum area, and 336 to a rural area. All 3 areas have general outpatient services as well as underfive clinics. Data on childrearing practices, anthropometric measurements, and morbidity are recorded in the health cards of the children. Various illnesses observed included
gastroenteritis
, upper respiratory tract infection, stomatitis,
constipation
, fever, pica, anemia, Vitamin A deficiency, measles, chicken pox, whooping cough, and others. Total illnesses per child were higher in urban slum and rural children compared to the urban group (chi-square=132.7, p0.001). Children who lived in pucca and mixed houses in urban slum and rural areas had significantly higher morbidity compared to the urban group (pucca houses, chi-square=77.01, p0.01; mixed houses, chi-square=16.98, p0.001). The incidence of morbidity was higher in children who lived in inadequately ventilated kachcha houses, had poor source of water supply through open wells and practiced open field defecation compared to those who lived in pucca houses with adequate ventilation, utilized tap water, and were using service latrines. The findings suggest the need to educate mothers and to improve sanitation in order to maintain hygienic conditions for improving the health status of the children. A safe drinking water scheme should be immediately instituted in the crowded urban slums or rural areas. The few wells in villages should be improved and water chlorinated by bleaching powder or chlorine tablets.
...
PMID:Influence of environmental factors on underfive morbidity. 730 16
A statistical analysis was undertaken of 1158 children admitted to a surgical ward for the management of acute abdominal pain. Over two-thirds (40%) of the children had non-specific abdominal pain while 29.7% had appendicitis. The remainder were found to have had urinary tract infections (11.7%),
constipation
(7.5%),
gastroenteritis
(5.8%) or intussusception (5.3%). A stepwise discriminant analysis of the data collected during their evaluation was performed, using the BMDP statistical software package. Demographic and clinical features, as well as the results of ancillary investigations, were included in the data. The programme generated a classification function of a sub-set of 18 variables which best discriminated among the diagnostic groups. The coefficients of the classification functions were then combined with the rank order of selection of the variables to derive a scoring method for predicting the diagnosis. The results of urine culture were excluded since these would be unavailable during early clinical assessment. The scores for the diagnostic groups fell within the following ranges:-1-23 Non-specific abdominal pain; 20-48 appendicitis; 35-84
Gastroenteritis
; 75-88
Constipation
and 89-140 Intussusception. It is suggested that this scoring method be evaluated by a prospective study to test its validity.
...
PMID:A scoring system for use in the diagnosis of acute abdominal pain in childhood. 766 74
The enterocolitis following a pull-through in Hirschsprung's disease can be life-threatening and difficult to distinguish clinically from
gastroenteritis
and post-operative complications. We reviewed retrospectively the abdominal radiographs in our series to identify specific radiographic characteristics of this syndrome in this population. A total of 55 episodes of enterocolitis with an abdominal series at presentation were located in the files of 43 patients following pull-through surgery for Hirschsprung's disease. There were 15 abdominal series with other complications of Hirschsprung's disease and surgery (seven cases of small bowel obstruction, one of fistula, one of abscess, six of severe
constipation
) and 71 surveillance follow-up studies. Radiographs were evaluated for bowel dilatation, air-fluid levels, intestinal cut-off sign, speculation, and pneumatosis. The intestinal cut-off sign with two or more air-fluid levels had sensitivity of 68% and specificity of 83%, with a positive predictive value of 0.71 and overall accuracy of 77%. Our review of enterocolitis following pull-through in children with Hirschsprung's disease concludes that the constellation of an intestinal cut-off sign and at least two air-fluid levels on the abdominal series strongly suggests the diagnosis.
...
PMID:Enterocolitis following endorectal pull-through procedure in children with Hirschsprung's disease. 793 88
The challenges of childhood abdominal pain are to treat the majority of children with self-limited conditions of obscure but benign causes and to identify the child with a rare, life-threatening cause of pain. The diagnostic algorithm of abdominal pain during childhood is best compartmentalized into three groups: infants, preschoolers, and school-age children. In infants, bilious vomiting heralds a life-threatening or surgically indicated disorder. Most nonsurgical conditions are related to
gastroenteritis
,
constipation
, and reflux. The majority of children with abdominal pain experience spontaneous resolution of their symptoms without specific management. For every 15 school-age children with abdominal pain, 1, at most, will have a serious condition such as appendicitis. Parents and children appreciate a careful appraisal of the symptoms, and the physician should listen to their concerns and perform a thorough examination. Laboratory or radiologic studies are rarely indicated.
...
PMID:Abdominal pain in infants and children. 882 Jul 74
Coeliac disease is diagnosed by means of jejunal biopsy, an invasive procedure. Anti-gliadin antibodies (AGA) have therefore been used in the first screening of the disease. On the other hand, low titers of AGA are widely detected also in normal subjects. In order to investigate if low levels of AGA could be correlated with laboratory and clinical data, we performed a study on 167 subjects with various illnesses, such as recurrent abdominal pain, failure to thrive, short stature, diarrhoea or
constipation
, cow-milk protein intolerance and/or food allergy, recurrent vomiting or previous
gastroenteritis
, all non coeliac conditions which have been associated with AGA presence. Seventy coeliac children, all biopsied, were selected as a control group. Among the 167 cases we found 60 subjects positive for AGA (35.9%), a high proportion as compared with the general population. Only 33/167 patients, all IgG and IgA AGA positive, fulfil our laboratory and clinical criteria to perform a 'confirming' biopsy. For the 134 residual cases (14 IgA, 13 only IgG AGA positive, 107 AGA negative) a diagnosis of coeliac disease has been excluded by clinical criteria (scoring). As a whole, the patients with coeliac disease had significantly higher levels of AGA of both IgG and IgA classes (p < 0.01). On the other hand, no significant difference emerged for all the anamnestic and laboratory parameters considered between AGA+ and AGA- non-coeliac subjects. However, laboratory parameters of IgG-AGA and/or IgA-AGA positive patients were similar to those of coeliac children for ion, Xylose, total IgA count. As no biopsied case showed mucosal atrophy, it is suggested that the presence of even low AGA levels in non-coeliac children may represent a highly sensitive index of intestinal alteration causing an increased permeability to macromolecules, but it is very unlikely that one could detect coeliac children by means of Ig-AGA among such illnesses and normal subjects. Strong clinical diagnosis and laboratory parameters are required to justify intestinal biopsies. In fact, the production of AGA seems to be a merely immunological phenomenon linked to an increased and probably transient permeability to macromolecules of the intestinal mucosa.
...
PMID:Screening for coeliac disease: the meaning of low titers of anti-gliadin antibodies (AGA) in non-coeliac children. 906 80
The purpose of this study was to determine the frequency with which general pediatricians perform a rectal examination on children with a complaint of acute abdominal pain and to determine factors associated with performing a rectal examination. Children were eligible for the study if they were 2 to 12 years of age and presented to the clinic or emergency department of a municipal teaching hospital with a complaint of abdominal pain of less than or equal to three days' duration. Measured variables included demographic characteristics and presenting signs and symptoms. For each patient, a clinical reviewer (1) assigned a final diagnosis, (2) determined whether a rectal examination had been performed, and (3) assessed the clinical contribution of the rectal examination findings. For 1,140 children presenting for a nonscheduled visit with acute abdominal pain, a rectal examination was performed on 4.9% (56/1,140). Using multiple logistic regression, children were more likely to have a rectal examination performed if they had abdominal tenderness (odds ratio [OR] = 3.3 and 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.8 to 6.0), a history of
constipation
(OR = 6.0 and 95% CI, 2.3 to 15.3), or a history of rectal bleeding (OR = 9.1 and 95% CI, 2.9 to 29). Children were less likely to have had a rectal examination performed if they presented with associated symptoms of cough (OR = 0.32 and 95% CI, 0.14 to 0.74), headache (OR = 0.15 and 95% CI, 0.05 to 0.46), or sore throat (OR = 0.28 and 95% CI, 0.08 to 0.91). The final diagnoses of 12 children who had clinically contributory findings on rectal examination included:
constipation
(5),
gastroenteritis
(3), appendicitis (2), abdominal adhesions (1), and abdominal pain of unclear etiology (1). General pediatricians infrequently perform a rectal examination on children who present with a complaint of acute abdominal pain. Clinical factors affect the likelihood of whether a rectal examination is performed.
...
PMID:Use of the rectal examination on children with acute abdominal pain. 959 98
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