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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (
gastroenteritis
)
11,398
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixty-four adult family contacts of 61 young patients with
gastroenteritis
were included in a study for evidence of concurrent infection with the human reovirus-like agent (HRVLA) of infantile
diarrhea
. Evidence of infection was detected in 26 (41%) of the adult contacts. The HRVLA infection occurred significantly more often among adult contacts of pediatric patients infected with HRVLA (55%) than among contacts of young patients not infected with the agent (17%). Mild cases of
gastroenteritis
developed in only three of the contacts infected with HRVLA.
...
PMID:Human reovirus-like agent infection. Occurrence in adult contacts of pediatric patients with gastroenteritis. 19 2
Conventional virologic investigations generally failed to implicate viruses as a cause of acute
gastroenteritis
in young children. When negative-contrast stain electron microscopy was used for the examination of stool samples from affected patients, several candidate etiologic agents were discovered. Rotavirus (otherwise known as orbivirus, reo-like agent, and infantile
gastroenteritis
virus) emerged as an important causative agent. In a considerable number of patients, however, no causative agent was identified. Several other candidate etiologic viruses now "stand in the wings" awaiting additional evidence as to their role in the pathogenesis of acute
gastroenteritis
. In a study period of 12 months, 669 patients were found to be shedding virus in association with symptoms of
diarrhea
, vomiting, and temperature elevation. Approximately one third of these patients acquired their infection in hospital.
...
PMID:Viruses associated with acute gastroenteritis in young children. 19 61
Two isolates of porcine rotavirus (reovirus-like agent) were isolated and passaged in primary procine kidney cell cultures. Viral infectivity for cells was monitored by immunofluorescence because viral cytopathic effect was moderate. Successful passage of virus in cell culture required that viral suspensions obtained from infected cell cultures be treated with pancreatin prior to inoculation onto cell monolayers. Porcine rotavirus passage in cell culture also was accomplished, using trypsin treatments in lieu of pancreatin treatments. Porcine rotavirus passaged 10 times in cell culture infected gnotobiotic pigs and caused
diarrhea
. Gnotobiotic pigs that recovered from this infection were resistant to challenge exposure with porcine rotavirus but were susceptible to challenge exposure with transmissible
gastroenteritis
virus. As determined by immunofluorescent cross reactions, porcine rotavirus was found to be antigenically related to the human and bovine rotaviruses but not to reovirus type 3 or to transmissible
gastroenteritis
virus.
...
PMID:Cell culture propagation of porcine rotavirus (reovirus-like agent). 20 Nov 98
During an outbreak of
gastroenteritis
in a paediatric ward astroviruses were found in faeces from 17 to 27 symptomatic children and from four of 14 members of the staff with
diarrhoea
. No viruses were found in 10 asymptomatic children. Fourteen of the 21 astrovirus excretors were free of any recognised pathogens, but in the other seven, rotaviruses or pathogenic bacteria were also present. Serological evidence of astrovirus infection was obtained in five adults and two children.
...
PMID:Astrovirus associated gastroenteritis in a children's ward. 20 70
During early summer 1975 and spring 1976, outbreaks of acute
gastroenteritis
were reported from primary schools and other institutions in several districts of Japan. Outbreaks occurred in an explosive manner resembling mass food poisoning from a school lunch. The majority of patients were in the age group 6-14 years. Clinical features were generally mild, consisting of vomiting and/or
diarrhea
, often with low-grade fever. Reovirus-like agents in the feces were found in 27 (44%) of 62 patients. The virus found in feces of schoolchildren with acute
gastroenteritis
(SCGV) was related morphologically as well as serologically, not only to the agent found in infantile
gastroenteritis
(IGV), but also to neonatal calf
diarrhea
virus (NCDV). A slight difference in antigenicity between SCGV and IGV as suggested by cross complement fixation (CF) remains to be elucidated. About one-half of paired sera from 54 patients showed a significant rise in CF antibody against SCGV and/or NCDV. The pattern of neutralizing (NT) antibody against NCDV in patients' sera was similar to that of CF antibody. Most children studied had a titer of 1:4 or greater of CF and/or NT antibodies to SCGV and NCDV in acute sera. The relationship between acute
gastroenteritis
associated with reovirus-like agent in infants and that in schoolchildren is discussed.
...
PMID:Acute gastroenteritis among schoolchildren associated with reovirus-like agent. 20 88
A rotavirus (reovirus-like agent) was associated with diarrheal diseases occurring in 1- to 4-week-old suckling pigs in 8 herds and in weaned pigs in 2 herds. Transmissible
gastroenteritis
virus was also detected in 2 of these herds, as was enteropathogenic Escherichia coli in 5 herds. Morbidity was generally greater than 80% in pigs of the affected age group within these herds, and mortality from
diarrhea
ranged from 7 to 20%. The disease due to rotavirus in suckling pigs appeared similar to the syndrome commonly referred to as milk scours, white scours, or 3-week scours.
Diarrhea
and villous atrophy, resembling that seen in transmissible
gastroenteritis
, occurred in naturally infected pigs and in gnotobiotic pigs experimentally infected with rotavirus. Diagnosis was accomplished by immune electron microscopy of intestinal contents and by immunofluorescent staining of enterocytes. A massive infection of enterocytes with rotavirus was demonstrated by immunofluorescence, which helps explain the pathogenesis of this disease. The apparent rarity of clinical rotaviral infections in suckling pigs greater than 7 days old is probably due to the acquisition of passive immunity from immune sows.
...
PMID:Rotavirus as a cause of diarrhea in pigs. 20 65
Two children with rotavirus
gastroenteritis
are presented. The first case developed a fatal Reye's syndrome and the other one encephalitis with slow recovery. The rotavirus diagnosis was made in both cases by electron microscopy and a significant rise in antibody titres to Nebraska calf
diarrhea
virus was seen in one of the two patients.
...
PMID:Central nervous system involvement in patients with rotavirus gastroenteritis. 20 84
Yersinia infections in 16 adults and 9 children are reported. 15 cases were caused by Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, 8 of them were proved by serological findings. In 4 cases the infection by Yersinia pseudotuberculosis was likely, in 3 other cases possible only. Real infections caused by serotype IV are demonstrated too. Furthermore there were 10 cases caused by Yersinia enterocolitica, 3 of them were proved by bacterial, the other ones by serological findings. Both germs caused identical symptoms: fever (80%), abdominal pains (56%),
diarrhoea
(52%), erythema nodosum (44%), arthritis (40%), vomiting (16%), weight loss (16%), lymphoma (12%) and others. In children 50% of erythema nodosum was produced by intestinal yersiniosis. The beginning with
gastroenteritis
and fever mostly was followed by a second phase with returning fever, abdominal pains, erythema nodosum and/or arthritis. Antibiotic therapy had a definite effect only in the first phase of
gastroenteritis
and in the two possibly relapsing cases. In two of 5 patients with long standing arthritis the HL-AB 27 was present.
...
PMID:[Intestinal yersiniosis: 25 cases of infections with Yersinia pseudotuberculosis and Yersinia enterocolitica (author's transl)]. 20 60
During a 15-month period of surveillance,
diarrhea
developed in 257 of 913 babies (28%) admitted within 2 hours of birth to a special care nursery in Melbourne, Australia.
Diarrhea
was seasonal, affecting a maximum of 43% of babies admitted during one winter month (July) and a minimum of 13% of babies admitted during one summer month (December).
Diarrhea
was no more frequent nor more severe in babies of very low birth weight or of very early gestational age. Two noncultivable viruses were located by electron microscopy in feces from babies with or without
diarrhea
. Excretion of a reovirus-like particle (rotavirus, duovirus, human reovirus-like agent, infantile
gastroenteritis
virus) was temporally related to diarrheal symptoms. Asymptomatic infection with this virus also occurred. A 28-nm virus-like particle was excreted by some babies, but it could not be implicated on epidemiological grounds in the etiology of the
diarrhea
. Rotavirus infection may be an important cause of endemic
diarrhea
in nurseries for the newborn. Infection may be difficult to control or eradicate, since it is often asymptomatic and may be influenced by infection in the community at large.
...
PMID:Noncultivable viruses and neonatal diarrhea: fifteen-month survey in a newborn special care nursery. 20 58
During an epidemic of acute
gastroenteritis
in Helsinki, in March--May 1976, 18 out of 40 adult patients showed electron microscopic and/or serologic evidence for rotavirus infection. Rotavirus was most frequently seen in the fecal suspensions from 2 to 6 days after the onset of the symptoms but persisted in one patient for as long as 10 days. An increase in the complement-fixing (CF) serum antibody titers against the related Nebraska calf
diarrhea
virus (NCDV), or an initially high titer and subsequent significant decrease, was seen in all but one patient with rotavirus-positive feces, and in 6 additional patients. This suggests that using electron microscopy as the only diagnostic procedure a considerable number of rotavirus infections in adults remain undetected. Immune response against autologous or homologous rotavirus was also documented by immunoelectron microscopy. Complement-fixing antibody titers against NCDV decreased significantly from the convalescence values over a half-year observation period, but still remained clearly above the titers of a
gastroenteritis
-negative control population.
...
PMID:Rotavirus infections in adults in association with acute gastroenteritis. 21 Feb 51
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