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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (gastroenteritis)
11,398 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A controlled, randomised trial comparing the results of oral rehydration therapy with those of intravenous fluid treatment in 470 children with severe gastroenteritis was undertaken. The oral rehydration therapy was divided into two phases--a rehydration phase that used high sodium isotonic fluid at 40 ml/kg per hour and a maintenance phase using low sodium isotonic fluid (sodium 40, potassium 30, bicarbonate 25, chloride 45, and dextrose 130 mmol/l). The results indicate that oral rehydration treatment, used according to this protocol, is successful in treating severe diarrhoea and dehydration, and has considerable advantages over intravenous fluid therapy in reducing complications associated with the treatment of hypernatraemia, in promoting rapid correction of hypokalaemia and acidosis, in decreasing the duration of diarrhoea, and in promoting a greater weight gain at hospital discharge.
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PMID:Oral versus intravenous rehydration therapy in severe gastroenteritis. 390 34

The main purpose of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of an oral fluid therapy alone or combined with parenteral administration of a 5% dextrose solution to attenuate the clinical signs and the pathophysiological consequences of transmissible gastroenteritis in neonatal piglets. Eighteen two day old conventional piglets were infected with transmissible gastroenteritis virus while six others were used as controls (Group 1). At the onset of diarrhea, infected piglets were divided into three groups of six (Groups 2, 3 and 4). Piglets in group 2 were not treated and were fed a milk replacer ad libitum. Piglets in group 3 were removed from the milk replacer and placed on an oral glucose-glycine-electrolyte solution ad libitum. Those in group 4 were placed on oral fluid therapy and received a 5% dextrose solution intraperitoneally at the rate of 25 mL/kg of body weight once a day. Blood samples were collected in heparin within minutes after the infected piglets became comatose and from the controls at four or five days of age. The following variables were measured: packed red cell volume, blood pH, total plasma protein and bicarbonate, blood urea nitrogen, and plasma glucose, creatinine, chloride, inorganic phosphorus, sodium, potassium, magnesium and calcium. Vomiting and diarrhea appeared 12 to 24 hours postinoculation in the infected piglets. There was a sudden and rapid progression into a comatose and moribund state one or two days later whether the infected piglets were treated or not.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Fluid therapy trials in neonatal piglets infected with transmissible gastroenteritis virus. 407 36

The ecology of non-O 1 Vibrio cholerae and Vibrio mimicus as causes of cholera-like diarrhea or seafood-associated gastroenteritis has been investigated in Toyama Prefecture since 1980. The relationship between biological or serological characteristics of the isolates and their enteropathogenicity is discussed. Overall isolation rates from river water, sea water, and fish were 24.0, 59.5, and 33.7%, respectively, the isolation frequency being, in general, extremely high in the summer season, although the organisms were detected all year around in the case of sea water. Most isolates from river water were unable to grow on plates of TCBS agar to which colistin was added at a concentration of 1 microgram/ml (CL-TCBS). These strains quickly fermented cellobiose. O-51 and O-70 were the two most frequently detected serogroups among them and they did not show enteropathogenicity in the rabbit ileal loop ( RIL ) test. On the other hand, almost all isolates from sea water and fish as well as those from human diarrhea cases were able to grow on CL-TCBS, but were unable to ferment cellobiose quickly. O-36, O-10, O-6, O-8, O-39, and O-26 were the dominant serogroups of these isolates, and some of them showed enteropathogenicity in the RIL test. Six out of 98 isolates from river water, 14 out of 116 from sea water, and 19 out of 112 from fish were classified as Vibrio mimicus . All of these strains were able to grow on CL-TCBS and quickly fermented mannose but not cellobiose. O-41 was the most common serogroup among them and some of these strains showed enteropathogenicity in the RIL test. Production of a cholera-like enterotoxin among the isolates in Toyama Prefecture, if any, seemed to be poor.
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PMID:Ecology of non-O 1 Vibrio cholerae in Toyama Prefecture. 673 82

In acute diarrhea of infancy we distinguish between infectious and noninfectious causes. In the latter we know some autosomal recessive disorders, e.g. the glucose-galactose-malabsorption, the lactase deficiency as well as the sucrase-isomaltase deficiency. In addition the most frequent acquired disorders like the cow's milk protein intolerance and celiac disease contribute also to the group of noninfectious causes of diarrhea. Here the most effective therapy consists of the elimination of the toxic agent from the diet. In infectious diarrhea we find most frequently rotavirus as the agent but also yersinia, campylobacter fetus, salmonella, shigella, E. coli, lamblia giardia and entameba hystolytica. Generally a conservative treatment with a dietetic regimen is preferred. Only in severe cases with yersinia and campylobacter infection the addition of antibiotic drugs is necessary. Giardia lamblia and amebiasis however have to be treated with metronidazol. As the absorption of glucose is coupled with that of sodium within the small intestine in acute gastroenteritis we find a combined disturbance between salt and carbohydrate absorption. A solution containing glucose and salt is recommended therefore for oral rehydration. The amount administered within the first 24 hours should be between 150-250 ml/kg per day. So called "antidiarrhoic drugs" are questionably effective.
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PMID:[Useful and superfluous measures in the treatment of infant diarrhea]. 717 37

1. We studied intestinal glucose transport in pigs during the acute and convalescent phases of an invasive viral enteritis, transmissible gastroenteritis. 2. When diarhoea was severe 40 h after experimental infection, net absorption of glucose, Na+ and water, measured by marker perfusion in the jejunum, was reduced; the enhancement of Na+ and water absorption in response to increasing perfusate glucose concentrations up to 120 mmol/l was diminished compared with the response observed in control and convalescent pigs. 3. Measured in vitro, 40 h after infection, unidirectional fluxes of 3-O-methyl-D-glucose across the jejunal epithelium were reduced and net absorption of the sugar was obliterated. Phlorizin (0.05 mmol/l), which completely inhibited net 3-O-methyl-D-glucose absorption in control tissue, had no significant effect on transmissible gastroenteritis jejunum. 4. Our data suggest that in this invasive viral enteritis, which closely resembles human rotavirus enteritis, glucose absorption is impaired as a result of defects in both active and passive glucose flux. 5. Differences between the mechanisms of viral diarrhoea, demonstrated by our study and those of the enterotoxigenic diarrhoeas, should be taken into consideration in formulating active therapeutic measures for children with acute viral diarrhoea.
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PMID:Intestinal glucose transport in acute viral enteritis in piglets. 724 53

The in vitro permeabilities of 14C labeled dextrans (10, 40, and 70 kD) were calculated from mass transport across Peyer's patches and non-patch tissues derived from rabbit jejunum, and a human colon cell line (Caco-2) grown as a monolayer on polycarbonate filters. Size distribution of dextrans did not change upon transport as judged from size exclusion chromatography. Permeabilities decreased in a size-dependent manner. Ranking of permeabilities for dextran 10 and 40 kD were: Caco-2 > non-patch tissue > Peyer's patches; while dextran 70 kD demonstrated no difference among the barriers. Tissue resistance, expressed as 1/(permeability.tissue thickness) was virtually the same in Peyer's patches and non-patch tissue, suggesting that tissue thickness and not interaction determines the difference in permeability. ATP depletion with ouabain, Na(+)-azide and 2-deoxy-D-glucose, and low temperature (4 degrees C) did not result in reduced permeabilities suggesting passive transport. The results suggest that the investigated intestinal barriers transport dextrans in a similar fashion independent of their source. However, comparison of the ratios dextran 10 kD/mannitol and PEG 900/mannitol between rabbit tissue and Caco-2 monolayers suggests Caco-2 monolayers may serve as a model to study absorption potential of potentially harmful compounds in coeliac disease, gastroenteritis, and colon carcinoma.
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PMID:Mechanism of dextran transport across rabbit intestinal tissue and a human colon cell-line (CACO-2). 754 76

Atopic diseases of infants and children are common, debilitating, chronic and sometimes even life-threatening. Several well-conducted studies in high risk babies have demonstrated a significant reduction in the prevalence and severity of atopic diseases with dietary and environmental manipulations. The currently available cow's milk (CM) substitutes for infants are soy protein (SP) formulas (SPFs), hydrolyzed formulas (HF), and home-made meat-based formulas. Soybeans have been cultivated in Eastern countries for many centuries and were first used to feed US babies with CM allergy (CMA) in 1929. Since then, SPFs containing purified SP, a mixture of vegetable oils, and purified carbohydrate have been developed. From a nutritional point of view, SPFs are adequate, support normal growth, protein status, bone mineralization, are well accepted, and economical. SPFs are used for different conditions including CMA, lactose and galactose intolerance and in the management of severe gastroenteritis, and some studies show that feeding SPFs for the first six months of life significantly reduces the prevalence of atopic diseases in high risk babies. Although gastrointestinal symptoms and atopic dermatitis (AD) may occur in some SPF-fed children, anaphylaxis following the ingestion of soybean is extremely rare in children. However, in the past few years the antigenicity/allergenicity of SPFs has been over-emphasized in the medical literature. In this paper on the natural history of soy antigenicity/allergenicity we discuss all the pros and cons of SPFs, their composition and nutritional value, the basic immune definitions, chemistry and characterization of SPs. We then discuss the antigenicity and allergenicity of SPFs in animals, recent data on the use of SPFs and the incidence of soy allergy in children, clinical reactions to SPFs, and the clinical relevance of skin testing and IgE antibodies to soy, challenge test procedure, clinical indication of SPFs, and their relevance in the prevention of atopy. We have meta-analyzed 17 different studies and conclude that history-based SPF allergy incidence totals 27%, in skin prick tests (SPT) RAST-oral food challenge (OFC)/double-blind food challenge (DBFC)-based epidemiological studies attains 3%, and in challenge test studies 4%. We suggest that double-blind placebo-controlled food challenge (DBPCFC) studies in larger cohorts of babies may establish a more reliable prevalence of SPF allergy in different disorders associated with CMA.
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PMID:Natural history of soy allergy and/or intolerance in children, and clinical use of soy-protein formulas. 961 75

The frequency of poor-water-quality advisories issued in Milwaukee and Racine, Wisconsin, in the absence of identifiable sources of contamination brought into question the reliability of the present indicator organism, Escherichia coli. Enteroccoci have been suggested as an alternative to E. coli for freshwater monitoring due to their direct correlation to swimmer-associated gastroenteritis. The purpose of this research was threefold: (i) to explore enterococci as an alternative to E. coli for monitoring freshwater Lake Michigan beaches, (ii) to evaluate the impact of the two indicators on regulatory decisions, and (iii) to compare membrane filtration m-enterococcus agar with indoxyl-beta-D-glucoside to a chemical substrate technique (Enterolert) for the recovery of enterococci. Recreational water samples from Milwaukee (n = 305) and Racine (n = 153) were analyzed for the enumeration of E. coli and enterococci using IDEXX Colilert-18 and Enterolert. Correlation between the indicators was low (R(2) = 0.60 and 0.69). Based on U.S. Environmental Protection Agency bacterial indicator threshold levels of risk for full body immersion, using enterococci would have resulted in 56 additional unsafe-recreational-water-quality advisories compared to the total from using E. coli and the substrate-based methods. A comparison of the two enterococcal methods (n = 124) yielded similar results (R(2) = 0.62). This was further confounded by the frequent inability to verify enterococci from those wells producing fluorescence by the defined substrate test using conventional microbiological methods. These results suggest that further research is necessary regarding the use of defined substrate technology interchangeably with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency-approved membrane filtration test for the detection of enterococci from fresh surface water.
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PMID:Enterococci as indicators of Lake Michigan recreational water quality: comparison of two methodologies and their impacts on public health regulatory events. 1251 81

The pathophysiological mechanism of Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica serovar Typhimurium (Salmonella typhimurium) induced gastroenteritis is controlled by interplay of various cell signaling events. Adherence of this organism through type-1 fimbriae is known to be a vital prerequisite for the establishment of infection. In the present investigation male albino Wistar rats were immunized with purified type-1 fimbriae and challenged intragastrically with S. typhimurium. Electrolyte transport and level of different second messengers were studied in four different groups of animals. Transepithelial fluxes of Na+ and Cl- revealed absorption in immunized-challenged group as observed in case of control and immunized group while secretion was observed in infected group. Ca2+ and 3-0-methyl-D-glucose fluxes did not show any change. Significant increase in the level of intracellular Ca2+, cAMP, membrane form of protein kinase C, prostaglandins, NADPH oxidase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, total oxygen free radicals, reactive nitrogen intermediates, citrulline and lipid peroxidation was found in the infected group. However, in the immunized-challenged group, the values of all the parameters were found to be same as that of control as well as immunized groups. Na+, K(+)-ATPase and calmodulin levels were found to be unaltered in all the groups of animals. Thus, the immunization with type-1 fimbriae has been found to be quite effective leading to the prevention of multiple physiologic derangements in isolated ileal cells suggesting the protective role of the fimbriae.
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PMID:The effect of type-1 fimbrial immunization on gut pathophysiological response in rats infected with Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica serovar Typhimurium. 1601 47

Rotaviruses are the most significant cause of gastroenteritis in young children and are responsible for over 600,000 infant deaths annually. The rotaviral haemagglutinin protein (VP8*) of some strains has been implicated in early recognition and binding events of host cell-surface sialoglycoconjugates, and is therefore an attractive target for potential therapeutic intervention. Since N-acetylneuraminic acid alpha(2,3)-linked to galactose is believed to be the minimum binding epitope of rotavirus to host cells, we report here our development of an efficient and flexible synthetic route to a range of lactose-based sialylmimetics of alpha(2,3)-linked thiosialosides. These compounds were biologically evaluated as inhibitors of rotaviral infection using an in vitro neutralisation assay. The results suggest that these lactose-based sialylmimetics are not inhibitors of the rhesus rotavirus strain; however, they do exhibit modest inhibition of the human (Wa) strain, presumably through inhibition of the rotaviral adhesion process.
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PMID:The synthesis and biological evaluation of lactose-based sialylmimetics as inhibitors of rotaviral infection. 1621 56


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