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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (
gastroenteritis
)
11,398
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The diuretic effect of high doses of furosemide alone and furosemide plus mannitol was analysed retrospectively in 30 children with acute renal failure. In 10 children (Group 1) renal failure developed mainly during glomerulonephritis, and in 20 children (Group 2) the cause was
gastroenteritis
. The diuretic effects of furosemide and furosemide plus mannitol were evaluated measuring the 24-hour urine volume at the time of anuria, oliguria or normal diuresis. The highest mean single intravenous doses of furosemide were 6.5 and 14 mg/kg in Groups 1 and 2, respectively; the highest average daily doses were 10.1 and 25.5 mg/kg, respectively. A broad relationship was observed between single i.v. dose and diuretic response following administration of furosemide (1.2 to 30.8 mg/kg). In both groups of patients a statistically significant negative linear correlation was found between the daily intravenous dose of furosemide and the 24-hour urine volume. Calculations based on the obtained regression equations showed that the expected 24-hour urine volumes corresponding to daily diuresis normal for age could be obtained after administration of daily 2.8 to 1.4 mg/kg furosemide in Group 1 and 9.3 to 2.3 in Group 2. It is therefore suggested that the total daily dose of furosemide should not exceed 100 mg in children with acute renal failure. Administration of furosemide plus mannitol did not result in higher daily diuresis as compared to 24-hour urine volume obtained when furosemide was given alone.
Furosemide
was well tolerated. Electrolyte disturbances, especially in Group 2, were the most frequent side effects due to high doses of furosemide.
...
PMID:High doses of furosemide in children with acute renal failure. A preliminary retrospective study. 193 35
In the relatively undifferentiated jejunal mucosa occurring in piglet viral enteritis, we measured the response of transepithelial Na+ and Cl- fluxes in vitro to raised intracellular adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) levels. At the acute 40-h stage of transmissible
gastroenteritis
(TGE), luminal membrane markers, sucrase and lactase, and a basolateral jejunal epithelial membrane marker Na+-K+-ATPase, were significantly decreased in activity, while a proliferative marker, thymidine kinase, was significantly enriched; these enzyme characteristics are typical of enterocytes isolated from crypts of other species. As expected, control piglet jejunum in short-circuited Ussing chambers after theophylline (10 mM) developed significant net secretory Na and Cl fluxes primarily due to significant antiabsorptive effects (delta JNa m----s = 3.48 +/- 0.52, delta JCl m----s = 2.59 +/- 0.28).
Furosemide
(10(-4) M), an inhibitor of electroneutral NaCl cotransport, produced antiabsorptive effects (delta JNa m----s = 2.53 +/- 0.31, delta JCl m----s = 2.58 +/- 0.28) in control jejunum that were not significantly different from those seen in response to theophylline. TGE jejunum, however, responded to theophylline not by an antiabsorptive effect but by significant electrogenic Cl- secretion (delta JCl s----m = 1.59 +/- 0.48); furosemide had no effect on ion fluxes in TGE tissue. Control and TGE jejunal mucosal homogenates did not differ in their basal or theophylline-stimulated levels of cAMP. We conclude that the relatively undifferentiated small intestine occurring in acute TGE does not generate either a cAMP-mediated antiabsorptive effect or a furosemide-mediated antiabsorptive effect.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Absence of a cAMP-mediated antiabsorptive effect in an undifferentiated jejunal epithelium. 303 40
This is a case of a 53-year-old male patient with a history of hypertension who developed sudden onset of right lower quadrant pain. On arrival, chest X-ray showed prominent aortic arch without cardiomegaly. CT of the abdomen/pelvis showed aortic dissection in descending aorta without rupture. CT of the chest displayed sparing of ascending and aortic arch. Ultrasound Doppler of the kidney displayed mild renal artery stenosis. Differential diagnosis was acute appendicitis, acute ureteric and severe
gastroenteritis
. The patient was started on oral blood pressure (BP) medicine to titrate off intravenous nicardipine and esmolol drip. After 10 days, he was switched to oral BP medicine. His leg pain was resolved with normal palpable pulse. One week later, his kidney function worsened. Thus,
Lasix
and minoxidil were stopped. The patient had no chest/abdominal pain and was tolerating the medicine well during his 2-week follow-up. Acute aortic dissection can be a fatal clinical emergency. Timing is critical during diagnosis and management of patients.
...
PMID:Atypical presentation of type B aortic dissection mimicking appendicitis managed medically. 2996 Sep 68