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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (
gastroenteritis
)
11,398
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A prospective randomized study of 100 well-nourished infants with acute
gastroenteritis
resulting in dehydration and acidosis was carried out at the Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami from 1981 to 1983. Patients were randomly assigned to receive either standard intravenous therapy or oral rehydration. Infants in the latter group first received solution A containing 75 mEq/L
sodium
, 30 mEq/L potassium, 75 mEq/L chloride [corrected], 30 mEq/L bicarbonate, and 2 gm/dL glucose [corrected]. After ad libitum feeding for six hours, solution B containing 50 mEq/L
sodium
, 30 mEq/L potassium, 50 mEq/L chlorine, 30 mEq/L bicarbonate, and 3 gm/dL [corrected] glucose was given. With three exceptions (6%), oral rehydration was comparable to the intravenous regimen in clinical estimates of improvement, although the oral group had more stools in the first day. The oral group had faster correction of acidosis and a sustained rise in serum potassium concentration, whereas in the intravenous group the potassium concentration showed first a drop with a later increase, but levels were at all times below those in the oral group. Although potassium was given from the beginning of oral rehydration, and at a higher concentration than recommended by the World Health Organization, no hyperkalemia occurred. We concluded that oral therapy is safe, less expensive for patients, and more convenient for the medical and nursing staffs.
...
PMID:Oral rehydration of infants in a large urban U.S. medical center. 400 30
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)
...
PMID:Fluid therapy trials in neonatal piglets infected with transmissible gastroenteritis virus. 407 36
Electrolyte homeostasis was maintained in 100 children with symptoms of acute
gastroenteritis
presenting without dehydration; their electrolyte disturbances and responses to oral electrolyte solution therapy were recorded. None of the children needed hospitalization, and 66% improved within 72 hours, the others requiring from 3-6 days. The electrolyte solution used was commercially available (Electral) and contained, including glucose to a 5% solution:
sodium
, 25 meq; potassium, 25 meq; calcium, 4 meq; magnesium, 4 meq; chloride, 30 meq; lactate, 4 meq; citrate, 15 meq; sulfate, 4 meq; and biphosphate, 5 meq per liter. In this study, when case electrolyte levels were compared with controls, a potassium deficiency of a mild to moderate degree was seen in half the children in this early phase; hence, the potassium level of the solution is most important. Hypokalemia was the major problem among these cases, as compared to hypo- or hypernatremia.
...
PMID:The role of oral electrolytes in the management of acute gastroenteritis in non-hospitalised children. 442 62
Bottle-fed infants do not gain weight as rapidly as breast-fed babies during the first week of life. This weight lag can be corrected by the addition of a small amount of alkali (
sodium
bicarbonate or trometamol) to the feeds. The alkali corrects the acidity of cow's milk which now assumes some of the properties of human breast milk. It has a bacteriostatic effect on specific Escherichia coli in vitro, and in infants it produces a stool with a preponderance of lactobacilli over E. coli organisms. When alkali is removed from the milk there is a decrease in the weight of an infant and the stools contain excessive numbers of E. coli bacteria.A pH-corrected milk appears to be more physiological than unaltered cow's milk and may provide some protection against
gastroenteritis
in early life. Its bacteriostatic effect on specific E. coli may be of practical significance in feed preparations where terminal sterilization and refrigeration are not available. The study was conducted during the week after birth, and no conclusions are derived for older infants. The long-term effects of trometamol are unknown. No recommendation can be given for the addition of
sodium
bicarbonate to milks containing a higher content of
sodium
.
...
PMID:Significance of milk pH in newborn infants. 456 15
Infants and young children with acute
gastroenteritis
have been studied with regard to stool electrolyte composition, external electrolyte balance, and aldosterone excretion. At the height of fluid depletion the stool
sodium
concentrations are low (median 8 m-equiv/1, range 3-58 m-equiv/1). The results indicate that in
gastroenteritis
the colon is responding homeostatically to a state of secondary hyperaldosteronism, thus assisting in
sodium
conservation.
...
PMID:The homeostatic function of the colon in acute gastroenteritis. 464 94
We studied 3-wk-old piglets 40 h after experimental infection with transmissible
gastroenteritis
(TGE) virus to identify the mechanisms of diarrhea in this disease and to better understand infectious diarrhea in humans. Using continuous segmental marker perfusion in four regions along the gut, we found significant increases in net intraluminal accumulation of water and electrolytes only in the proximal jejunum, the region infected by the virus. In this jejunal segment studied in vivo, unidirectional
sodium
flux, extracellular fluid (ECF) to lumen, significantly increased, lumen to ECF significantly decreased, compared with matchfed littermates. The standard perfusate rendered hypertonic by adding mannitol (450 mosmol/kg), in the same segment of normal pigs, caused only an increase in ECF to lumen flux of
sodium
. TGE did not alter gross villous structure or intraluminal bacteria, bile salts, lactate, pH, or osmolality. Epithelial cell migration was accelerated in the jejunum of infected pigs. Isolated in suspension, these cells from TGE pigs exhibited increased active and passive
sodium
efflux, cells from mannitol-perfused pigs exhibited only increased active
sodium
efflux. In this viral enteritis, altered
sodium
transport occurring in the jejunum, the region of the intestine infected appears to be associated with defective epithelial cell function. The precise nature of the abnormalities in
sodium
transport, their relationship to disturbances of transport of other solutes, and to virus epithelial cell interaction remain to be defined.
...
PMID:Transmissible gastroenteritis. Mechanisms responsible for diarrhea in an acute viral enteritis in piglets. 482 28
When treated with formaldehyde, Tween 80,
sodium
oleate and Nonidet P-40, avian infectious bronchitis virus, porcine transmissible
gastroenteritis
virus, neonatal calf diarrhea coronavirus, porcine hemagglutinating encephalomyelitis virus as well as the human coronavirus show similar inner structures by negative staining. The first one is an inner membranous bag. This structure could be evaginated following treatments used and does not show the characteristic projections of coronaviruses. Subsequently, the inner fold could be separated from the outer membrane at the point of junction between these two membranes. Each virus does not react in the same way to the action of the different products. The transmissible
gastroenteritis
virus appears more sensitive to treatments than other viruses. On the other hand, the hemagglutinating encephalomyelitis virus is the most resistant. The variable sensitivities of these viruses are not related to the type of host-cells. Also, a second internal structure, which is more dense than the viral particle, encircles partially the aperture of the internal tongue-shaped structure and seems to emerge from the viral particle through the aperture of the inner bag.
...
PMID:Inner structures of some coronaviruses. 626 23
Of a variety of disinfectants evaluated, only
sodium
hypochlorite and
sodium
hydroxide inactivated porcine parvovirus (PPV) after a 5-minute incubation period. After the same incubation time, pseudorabies and transmissible
gastroenteritis
viruses were inactivated by all of the disinfectants tested. When the incubation time was increased to 20 minutes, 2% glutaraldehyde and a double-strength concentration of a commercial formaldehyde preparation also inactivated PPV. Formaldehyde vapor and ultraviolet radiations inactivated PPV also, but relatively long exposure times were required.
...
PMID:Laboratory evaluation of selected disinfectants as virucidal agents against porcine parvovirus, pseudorabies virus, and transmissible gastroenteritis virus. 626 67
Nine patients with 11 beta-hydroxylase deficiency had 13 episodes of
gastroenteritis
requiring hospital admission and fluid administration. Eight episodes were accompanied by hyponatraemia and salt loss. The salt losing patients were treated with excessive glucocorticoid and those with normal serum
sodium
concentrations were treated with inadequate glucocorticoid. Excessive glucocorticoid suppressed deoxycorticosteroid secretion, resulting in salt loss.
...
PMID:Salt loss in congenital adrenal hyperplasia due to 11 beta-hydroxylase deficiency. 633 97
During a one-year period, 315 of 5,397 children admitted to the general pediatric wards of a hospital had bacteremia. The commonest causative organisms were Streptococcus pneumoniae, Salmonella enteritidis, Hemophilus influenzae, and Escherichia coli. Most episodes of bacteremia were associated with
gastroenteritis
, pneumonia, or meningitis. Seventy-eight episodes occurred in children with severe protein-energy malnutrition, and 46 episodes were hospital acquired. The overall case fatality rate was 23.2%, being highest in children with severe malnutrition and in those with other underlying conditions. The high proportion of bacteremias due to S pneumoniae and S enteritidis possibly reflects infections occurring in a lower socioeconomic group living in a temperate climate in crowded conditions. The most appropriate antimicrobial therapy for children who have suspected bacteremia in association with
gastroenteritis
or severe malnutrition is a combination of ampicillin
sodium
and gentamicin sulfate.
...
PMID:Bacteremia in hospitalized black South African children. A one-year study emphasizing nosocomial bacteremia and bacteremia in severely malnourished children. 637 39
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