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Query: UMLS:C0017536 (
giardiasis
)
1,714
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Diarrhea
affects approximately 330,000 travelers from industrialized nations each year.
Diarrhea
is a reflection of inadequate hygiene or waste disposal in the countries visited, usually developing countries. The greatest incidence occurs in 20-29 years olds who take the most dietary risks. Some foods that pose the greatest risk in descending order include raw oysters, steak tartare, ice cubes, washed vegetables, cold milk, puddings, and sandwiches with mixed fillings. 40% of all travelers have a self limiting and rarely grave diarrheal illness caused by local enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC). Following an incubation period of 5-9 days, symptoms appear (cramps, fever, and 10 or more diarrheal episodes/day). 5% are infected with Giardia lamblia and 4% with Entamoeba histolytica.
Giardiasis
occurs worldwide and is characterized by grumbling
diarrhea
, cramps, and flatulence. E. histolytica causes a severe illness characterized by colitis with bloody stools, anorexia, malaise, sweats, weight loss, and epigastric pain. Only 10-100 Shigella bacteria are required by cause shigellosis. Symptoms include blood and mucus in the
diarrhea
and malaise. A traveler who ingests food with 100,000 Salmonella bacteria in it most likely will fall ill 48 hours after eating the contaminated food. Typhoid and paratyphoid fevers have an incubation period of about 12 days and may be fatal. Initial symptoms consists of headache, malaise, fever, and pain and 2 weeks later bloody
diarrhea
appears. Additional common diarrheal illnesses include cholera, post infectious tropical malabsorption, and those caused by Vibrio parahaemolyticus and Campylobacter species. Another disease common in areas of poor hygiene is poliomyelitis with fever, sore throat, and headache present in mild forms. If the virus invades the central nervous system, however, paralysis occurs.
...
PMID:Exotic diarrhoeal problems and poliomyelitis. 259 59
Eight pediatric patients with presenting symptoms of chronic
diarrhea
, abdominal cramps, weight loss, and/or recurrent emesis were diagnosed as having
giardiasis
by duodenal brush cytology. All patients had at least three stool specimens examined for ova and parasites, which failed to reveal Giardia lamblia cysts or trophozoites. In each patient, the small intestinal mucosal biopsies as well failed to reveal giardia. No complications were encountered during any of the procedures. Duodenal brush cytology for
giardiasis
appears to be a valuable diagnostic adjunct potentially superior to stool examination as well as endoscopic grasp small bowel biopsy.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of giardiasis in infants and children by endoscopic brush cytology. 277 64
Multiple biopsies from the lower duodenum were obtained during endoscopy of 171 patients with dyspepsia,
diarrhoea
and/or suspected malabsorption. Histological evidence of
lambliasis
was obtained in six (3.5%). Antibiotic treatment with metronidazole, 250 mg two or three times daily for seven to 11 days (which had to be repeated in two cases), improved symptoms in four. In most of the patients "functional upper-abdominal symptoms" had been diagnosed after extensive examinations. In case of unclear upper-abdominal symptoms, chronic or chronic-recurrent
diarrhoea
and/or malabsorption
lambliasis
should be considered and histological examination of the duodenal mucosa undertaken.
...
PMID:[Lambliasis: a cause of malabsorption and diarrhea?]. 272 87
In 1985, the US Peace Corps developed a computerized epidemiological surveillance system to monitor health trends in over 5500 Peace Corps Volunteers working in development projects in 62 countries worldwide. Data on 31 health conditions and events are collected monthly from each country; quarterly and annual incidence rates are then calculated, and the analysed data are distributed. In 1987, the most commonly reported health problems were
diarrhoea
(unclassified), 48 cases per 100 volunteers per year; amoebiasis, 24 per 100 volunteers per year; injuries, 20 per 100 volunteers per year; bacterial skin infections, 19 per 100 volunteers per year; and
giardiasis
17 per 100 volunteers per year. Tracking each of these common problems, as well as other selected health conditions, guides design of more specific studies and disease control efforts. Health problems with very low rates (less than 1.0/100 volunteers/year) include hepatitis, schistosomiasis, non-falciparum malaria, and filariasis. The epidemiological surveillance system provides the health data needed to plan, implement, and evaluate health programmes for Peace Corps Volunteers, and provides a model for surveillance in other groups of temporary and permanent residents of developing countries.
...
PMID:Epidemiological surveillance in Peace Corps Volunteers: a model for monitoring health in temporary residents of developing countries. 272 68
We describe two patients with Crohn's disease, secretory
diarrhea
, and concurrent
giardiasis
. As we review the pathophysiology of secretory
diarrhea
in Crohn's disease, we suggest that secretory
diarrhea
in Crohn's disease may be more common than has been believed.
...
PMID:Secretory diarrhea in Crohn's disease with concurrent giardiasis. 273 61
The importance of Cryptosporidium species as a cause of
diarrhea
in the childhood population has increased since the examination of fecal samples has been introduced in microbiological laboratories. A one-year prospective survey carried out on 699 children from rural and urban districts examined at the University Hospital in Salamanca (Spain) revealed 8 cases of cryptosporidiosis (1.1% of the children studied). Most of the cases (5 patients) were observed in the January-April period. Seven of the eight cases occurred in children younger than 3 years of age. All the children with cryptosporidiosis were immunocompetent.
Diarrhea
(75.0%) and vomiting (50.0%) were the most frequent clinical features of the cryptosporidiosis. In one quarter of the cases, other pathogens were associated. A comparison is made with the incidence of
giardiasis
, which is the commonest intestinal parasitosis in our community.
...
PMID:The incidence of cryptosporidiosis in children: a one-year prospective survey in a general hospital in Spain. 278 57
A total of 1,167 stool specimens collected from 0.6-6 years old patients attending King Abdel Aziz University Hospital (KAUH) in Riyadh, were examined for intestinal parasites. Of these 243 (20.8%) were positive. Giardia lamblia (13.5) and Enterobius vermicularis (4.2%), were the commonest parasites found. Other parasites present include Ascaris lumbricoides, Entamoeba histolytica and Hymenolepis nana. Abdominal pain (38.6%) and
diarrhoea
(27.6%) were the most common causes of referral presented among both males and females examined groups. Out of 211 patients positive for different parasites and showing different causes of referral, 45.5% were accompanied with abdominal pain and 22.3% having pruritus ani, while the percentage of patients having
diarrhoea
and positive for different parasites (9.5%) are less. It has been concluded that
diarrhoea
is not a major sign of parasitic infestation in 0.6-6 years old age group. Other causes of referral include, loss of appetite, underweight and failure to thrive which are mainly associated with
Giardia lamblia infection
.
...
PMID:Pattern of intestinal parasitic infection in preschool children in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. 280 81
Two patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation developed severe gastrointestinal symptoms, one during the peri-transplantation period and the other several months post-transplantation and following documented intestinal graft-versus-host disease. After detection of Giardia lamblia trophozoites in a stool specimen from one patient and a duodenal aspirate from the other, treatment with metronidazole was administered and all symptoms resolved.
Giardiasis
should be considered in transplant patients with
diarrhea
. Negative stool examinations do not rule out this possibility, and consideration should be given to examining a sample of small intestinal contents for Giardia trophozoites.
...
PMID:Severe giardiasis in two patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation. 281 89
An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was used to detect serum IgM and IgG antibodies against Giardia in fifty-two patients with
diarrhoea
from the United Kingdom and south India. Serum anti-Giardia IgM responses occurred in patients with
giardiasis
; in two of three patients studied longitudinally IgM levels had fallen to normal 2-3 weeks after treatment. At serum dilutions of 1/200 to 1/400 there was almost complete separation of ELISA readings between patients with Giardia and Giardia-free controls; the sensitivity and specificity of the ELISA were both 96%. Serum anti-Giardia IgG was detected in patients and controls but was unable to distinguish current from previous infection.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of giardiasis by specific IgM antibody enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. 257 Sep 40
Diarrheal diseases remain a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the developing countries and represent at least a nuisance in the industrialized world. Fluid and electrolyte replacement, particularly via oral rehydration, is the mainstay of therapy for the prevention and treatment of dehydration associated with these illnesses. Antibiotics are not indicated for the majority of enteric infections, and their promiscuous use can contribute to the escalating prevalence of bacterial resistance worldwide. Used judiciously, however, antimicrobial agents can ameliorate illness or curtail pathogen excretion and spread of disease, or both, in some diarrheal infections. Antimicrobial agents are indicated for shigellosis, cholera, traveler's
diarrhea
, amebiasis, and
giardiasis
. They are indicated in some specific circumstances to treat infections caused by Campylobacter, some categories of diarrheagenic E. coli, C. difficile, nontyphoidal Salmonella, and certain Vibrionaceae. Few adjunctive treatments provide proven benefit without risk of adverse reactions; most offer no advantage over placebo, and their general use is not encouraged.
...
PMID:Treatment of diarrhea. 307 25
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