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Pivot Concepts:
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0017536 (
giardiasis
)
1,714
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The tetracyclines are effective in the treatment of Chlamydia, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and rickettsial infections and also can be used for gonococcal infections in patients unable to tolerate penicillin. These drugs may cause gastrointestinal irritation, diarrhea, phototoxic dermatitis, and vestibular damage, and fatal reactions due to hepatotoxicity have occurred in pregnant women. Chloramphenicol has a broad spectrum of bacteriostatic activity, but its association with suppression of the bone marrow and aplastic anemia has relegated it to a historical role. Erythromycin is the drug of choice for the treatment of infections caused by M. pneumoniae, Legionella species, group A beta-hemolytic streptococci, and Streptococcus pneumoniae. The frequency of serious adverse effects associated with the use of erythromycin is low; dose-related epigastric distress may occur. Clindamycin is bactericidal to most nonenterococcal gram-positive aerobic bacteria and many anaerobic microorganisms. Although historically it was a frequent cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhea and colitis, clindamycin is considered an excellent alternative to beta-lactam antibiotics for treatment of many staphylococcal infections, and it has therapeutic utility in anaerobic infections and in several protozoan infections in immunosuppressed patients. Metronidazole is efficacious for treating nonpulmonary anaerobic infections, various parasitic infections (trichomoniasis, amebiasis, and
giardiasis
), nonspecific vaginitis, and Clostridium difficile-mediated colitis. With use of metronidazole, mild side effects such as epigastric
discomfort
, diarrhea, reversible neutropenia, and allergic-type cutaneous reactions may occur.
...
PMID:Tetracyclines, chloramphenicol, erythromycin, clindamycin, and metronidazole. 174 96
Until the early 1940s, Giardia lamblia was considered by virtually all to be a simple intestinal commensal that benignly fed on small amounts of ingested food, never to cause symptoms or invade tissue. In the past 35 years this organism has established itself, through epidemics in which other pathogens were ruled out, as a fairly common cause of human enteropathology. The most common forms of symptomatic giardial illness present initially to primary care physicians and invariably are diagnosed as "gastroenteritis" with a symptom complex of abdominal upset, diarrhea, cramping, flatulence, and belching. Unlike most enteritides,
giardiasis
may become chronic and cause severe weight loss, malabsorption, or generalized
discomfort
. Also, unlike most, the organism is quite sensitive to antimicrobials and may be simply eradicated. Therefore, it is crucial that the index of suspicion for this illness be raised among family physicians, since it may be treated at the primary care level instead of remaining unsuspected until eventually being referred for a major gastrointestinal evaluation.
...
PMID:Giardiasis: a common and underrecognized enteric pathogen. 745 86
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is the most frequent functional gastrointestinal disorder. It is characterized by abdominal hypersensitivity, leading to
discomfort
and pain, as well as altered bowel habits. While it is common for IBS to develop following the resolution of infectious gastroenteritis [then termed postinfectious IBS (PI-IBS)], the mechanisms remain incompletely understood. Giardia duodenalis is a cosmopolitan water-borne enteropathogen that causes intestinal malabsorption, diarrhea, and postinfectious complications. Cause-and-effect studies using a human enteropathogen to help investigate the mechanisms of PI-IBS are sorely lacking. In an attempt to establish causality between
giardiasis
and postinfectious visceral hypersensitivity, this study describes a new model of PI-IBS in neonatal rats infected with G. duodenalis At 50 days postinfection with G. duodenalis (assemblage A or B), long after the parasite was cleared, rats developed visceral hypersensitivity to luminal balloon distension in the jejunum and rectum, activation of the nociceptive signaling pathway (increased c-fos expression), histological modifications (villus atrophy and crypt hyperplasia), and proliferation of mucosal intraepithelial lymphocytes and mast cells in the jejunum, but not in the rectum. G. duodenalis infection also disrupted the intestinal barrier, in vivo and in vitro, which in turn promoted the translocation of commensal bacteria. Giardia-induced bacterial paracellular translocation in vitro correlated with degradation of the tight junction proteins occludin and claudin-4. The extensive observations associated with gut hypersensitivity described here demonstrate that, indeed, in this new model of postgiardiasis IBS, alterations to the gut mucosa and c-fos are consistent with those associated with PI-IBS and, hence, offer avenues for new mechanistic research in the field.
...
PMID:Giardia duodenalis induces paracellular bacterial translocation and causes postinfectious visceral hypersensitivity. 2674 69