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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Large bowel disease detected clinically by
rectal prolapse
was studied in 64 immunodeficient mice (37 athymic NCr-nu/nu, 12 BALB/c AnNCr-nu/nu, 9 C57BL/6NCr-nu/nu, and 6 C.B17/Icr-scid/NCr) naturally infected with Helicobacter hepaticus.
Rectal prolapse
was found in approximately 5% of immunodeficient mice maintained in a research facility over a period of 3.5 years. All mice had various degrees of chronic proliferative typhlitis, colitis, and proctitis, usually without concomitant
hepatitis
. Some mice had severe proliferative proctitis with cystic hyperplasia. Histologic study of the large bowel of 48 athymic NCr-nu/nu mice without H. hepaticus infection and housed in another clean facility revealed only 12% of the mice with minimal-to-mild large bowel inflammation. Helicobacter hepaticus infection is associated with large bowel disease in immunodeficient mice but is not seen in H. hepaticus-infected immunocompetent mice. This new pathogenic bacterial infection should be considered as another potential cause or co-factor for
rectal prolapse
and large bowel disease in mice.
...
PMID:Inflammatory large bowel disease in immunodeficient mice naturally infected with Helicobacter hepaticus. 869 13
We report 81 of 107 cases of hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), admitted between July 1994 and February 1996, following an outbreak of Shigella dysenteriae type 1 dysentery in Kwazulu/Natal. All patients, excluding 1, were black with a mean age of 38 months (range 1-121); 50 (61.7%) were males. The mean duration of dysentery was 11.3 days (range 1-41) and HUS 15 days (range 1-91). Most patients had acute oliguric renal failure (90.1%), 42 (51.6%) required peritoneal dialysis. Complications included encephalopathy 30 (37.0%), convulsions 12 (14.8%) and hemiplegia 2 (2.3%), gastrointestinal perforation 8 (9.9%), protein losing enteropathy 26 (32.1%), toxic megacolon 4 (4.9%),
rectal prolapse
5 (6.2%),
hepatitis
11 (13.6%), myocarditis 5 (6.2%), congestive cardiac failure 3 (3.7%), cardiomyopathy 3 (3.7%), infective endocarditis 1 (1.2%), septicemia 15 (18.5%), disseminated intravascular coagulation 17 (21%). Leukemoid reactions were found in 74 (91.3%) patients, hyponatremia in 56 (69.1%), and hypoalbuminemia in 67 (82.7%). Stool culture for Shigella dysenteriae type I was positive in only 7 (8.6%) patients; Shiga toxin assays were not performed. Outcome was as follows: recovery 32 (39.5%), impaired renal function 8 (9.9%), chronic renal failure 26 (32.1%), end-stage renal disease 1 (1.2%), and death 14 (17.3%) patients.
...
PMID:Post-dysenteric hemolytic uremic syndrome in children during an epidemic of Shigella dysentery in Kwazulu/Natal. 932 80
Citrobacter rodentium from an undetermined source was detected in a breeding colony of T-cell receptor transgenic mice housed in a conventional mouse facility in which murine
hepatitis
virus had been endemic and Helicobacter spp. had been detected. Citrobacter rodentium, isolated from blood, spleen, and colon, correlated with a significant increase in mortality and morbidity in this breeding colony. Transgenic mice of all ages were affected by chronic debilitation, loss in reproductive efficiency,
rectal prolapse
, and acute death, resulting in the near loss of these noncommercially available strains. Several alterations in immunologic parameters were observed, including outgrowth of an unusual population of cells in the spleen and blood, reduction in ascites production, loss of the capacity of peritoneal exudate cells to serve as feeders for the cloning of long-term T-cell lines, and inhibition of antigen-specific cytotoxic T-cell activity. These altered immune functions also were apparent in commercially-derived nontransgenic mice cohoused with the infected colony and in overtly healthy transgenic and nontransgenic littermates. Citrobacter rodentium and murine
hepatitis
virus were eliminated ultimately on rederivation of the affected strains by embryo transfer. However, the rapid decrease in the health of the colony necessitated more immediate action. To reduce mortality and allow breeding to continue during rederivation of the transgenic lines, animals were treated with enrofloxacin and moved to a barrier facility. Antibiotic therapy significantly reduced morbidity and mortality, markedly increased litter size and frequency, and resulted in the normalization of many of the immunologic assays. The involvement of C. rodentium in altering viability of the colony and perturbing immunologic assays is suggested by correlation of the onset of the syndrome with the appearance of Citrobacter sp. and its resolution with the elimination of Citrobacter sp. from the colony. Whether infection with Citrobacter alone is causative or whether superinfection of murine
hepatitis
virus- and Helicobacter-infected mice is required remains to be determined.
...
PMID:Diminished reproduction, failure to thrive, and altered immunologic function in a colony of T-cell receptor transgenic mice: possible role of Citrobacter rodentium. 1009 5
Beginning in 2015, athymic nude sentinel mice from conventional, medium-, and high-security facilities presented to the Comparative Pathology Laboratory (CPL) with weight loss, diarrhea, and/or
rectal prolapse
. Regardless of whether clinical signs were present or absent, the gross observation of ceco-colonic thickening corresponded histologically to pleocellular typhlocolitis with mucosal hyperplasia and lamina proprial multinucleated cells. A subset of affected sentinels exhibited granulomatous serositis and hepatosplenic necrosis with multinucleated cells. Initial suspicion of mouse
hepatitis
virus infection was excluded by polymerase chain reaction, electron microscopy, and serology. Multinucleated giant cells were confirmed as macrophages by positive immunoreactivity to Mac-3 and Iba-1 and negative immunoreactivity to pancytokeratin. From conventional and medium-security facilities, Helicobacter species were identified in 40 of 143 (27.9%) mice, with H. hepaticus accounting for 72.5% of identified Helicobacter species. Other agents included opportunistic bacterial infection (41/145, 28.3%), murine norovirus (16/106, 15.1%), and pinworms (2/146, 1.4%). From high-security facilities, only Enterobacter cloacae was identified (2/13, 15.4%), and no evidence of Helicobacter sp., murine norovirus, or pinworms was present. No potentially infectious disease agent(s) was identified in 71 of 146 (48.6%) affected nude sentinels from conventional and medium-security facilities and 11 of 13 (84.6%) affected nude sentinels from high-security facilities. No statistically significant differences in histologic lesion scores were identified between Helicobacter-positive and Helicobacter-negative mice. Thus, proliferative typhlocolitis with multinucleated giant cells was considered a nonspecific histologic pattern associated with a variety of primary and opportunistic pathogens in athymic nude mice.
...
PMID:Proliferative Typhlocolitis With Multinucleated Giant Cells: A Nonspecific Enteropathy in Immunodeficient Sentinel Mice. 3022 63