Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020639 (hypoproteinemia)
1,134 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Operative intervention in patients with unrecognized and untreated amebomas or acute fulminating amebic colitis may result in severe complications. Nevertheless, certain clinical presentations of intestinal amebiasis require surgical procedures varying from drainage of an abscess to a subtotal colectomy. If, in patients with acute fulminating amebic colitis, the signs or symptoms of intraperitoneal or impending perforation develop, unremitting diarrhea associated with anemia and hypoproteinemia continues, or localized abscsses fail to improve with chemotherapy, operative intervention is indicated. Complications of amebomas that require operative intervention include failure to respond to chemotherapy, perforation, hemorrhage, ulceration, stricture or fistula formation and obstruction. Anti-amebic chemotherapy can reduce intestinal complications so elective operative procedures should be delayed to allow time for adequate treatment.
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PMID:Surgical intervention in intestinal amebiasis. 16 11

To describe the epidemiologic and clinical features associated with invasive amebiasis in Bangladesh, 85 hospitalized diarrheal patients with hematophagous trophozoites of Entamoeba histolytica in their stools were compared to a control group of 84 hospitalized diarrheal patients without amebiasis. Postmortem examinations were carried out in 22 deaths due to amebiasis. For the patients with amebiasis, there was a bimodal age distribution with peaks at 2-3 years and greater than 40 years, whereas the control patients had a unimodal distribution with the peak at 0-1 year. The sex distribution was equal in childhood but young adults were predominantly female and older adults predominantly male. The clinical features significantly associated with amebiasis were prolonged dysentery, prior measles rash, malnutrition, hyponatremia, hypokalemia, and hypoproteinemia (all P less than 0.05). The case fatality rate in amebiasis was 29%, which was significantly higher than 11% for the controls (P less than 0.05). Postmortem findings included extensive colitis with deep ulcers and complications, including colonic perforation in 2 cases, peritonitis in 4 cases, pneumonia in 9 cases, and septicemia in 5 cases. These results indicate that invasive amebiasis in this population differs from other diarrheal diseases, affecting mainly children greater than 2 years and adults and causing severe and fatal illness characterized by extensive colitis with diverse systemic consequences.
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PMID:Epidemiologic and clinical features of invasive amebiasis in Bangladesh: a case-control comparison with other diarrheal diseases and postmortem findings. 289 90