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)

The efficacy of oxantel pamoate (1, 4, 5, 6-tetrahydro-2-[trans-3-hydroxystyryl]-1-methyl pyrimidine pamoate) was evaluated in 25 children with severe Trichuris infection. The presence of chronic dysentery and sigmoidoscopic demonstration of whipworms in the intestinal mucosa were the criteria for inclusion in the trial. Most of these patients had severe anemia, rectal prolapse, digital clubbing, hypoproteinemia, and growth retardation. There were a high incidence of concomitant parasitism with other intestinal helminths and with Entamoeba histolytica and Giardia lamblia. Sigmoidoscopic grading of Trichuris load and egg count in the feces were carried out prior to treatment and 2 days after each course of oxantel therapy. Oxantel was administered at a dose of 10 mg/kg body weight twice daily for a 3-day course. Satisfactory response, as judged by relief of dysentery and absence of whipworms from the mucosa at sigmoidoscopy, was achieved in 17 patients after the first course and in the remaining 8 patients after a second course of oxantel. The drug was well tolerated and no side effects were noted during or after treatment. It is concluded that oxantel is a safe and effective anthelmintic for severe clinical trichuriasis.
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PMID:Therapeutic evaluation of oxantel pamoate (1, 4, 5, 6-tetrahydro-1-methyl-2-[trans-3-hydroxystyryl] pyrimidine pamoate) in severe Trichuris trichiura infection. 96 73

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

Findings are reported from a study conducted to determine the clinical features and outcome of shigellosis in young infants. The authors reviewed the hospital records of 159 infants of no greater than age 3 months and those of 159 children aged 1-10 years with shigellosis who were admitted to the Diarrhea Treatment Center in Dacca, Bangladesh. 82.8% of infants had a history of nonbloody diarrhea, 59.9% moderate or severe dehydration, 12% bacteremia, 32.7% fever, 1.9% abdominal tenderness, and 0% rectal prolapse. 42.7% of children had a history of nonbloody diarrhea, 32.1% moderate or severe dehydration, 5.0% bacteremia, 58.6% fever, 12.6% abdominal tenderness, and 8.3% rectal prolapse. Infections caused by Shigella boydii and Shigella sonnei were more common in infants, while Shigella dysenteriae type 1 infections were less common in infants than in older children. There was an equivalent proportion of Shigella flexneri infections in the two groups. Infants were twice as likely to die as older children. Only 17 infants were being exclusively breastfed at the onset of their illness. Multiple logistic regression analysis identified the independent predictors of death among infants to be gram-negative bacteremia, ileus, decreased bowel sound, hyponatremia, hypoproteinemia, and a lower number of erythrocytes detected on the microscopic examination of stool specimens. Diarrhea management algorithms which rely exclusively upon clinical findings of dysentery to diagnose and treat shigellosis are likely to be unreliable in this high-risk age group.
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PMID:Shigellosis in neonates and young infants. 802 64