Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Therapeutic strategies for the treatment of diarrhea of neonatal calves should be logical and should be targeted at correction of physiologic dysfunction. Appropriate, specific antimicrobial or antiprotozoal therapy should be instituted when colibacillosis,
salmonellosis
, or giardiasis is confirmed or suspected. All calves with diarrhea should be rehydrated if necessary, and proper nutritional support should be provided. Antisecretory agents such as flunixin meglumine and bismuth subsalicylate may be beneficial for treatment of calves with colibacillosis and
salmonellosis
. Adsorbants, such as attapulgite and bismuth subsalicylate, also may reduce loss of fluids. Perhaps loperamide or a similar drug will be proven effective in calves in the future. Potentially harmful drugs include several antimicrobial agents when they are administered orally, because they result in
malabsorption
; kaolin and pectin, which increase loss of ions during diarrhea; and motility modifiers that cause a decrease in all types of intestinal motor function. Finally, success should be measured by indicators of production such as survivability, days treated, weight gained, and net profit. Our goal should be to restore and maintain the health of the calf, not simply to alter the volume and consistency of the feces.
...
PMID:Treatment of diarrhea of neonatal calves. 176 Jul 58
The paper reviews existing reports on relations between pathologies leading to
malabsorption
and dental lesion in children. The following dental alterations are reported in the literature: delayed eruption of deciduous teeth, hypoplasia of enamel and dental caries. These lesions have been observed in gastrointestinal pathologies, for example, coeliac disease, chronic diarrhea and recurrent vomiting, intolerance of cow's milk protein, Crohn's disease and
salmonellosis
. The delayed eruption of deciduous teeth and hypoplasia of the enamel are certainly correlated to
malabsorption
and maldigestion, especially if these are protracted over time. Dental caries may be due to poor oral hygiene, poor diet and to the presence of modified calcification. Only a comparative study with a control group will enable the effective prevalence to be assessed.
...
PMID:[Dental changes in children with malabsorption]. 269 14
This paper reports seven cases of penile paraphimosis which occurred in both entire and castrated horses in association with general debility. Two cases were discharged after treatment while still suffering from partial paralysis; one was discharged at the owner's request with complete paralysis; three were destroyed and one died during treatment. Identified causes of debility were malnutrition, severe parasitism, glucose
malabsorption
and
salmonellosis
.
...
PMID:Paraphimosis in seven debilitated horses. 398 75
From 1992 to mid-1996, a national survey of poultry diseases in Lebanon was conducted. This surveillance included meat breeder, layer breeder, commercial layer and chicken broiler flocks. The history, signs, lesions and laboratory tests of poultry were used in the diagnosis of prevalent poultry diseases. Culture techniques were used to screen for bacterial diseases; serological techniques and, to a lesser extent, culture techniques were used to diagnose viral diseases; and both serological and culture techniques were used to diagnose Mycoplasma infections. The outbreaks of diseases detected in broiler breeder flocks and the number of such flocks experiencing these diseases were as follows: femoral head necrosis (6), egg-drop syndrome (3), reovirus-associated
malabsorption syndrome
(3), synovitis (Mycoplasma synoviae infection) (7), swollen head syndrome (SHS) (3), tenosynovitis (viral arthritis) (1), lymphoid leukosis (3), avian encephalomyelitis (1), fowl pox (1) and aortic rupture (1). The disease outbreaks detected in layer breeders were as follows: SHS (2), bumble foot (2), egg-drop syndrome (3) and avian infectious bronchitis (IB) (1). The disease outbreaks detected in commercial layer flocks were as follows: egg-drop syndrome (5), avian infectious laryngotracheitis (2), avian IB (nephrogenic strain) (1),
malabsorption
(1), avian tuberculosis (Mycobacterium avium) (1), Marek's disease (1), fowl pox (1), Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica Enteritidis infection (1), salpingitis (1) and Heterakis gallinae infestation (1). The disease outbreaks detected in broiler flocks were as follows: colibacillosis (40), infectious bursal disease (Gumboro disease) (15),
malabsorption syndrome
(8), avian infectious laryngotracheitis (8), paratyphoids (
salmonellosis
) (7), femoral head necrosis (8), SHS (6), avian mycoplasmosis (Mycoplasma gallisepticum infection) (6), synovitis (7), avian IB (6), botulism (1), avian encephalomyelitis (1) and gangrenous dermatitis (1). Diseases which occurred and which were reported for the first time in Lebanon were as follows: bumble foot, femoral head necrosis, avian IB (nephrogenic strain),
malabsorption syndrome
and SHS. This surveillance helped to establish baseline data concerning the predominant poultry diseases in Lebanon. Such information is a prerequisite for future regional and international collaboration to identify the source of the aetiological agents and to control their spread to neighbouring countries.
...
PMID:National surveillance of poultry diseases in Lebanon. 956 2
Salmonelloses
are bacterial infections of the faecal peril; they are endemic in some regions of the world. They can colonize almost any organ hematogenously, hence, severe forms may be observed. We report a case of typhoid fever in a 16-year old young adolescent with no medical history, sexually transmitted diseases or sexual intercourses, presenting with necrotic scrotal ulcerations evolving over the past 3 weeks in a context of fever, diarrhoea, weight loss and alteration of the general state. Paraclinical assessment showed 7g/dl hypochromic microcyticanemia with target cells in blood smear and normal hemoglobin electrophoresis, biologic inflammatory syndrome,
malabsorption syndrome
, cytolysis and hepatic cholestasis 20 times above the normal, hepatosplenomegaly, normal viral serologic testing (HBV, HCV, HIV, EBV and CMV) and positive testing for salmonella. The patient underwent 3 weeks of therapy with fluoroquinolones with favorable evolution. Dermatologic manifestations are frequent and polymorphic in typhoid fever; however cutaneous and, in particular, scrotal ulcerations are rarely reported. Differential diagnosis may be based on sexually transmitted diseases, inflammatory bowel diseases or hematologic disorders. More often diarrhoea is reduced or absent and patient's outcome depends on antibiotic. Diagnostic confirmation in patients with an atypical clinical picture, as in the case of our patient, is based on serology. Treatment is based on proper and prolonged antibiotic therapy and on prophylaxis measures to neighbouring.
...
PMID:[A rare and atypical cause of scrotal ulcerations]. 2987 68
Livestock meat and offal contribute significantly to human nutrition as sources of high-quality protein and micronutrients. Livestock products are increasingly in demand, particularly in low- and middle-income settings where economies are growing and meat is increasingly seen as an affordable and desirable food item. Demand is also driving intensification of livestock keeping and processing. An unintended consequence of intensification is increased exposure to zoonotic agents, and a contemporary emerging problem is infection with Campylobacter and Salmonella spp. from livestock (avian and mammalian), which can lead to disease,
malabsorption
and undernutrition through acute and chronic diarrhoea. This can occur at the farm, in households or through the food chain. Direct infection occurs when handling livestock and through bacteria shed into the environment, on food preparation surfaces or around the house and surroundings. This manuscript critically reviews Campylobacter and
Salmonella infections
in animals, examines the factors affecting colonization and faecal shedding of bacteria of these two genera as well as risk factors for human acquisition of the infection from infected animals or environment and analyses priority areas for preventive actions with a focus on resource-poor settings.
...
PMID:Infection, colonization and shedding of Campylobacter and Salmonella in animals and their contribution to human disease: A review. 3117 37