Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
31,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A cohort of 439 infants from poor districts of Greater Khartoum were examined at intervals of 2 weeks from birth to 1 year. At each visit symptoms suggesting infection were recorded--diarrhoea, fever, vomiting and cough or cold. On average 30 per cent of children had episodes of diarrhoea and 40 per cent had episodes of cold or cough in each 4-week period, the incidence being somewhat lower in the first 2 months of life. The average duration of an episode was 5 d. The effect of illness on weight gain was calculated by regressing weight gain against number of days ill. Diarrhoea produced a deficit in weight gain of 32 g per day ill, and cough/cold a deficit of 16.4g per day ill. From these data the overall impact of illness on weight gain was calculated. In the average child between 12 and 24 weeks diarrhoea produced a reduction in growth of 160g, and cough/cold a reduction of 95g. In most periods the frequency of episodes of diarrhoea was not significantly greater in supplemented than in exclusively breast-fed children. In the first 3 months of life episodes of diarrhoea had little effect on weight gain, but thereafter an episode of diarrhoea in any 2-week period reduced the gain in that period to less than 50 per cent of that found in uninfected children. 'Faltering' was defined as a weight increment below -2 s.d. of the reference mean. Diarrhoea did not always lead to faltering, but it seems to have been an initiating factor in some 50 per cent of those children who did falter.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effects of infection on growth in Sudanese children. 342 64

Between Oct. 1, 1983, and June 30, 1985, Cryptosporidium oocysts were identified in stool specimens from 74 patients who presented with gastrointestinal symptoms to their physicians. Questionnaires prepared to determine travel history, symptoms, duration of illness and epidemiologic characteristics of the infection were completed for 67 (90%) of the patients by their physicians; the information on the other 7 patients was obtained from the requisitions accompanying the specimens. Of the 67, 35 (52%) had recently been to Mexico. The infection was likely transmitted through contaminated water, food and, possibly, milk. The infections in patients who had not travelled were thought to be due to contact with infected pets or farm animals or with infected children attending daycare centres. Diarrhea, vomiting, fever and nausea usually lasted for 1 to 2 weeks, except in those with immune deficiency, in whom the symptoms persisted for up to 6 months. The condition was diagnosed by identification of oocysts in stool specimens that underwent formalin-ether sedimentation and modified cold Kinyoun staining.
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PMID:Cryptosporidium infections: a laboratory survey. 373 Sep 80

Acute hemolysis as a reaction to rifampicin is extremely rare; case reports number less than 15. We recently evaluated a 65-year-old Cambodian refugee who self-regulated the use of rifampicin and isoniazid for pulmonary tuberculosis. Fifteen minutes after a single discontinuous oral dose, he developed flank pain, chills, rigors, vomiting, diarrhea, fever, and brown turbid urine. Laboratory tests at presentation showed acute intravascular hemolysis. Nonoliguric renal failure ensured, and he was transferred to our institution 2 days later. The patient was group A, Rh (D) positive, P1 negative with a cold autoantibody and cold anti-P1 alloantibody. The direct antiglobulin test was negative at the time of transfer. To evaluate the hemolysis, studies were done to test for rifampicin- or isoniazid-dependent antibodies. Rifampicin-dependent antibodies were detected in the antiglobulin phase with broad spectrum anti-human globulin, monospecific anti-gamma chain, and anti-complement antisera. Agglutination titers did not change after dithiothreitol reduction of the patient's serum. We conclude that this patient developed rifampicin-dependent IgG antibodies with complement-fixing capability. The presence of rifampicin-dependent antibodies should be suspected in a patient with hemolysis and/or renal failure taking rifampicin.
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PMID:Acute hemolysis and renal failure with rifampicin-dependent antibodies after discontinuous administration. 398 5

Pain characteristics of the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome were abstracted from the observations of five patients with repeated incidents of painful ophthalmoplegia. The pain was experienced either as pressure behind the ophthalmoplegic eye or as boring pain in one orbital region, fluctuating in intensity, sometimes worsening to knife stab-like pain in the eye. The unilateral pain did not shift side during a solitary incident of painful ophthalmoplegia and was never completely absent. The pain was increased when the eyes were strained, when cold wind blew against the face, and when a change in the weather took place. It was accompanied by a feeling of swelling in the affected region, but not by nausea nor vomiting. Conventional headache drugs provided little relief. All cases experienced tenderness when pressure was applied to the ipsilateral supraorbital foramen. The pain was suggested to be related to an increased load on the impaired venous blood flow in the region of the superior orbital fissure.
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PMID:Pain characteristics of painful ophthalmoplegia (the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome). 401 17

Two outbreaks of gastrointestinal illness with identical symptoms occurred in parties attending banquets on consecutive evenings at a large hotel. The illness was typical of epidemic winter vomiting disease. Small round structured viruses resembling those seen in the Norwalk Ohio outbreak were identified by electron microscopy in stools of victims from one episode. One food handler was found to be excreting the virus, and there was evidence of a poor standard of hygiene in the kitchen. A food history analysis showed the illness to be significantly associated with eating cold cooked ham.
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PMID:Food borne infection by a Norwalk like virus (small round structured virus). 608 27

During the 1981 corn harvest season in Illinois and surrounding states, cold wet weather enhanced the growth of Fusarium graminearum, with resulting contamination by vomitoxin and, to a lesser extent, zearalenone. Of 342 feed samples analyzed, 274 contained vomitoxin at a concentration ranging from 0.1 to 41.6 ppm (mean, 3.1 ppm) and 40 samples contained zearalenone at a concentration ranging from 0.1 to 8 ppm (mean, 0.66 ppm). Animal health problems and reduced growth performance were observed mainly in swine fed vomitoxin-contaminated rations. The predominant clinical complaints, in decreasing frequency were: reproductive problems (50%), feed refusal (43%), reduced weight gain (25%), diarrhea (17%), death (14%), and emesis (11%).
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PMID:Survey of vomitoxin-contaminated feed grains in midwestern United States, and associated health problems in swine. 623 Mar 42

Yersinia pseudotuberculosis infection was diagnosed in 12 children on the basis of recovery of the organism from stool cultures and a 4-fold or greater titer change in agglutinating antibody. Eight of the 12 Yersinia isolates were recovered from stool cultures only after cold enrichment. Clinical findings in 50% or more of patients were fever, rash, diarrhea, desquamation, strawberry tongue, vomiting, red and cracked lips, abdominal pain, arthralgias, hepatomegaly and conjunctivitis. The patients' clinical manifestations and courses of illness resembled those of Izumi fever, an illness that occurs epidemically in Japan. Additionally the finding in two children fulfilled the strict criteria for Kawasaki syndrome, and signs in the other 10 children were consistent with that diagnosis.
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PMID:Yersinia pseudotuberculosis infection in children, resembling Izumi fever and Kawasaki syndrome. 634 44

An invasive strain of Escherichia coli (ONT:NM) was isolated from stool specimens from 7 of 10 ill passengers who developed diarrhea during a 5-day ocean cruise. The ill passengers had shared no common exposures off the ship before or during the cruise. Three of the persons whose stools were cultured were part of a tour group of 219 persons, and a food consumption and health history questionnaire was completed by 190 members (87%) of this tour group. Forty-seven (25%) had had diarrhea during the cruise; other symptoms among those with diarrhea included nausea (72%), abdominal cramps (68%), headache (68%), chills (60%), dizziness (53%), myalgias (43%), subjective fever (36%), and vomiting (26%). The median duration of symptoms was 3 days. Eating at cold buffets on ship and eating potato salad, a buffet food item, were significantly associated with illness. No evidence of secondary spread of illness in household contacts of the ill person was found.
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PMID:Outbreak of invasive Escherichia coli gastroenteritis on a cruise ship. 637 5

The main treatment of the acute migraine attack remains sleep, sedation, an anti-nauseant and analgesics, and in some patients 1 or 2 mg of ergotamine tartrate. Drugs containing large amounts of caffeine should not be used. Absorption of drugs may be impaired in a migraine attack. Metoclopramide is probably the anti-emetic of choice because it is an effective anti-nauseant and promotes normal gastrointestinal activity. Domperidone has a similar action but is said not to go through the blood-brain barrier, so is less likely to cause extrapyramidal reactions. All drugs, including analgesics such as aspirin and paracetamol, are best given in a soluble or effervescent form. Where vomiting occurs early in the attack, suppositories may be indicated. Ergotamine tartrate is necessary in about one third of attacks and is best given by suppository or by inhalation. Doses higher than 2 mg per attack or 6 mg in one week may cause toxic symptoms, the early signs of which are headache, nausea, vomiting and a feeling of not being very well. The non-drug treatments of an acute attack include pressing on the temporal artery, hot and cold compresses and relaxation.
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PMID:Treatment of the acute migraine attack--current status. 640 72

Further work on the treatment of postoperative pain with non-narcotic analgesics involving an investigation of the effect of twice the customary dose of lysine acetylsalicylate in a double-blind trial versus meperidine is reported. In addition to subjective and objective pain, the parameters included blood pressure, pulse rate, breathing rate, sweating, pupil diameter, nausea, vomiting, somnolence, hiccuping feeling of cold, erythema, dizziness, and nasograstric sound intolerance. Application of Wilcoxon's non-parametric tests and the chi-square test showed that the drug was as good as or better than meperidine with regard to pain, and performed very well overall with respect to the other parameters. The conclusion is drawn that its administration in high doses is justified in many patients subjected to general surgery.
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PMID:[Treatment of postoperative pain with non-narcotic drugs; evaluation of lysine acetylsalicylate in high doses. Double-blind controlled study]. 679 21


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