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)

Sixty-eight bottle-fed babies under 9 months of age with mild acute gastroenteritis were observed to evaluate current feeding regimens following acute gastroenteritis in infancy. All babies were fed for 24 h with a glucose-electrolyte mixture (GEM) and then randomly assigned to either a gradual reintroduction to their normal milk, i.e., slow regrade; immediate return to full-strength formula; or a rapid regrade to a hypoallergenic whey hydrolysate formula. All groups were well matched for age, sex, ethnic origin, nutritional state, and degree of hydration. There was no significance difference in stool frequency or reducing substances, vomiting, and duration of hospital stay between the three groups. Many infants (6/24) refused to take the whey hydrolysate formula, presumably because of unpalatability. Weight gain was more rapid when full-strength milk was given. Clinical relapse developed in 12 (17%) of patients. An enteric pathogen was detected in eight of this group and cow's milk protein intolerance in three (one from each feeding group). No infant had clinically significant lactose intolerance, in marked contrast to previous experience at Queen Elizabeth Hospital. In this group of previously healthy, well-nourished babies with mild acute gastroenteritis, there was no advantage in regrading slowly to milk or a hypoallergenic formula. An immediate return to normal formula 24 h after GEM feeding was well tolerated and simpler for parents.
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PMID:Evaluation of infant feeding in acute gastroenteritis. 270 54

We conducted a prospective study of 50 consecutive cases of children with gastroenteritis and dehydration to assess the correlation of alterations in the blood urea nitrogen (BUN) concentration. Symptoms included 24 children with vomiting and 26 with vomiting and diarrhea. All children were estimably dehydrated-appearing on examination by traditionally used criteria and had metabolic acidosis (serum bicarbonate concentration of less than 20 mEq/L) and increased anion gap (more than 12 mEq/L). Of these 50 children, 44 (88%) had a BUN concentration within the limits of normal--17 were less than or equal to 10 mg/dL, 17 were between 11 and 14 mg/dL, and ten were between 14 and 18 mg/dL. We discuss the physiologic factors that influence the BUN concentration in conditions of dehydration. Although commonly used, measurement of the magnitude of the BUN concentration is not an accurate method for assessing the hydration status of children with dehydration due to gastroenteritis.
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PMID:Efficacy of measuring BUN in assessing children with dehydration due to gastroenteritis. 216 Jul 82

In June and July 1982, a large outbreak of gastroenteritis associated with a barbecue restaurant involved 120 persons in central Arkansas. The illness was characterized by diarrhea, abdominal pain, and vomiting; 23 patients (19%) were hospitalized. Epidemiologic investigation showed that persons who became ill were more likely to have eaten ham or pork sandwiches at the restaurant before their illness than those who remained well. Stool cultures from 19 customers and each of the eight restaurant employees were positive for Salmonella newport. Cultures of a ham slice obtained from the restaurant and a partially consumed pork sandwich obtained from one ill person both grew Salmonella of same serotype.
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PMID:Epidemic of restaurant-associated illness due to Salmonella newport. 274 51

During a 15-month period, 621 hospitalized children with acute gastroenteritis and 152 control children were investigated for etiologic agents of the disease. Putative enteropathogens were identified in 86% of the patients and 10% of the controls. Common viral agents associated with gastroenteritis among children included rotaviruses (45%) and enteric adenoviruses (4%). Bacterial pathogens infecting children were Salmonella serotypes (24%), enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (9%), Campylobacter jejuni (7%), enteropathogenic E. coli (7%), Shigella (4%), and enterotoxigenic Aeromonas sp. (1%). The highest incidence of infections was observed in the 3-25 month age group. Mixed infections were observed in 12% of the patients. Viral gastroenteritis was clinically mild and of short duration. Upper respiratory tract infections, vomiting, and watery stools were common features. In contrast, bacterial gastroenteritis was more severe; stools were frequently bloody and abdominal pain, cramps, shock, convulsions, and milk intolerance were predominant clinical features. Comparative analysis revealed differential features of bacterial and viral gastroenteritis which should help clinicians to make a tentative diagnosis and to start treatment early.
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PMID:Microbial etiology of acute gastroenteritis in hospitalized children in Kuwait. 279 54

A cohort of 363 rural children in Bilbeis, Egypt, were followed from birth from 1981 to 1983, with twice-weekly home visits made to detect diarrheal illness. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was used for detection of rotavirus in stools collected during episodes of diarrhea. Rotavirus-associated diarrhea was detected once in 74 children and twice in 12 children. Using a technique not previously described, the authors calculated the age-specific incidence rates for initial episodes and second episodes of rotavirus-associated diarrhea to estimate the effectiveness of naturally acquired immunity. Assuming that the risk of exposure was the same before and after the first episode, the observed and expected numbers of second episodes of rotaviral diarrhea were equal (age-adjusted rate ratio = 1.01; 95 percent confidence interval 0.55-1.86), given the age-specific person-years at risk. The assumption of equal risk for reexposure to rotavirus appears to be invalid, however, since the children with one and two rotavirus-positive episodes appeared to be at greater risk for diarrheal illness of all causes (rate ratios of 1.42 and 1.78, respectively). The clinical illness may have been less severe in second episodes; emesis was reported more often with first rotavirus episodes than with second rotavirus episodes, and the only fatal case was in an initial episode. These data are compatible with the existence of partial immunity, since it appears that the risk of reexposure may be greater in children who experienced rotaviral gastroenteritis earlier in life. In four of seven children, rotavirus isolates from first and second episodes were of identical serotypes, indicating that even serotype-specific immunity for rotaviral diarrhea was incomplete.
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PMID:An observational study of naturally acquired immunity to rotaviral diarrhea in a cohort of 363 Egyptian children. Calculation of risk for second episodes using age-specific person-years of observation. 281 5

Between November 1 and 22, 1985, an outbreak of acute, nonbacterial gastroenteritis occurred in a 600-bed hospital in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Illness in 635 of 2,379 (27%) staff was characterized by fatigue, nausea, diarrhea, and vomiting and had a median duration of 24-48 hours. The finding of virus-like particles measuring 25-30 nm in six stool specimens and low rates of seroresponse to Norwalk virus (3/39) and Snow Mountain agent (1/6) suggest that a Norwalk-like virus was responsible for the outbreak. The outbreak was of abrupt onset and high incidence, affecting 79 people in a single day. No common food or water exposure could be identified. The attack rate was greatest (69%) for staff who had worked in the Emergency Room. Of 100 patients and their companions who visited the Emergency Room on November 11-12 for unrelated problems, 33 (33%) developed gastroenteritis 24-48 hours after their visit, versus 0 of 18 who visited the Emergency Room on November 8 (p less than 0.001). An analysis of housekeepers who worked at least once during the period from November 9-13, which included those who became ill during the period of November 9-14, showed that the risk of becoming ill was four times greater for those who visited or walked through the Emergency Room than for those who did not (p = 0.028). These data are consistent with the possibility of the airborne spread of a virus.
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PMID:25- to 30-nm virus particle associated with a hospital outbreak of acute gastroenteritis with evidence for airborne transmission. 283 99

During a prospective 3-year study, clinical and epidemiological features of rotavirus gastroenteritis in black infants were investigated. Fever and temperatures exceeding 39 degrees C were more frequent in children shedding subgroup II rotaviruses, whereas vomiting was more pronounced in children with subgroup I infection. Diarrhea, dehydration, duration of illness, and the need for admission to a hospital ward were similar in both groups.
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PMID:Clinical features of acute infantile gastroenteritis associated with human rotavirus subgroups I and II. 285 76

150 infants aged under 6 months and admitted to hospital with acute gastroenteritis were treated with rice water (RW), rice-based electrolyte solution (RES), and the glucose electrolyte solution (GES) recommended by the World Health Organisation. Two-thirds of the patients were moderately dehydrated and only 8% had positive stool culture. Vomiting, present in 11%, did not interfere with successful oral rehydration. Before treatment serum electrolytes and other biochemical variables were similar in the three groups. After 48 h of treatment the blood urea nitrogen and serum creatinine were lower (p less than 0.05) in the RW and RES group than in the GES group. Serum potassium was also lower in the RW than in the RES group. RW and RES were superior to GES in reducing the frequency and volume of stool output and in producing weight gain.
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PMID:Comparison of rice water, rice electrolyte solution, and glucose electrolyte solution in the management of infantile diarrhoea. 287 Mar 23

Adenoviruses were found in 8.6% of 900 pediatric inpatients with diarrhea who were tested by electron microscopy of a fecal specimen and cell culture inoculation of a throat swab and an anal swab specimen. In 5.1% of these patients, including 13.5% of patients who were four through five months of age, adenovirus particles were visualized in the fecal specimen. Controlled study demonstrated that visualized adenoviruses, especially those that did not grow readily in conventional Hep-2 cell cultures, were significantly associated with diarrhea. About 80% of the visualized adenoviruses from patients with diarrhea or vomiting or both, including 94% of the viruses that grew in the 293 cell line but that did not grow readily in Hep-2 cultures, proved to be enteral adenoviruses--adenoviruses from either group F (type 40) or group G (type 41). Inpatients with gastroenteritis and confirmed enteral adenoviruses ranged in age from one through 16 months, with a median age of seven months. Enteral adenoviruses apparently are endemic in this locale, as one or more of these viruses have been found in every calendar month for nine successive years.
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PMID:Adenoviruses and pediatric gastroenteritis. 298 60

During a 29-month period, we studied enteric infection in 70 families from a pediatric practice in suburban Washington, D.C. Fecal adenoviruses were detected in stools of 18 patients by tissue culture and electron microscopic procedures. From 6 through 11 months of age, the incidence of fecal adenoviruses associated with enteritis was seven per 100, and of confirmed enteric adenoviruses (EAds), three per 100 individuals per year. All EAds belonged to subgenus G (type 41). All three patients with EAds had diarrhea; two had vomiting and one had fever, but none required hospitalization. Ten of the 15 patients with non-EAds were younger than 2 years, and 60% had diarrhea, 40% had vomiting, and 20% had fever. Combined gastrointestinal and respiratory symptoms occurred more often in those who shed non-EAds (three of 11) than in matched controls (two of 48, P = 0.04). An adenovirus was detected in approximately 6% of gastroenteritis episodes, and confirmed EAds were present in approximately 2% of episodes of gastroenteritis in children younger than 2 years of age. None of the contacts of patients with non-EAds shed such virus in their stools. None of nine family contacts of those with EAd appeared to shed adenovirus in stool. In contrast, rotavirus spread readily to exposed adults (25% of 65) and children (56% of 62) when a child in similar families had rotavirus infection.
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PMID:Fecal adenoviruses from a longitudinal study of families in metropolitan Washington, D.C.: laboratory, clinical, and epidemiologic observations. 299 30


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