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)

Although serologic studies have identified hantaviral infection in the United States, acute disease has not been recognized. This study describes 3 cases of domestically acquired hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) in the United States. Infection was due to a local strain of Seoul virus (Baltimore rat virus). A review of the clinical features indicated a mild illness characterized by nausea, vomiting, renal and liver failure similar to HFRS described elsewhere for rat-borne viruses. Follow-up of 2 patients identified persistent hypertension and renal disease providing further evidence of an association between past hantaviral infection and hypertensive renal disease.
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PMID:Domestic cases of hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome in the United States. 799 Oct 40

The patient was a 26-year-old man who complained of headache and vomiting. On examination, there was nothing abnormal, but the edge of the right optic papilla was not clear. His temperature was 38.5 degrees C, pulse 96/min, blood pressure 120/80 mmHg. A space-occupying lesion in his fronto-dextra cupular part was found by CT scanning. He had a 12-year history of chronic purulent otitis. The diagnosis was a brain abscess in the fronto-dextra cupular part. The brain abscess was extracted and Pasteurella multocida was isolated from the dark brown pus draining from the abscess. The patient recovered through proper antibiotic therapy based on a sensitivity test. Reports of infections caused by this organism in foreign countries very widely from local infections due to bites and scratches by cats, dogs etc. to general infections such as infections of the respiratory tract, sepsis and meningitis. However, Pasteurella multocida brain abscesses are rare. Pasteurella multocida is a Gram-negative short rod which is best known as part of the mouth flora and as a pathogen causing septicemia in many domestic animals, such as cats, dogs etc.. Infection in man results mainly from animal bites or scratches. It has been reported that Pasteurella multodida can cause human septicemia, meningitis, respiratory tract infection, conjunctivitis and other infections. We isolated a strain of Pasteurella multocida from the pus of a brain abscess following chronic purulent otitis on August 6, 1990.
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PMID:Brain abscess due to Pasteurella multocida. 817 82

During a twelve-month period (1 July 91-30 June 92), feces from 912 persons from the Townsville region in the dry tropics of Queensland, Australia were evaluated by culture and 45 (4.9%) immunocompetent patients were found to be carrying Aeromonas in their stools. All patients were index cases and no secondary cases from household or close contact of index cases were identified. Eight patients (9.3%) were from Palm Island, an Aboriginal community, and 37 (4.5%) were from the essentially Caucasian population of Townsville. This is a significant difference in incidence of cases between the two population groups. Infection occurred mainly in two age groups: the under five-year-old (27 cases) and the over 25-year-old age group (17 cases). Except for one patient, all cases of Palm Island Aborigines were children less than five years of age, and 13 of these infants (48%) were less than 1 year old, but none were neonates. Of the 37 Townsville patients, 20 cases (54%) were in the under five-year-old group. Signs and symptoms of Aeromonas-associated diarrhea in patients where Aeromonas was the sole pathogen isolated were diarrhea sometimes with vomiting, absence of fever and of fecal leukocytes and blood in the stools. No cases of Aeromonas-associated diarrhea with dysentery were encountered. After rotavirus (12.3%), Aeromonas was the second most common enteric pathogen detected, but was only marginally more common than Giardia and Salmonella. Of the aeromonad isolations, 50% were Aeromonas hydrophila, 22% were A. sobria, and 28% were A. caviae.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The spectrum of Aeromonas-associated diarrhea in tropical Queensland, Australia. 826 41

The purpose of this study was to review our experience with the use of OKT3 (a murine monoclonal CD3 antibody) used as immune prophylaxis for pediatric heart transplant recipients. Orthotopic heart transplantation was performed in 18 pediatric patients, 8 girls and 10 boys, ranging in age from 17 days to 17 years. OKT3 therapy was initiated intraoperatively at a dose of approximately 0.2 mg/kg and was administered at a dose of approximately 0.1 to 0.2 mg/kg/day for a period of 11.5 +/- 2.5 days. Daily average OKT3 levels were 1132 +/- 469 ng/ml. Side effects that occurred during OKT3 therapy were fever (59%), diarrhea (24%), headaches (24%), vomiting (18%), encephalopathy (12%), pulmonary edema (6%), and rash (6%). Infections occurred in 24% of patients, all within 6 months of transplantation. In the first year after transplantation, patients experienced 3.4 +/- 2.4 episodes of mild rejection and 1.0 +/- 0.8 episodes of moderate rejection. No patient experienced severe rejection. Five of the surviving 14 patients (36%) have been weaned from chronic steroid therapy, and 42% are being maintained on alternate-day prednisone at a dose of 0.06 +/- 0.02 mg/kg/day. Coronary artery disease developed in three patients; two of whom died. Actuarial survival was 83% at 1 year and 73% at 2 years. This report shows that OKT3 prophylaxis in pediatric heart transplantation can be used with acceptable short-term adverse side effects and overall survival.
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PMID:Murine monoclonal CD3 antibody (OKT3)-based early rejection prophylaxis in pediatric heart transplantation. 832 14

We present a study of acute otitis media among 20,532 Spanish children during a 6-month period from January through June 1991. The study was done by distributing a questionnaire to all Spanish pediatricians. Of the patients 51.7% were girls and 48.3% boys; 68.7% of all children were younger than 5 years. The most frequent symptoms were otalgia or irritability, 92.7%; fever, 63.5%; otorrhea, 24.9%; vomiting, 21.4%; and another concomitant upper respiratory tract infection, 65.5%. Otitis was bilateral in 45.6% of the cases. The most frequently used antibiotic was cefixime (38%), followed by amoxicillin-clavulanate (22.2%), amoxicillin (15.3%), 2nd-generation cephalosporins (13.5%) and macrolides (8.8%). In 11.8% of the patients, a change in the initial antibiotic therapy was required due to adverse effects. Resolution of symptoms occurred in 77.8% of the patients.
Infection 1995
PMID:Acute otitis media in childhood: a study of 20,532 cases. 853 35

A 79-year-old women with upper abdominal pain, vomiting and weight loss was found at endoscopy to have a large tumour mass in the gastric body. Histology of forceps biopsies revealed an adenocarcinoma of intestinal type. Gastrectomy was performed, but extensive lymph node metastasis precluded a curative surgical approach. Histopathological study of the specimen, however, revealed two distict malignancies, which arose in the setting of Helicobacter pylori-associated chronic gastritis with partial mucosal atrophy. One tumour was a gastric carcinoma, while the other was a primary B-cell lymphoma of the stomach (CD20-positive). The lymphoma comprised both a low-grade component (mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue- or MALT-type lymphoma), and a high-grade component (large cell lymphoma with CD30-positive giant cells). Infection with H. pylori was confirmed by the serological presence of IgG antibodies to H. pylori-antigens, including antibodies against the 128 kDa protein of the cytotoxin-associated gene (cagA gene) of H. pylori.
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PMID:Simultaneous gastric adenocarcinoma and MALT-type lymphoma in Helicobacter pylori infection. 854 31

Infection due to Helicobacter pylori may be associated with gastritis and peptic ulcer disease in children. The aim of this study was to compare the presentation of gastritis due to H pylori with that of gastritis not associated with H pylori infection. The medical records of 296 children who had esophagogastroduodenoscopy were reviewed; 23 (8%) had H pylori gastritis, and 51 had primary gastritis without H pylori infection. Of patients with H pylori, 43% had antral nodularity and 17% had duodenal ulcers. The incidence of epigastric pain, nocturnal pain, postprandial pain, family history of peptic ulcer disease, water brash, vomiting, weight loss, fecal occult blood, and hematemesis was similar between both groups. Periumbilical pain was less common in children with gastritis than epigastric pain, and pain in the periumbilical region was present in only 4% of children with H pylori infection, compared with 31% of patients who had gastritis without H pylori infection. The presence of H pylori should be sought in children having endoscopy for evaluation of upper gastrointestinal mucosal disease.
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PMID:Symptoms of gastritis due to Helicobacter pylori in children. 860 56

Clinical features of infantile diarrhea were studied among 603 infants from birth to 12 months of age to determine the predominant clinical feature(s) seen in infantile diarrhea associated with a specific enteric pathogen. Among the major clinical features, fever was most often seen in diarrhea due to Yersinia spp. (61.5%) followed by that in rotavirus (26.1%). Vomiting was mostly associated with Vibrio cholerae infection (90.9%) and shigellosis (64.6%). Dehydration was predominant in Vibrio cholerae (90.9%) and Salmonella (84.9%) infections. Bloody diarrhea was mostly due to Shigella infection (74.3%). As regards diarrhea with multiple pathogens, vomiting and dehydration were most frequent with Campylobacter+Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) (88.9% and 77.8%, respectively), while fever was more common with rotavirus+Shigella+Escherichia coli and rotavirus+Giardia. Infection with invasive organisms lead to vomiting, 4-10 stools per day and dehydration significantly more often as compared to infections with non-invasive organisms. Similarly more stools of patients infected with invasive organisms showed presence of blood and more than 5 leukocytes/HPF as compared to those infected with non-invasive organisms.
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PMID:Clinical features of infantile diarrhea associated with single or multiple enteric pathogens. 871 22

The aim of our study was to analyze the clinical course and outcome of acute renal failure (ARF) in patients with hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS). From 1983 to 1995, we treated 33 patients (27 males, 6 females) aged from 16 to 71 years. Half of patients were connected with work at a farm or in a forest. The disease was confirmed serologically with indirect immunofluorescence test (IFT) and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). In 18 patients percutaneous kidney needle biopsies were analyzed. In 85% of the cases, the disease broke out from June to October. The most frequently expressed clinical signs and symptoms were fever, nausea/vomiting, headache, backache, abdominal pain, myalgia, diarrhea, conjunctival injection, and hemorrhages. Four patients had concomitant pancreatitis. In 25 patients, oliguria was present, and transient hemodialysis treatment was needed in 19 patients. Infection with Hantaan virus was established in 20 patients and with Puumala virus in 13 patients. At renal biopsy, acute interstitial nephritis accompanied with hemorrhages and necrosis was found, and at a later biopsy there were also signs of interstitial fibrosis. All patients were cured, but renal function was not completely recovered in some. We conclude that ARF is a serious complication in patients with HFRS. Although not lethal in our group of patients, many of them showed severe signs and symptoms of illness. Transient hemodialysis was necessary in two-thirds of the patients. Some degree of functional defects and morphological changes might persist.
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PMID:Acute renal failure due to hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome. 887 90

Five case of intestinal cryptosporidiosis with pulmonary involvement in patients with AIDS are reported. The diagnosis was based on the recognition of acid-fast oocysts in sputum or aspirated bronchial material and stool specimens. Coughing and excess secretions were present in all cases. Four patients had other associated pulmonary pathogens: two Mycobacterium tuberculosis, one Mycobacterium fortuitum and one Cytomegalovirus + Pneumocystis carinii; all of them had a previous (three cases) or simultaneous (one case) diagnosis of intestinal cryptosporidiosis, presenting with diarrhoea and vomiting. In the fifth patient Cryptosporidium was the only pulmonary pathogen found in a bronchial aspirate, and the onset of diarrhoea was 1 month after respiratory detection. Fifty-seven cases of respiratory cryptosporidiosis have been reported since 1980. In 17 of them, no other pathogen was found. Diarrhoea was present in 77% of the patients, cough in 77%, dyspnea in 58%, expectoration in 54%, fever in 45%, thoracic pain in 33%.
Infection
PMID:Respiratory cryptosporidiosis: case series and review of the literature. 892 43


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