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)

Coccidial parasites of the genus Isospora cause intestinal disease in several mammalian host species. These protozoal parasites have asexual and sexual stages within intestinal cells of their hosts and produce an environmentally resistant cyst stage, the oocyst. Infections are acquired by the ingestion of infective (sporulated) oocysts in contaminated food or water. Some species of mammalian Isospora have evolved the ability to use paratenic (transport) hosts. In these cases, infections can be acquired by ingestion of an infected paratenic host. Human intestinal isosporiasis is caused by Isospora belli. Symptoms of I. belli infection in immunocompetent patients include diarrhea, steatorrhea, headache, fever, malaise, abdominal pain, vomiting, dehydration, and weight loss, blood is not usually present in the feces. The disease is often chronic, with parasites present in the feces or biopsy specimens for several months to years. Recurrences are common, Symptoms are more severe in AIDS patients, with the diarrhea being more watery. Extraintestinal stages of I. belli have been observed in AIDS patients but not immunocompetent patients. Treatment of I. belli infection with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole usually results in a rapid clinical response. Maintenance treatment with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole is needed because relapses often occur once treatment is stopped.
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PMID:Biology of Isospora spp. from humans, nonhuman primates, and domestic animals. 899 57

Infections caused by caliciviruses, i.e., vesicular exanthema virus of swine were recognised as a major cause of economic loss in the 1930s. However, it was not until the application of electronmicroscopy in the 1970s that caliciviruses and astroviruses were recognised and proven to be a cause of diarrhoea and vomiting. The following review briefly describes the steps which have led to the development of diagnostic tests and enabled the characterization of several members of the Caliciviridae and Astroviridae. In the past five years this has culminated in the sequencing of their genomes and the expression of viral proteins. This in turn has led to the development of improved diagnostic tests e.g., RT-PCR and enzyme immunoassays, and may pave the way towards producing effective vaccines in the future.
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PMID:Historical background and classification of caliciviruses and astroviruses. 901 19

Four hundred children between the ages of 1 month and 14 years with the complaint of diarrhea were studied to assess Campylobacter jejuni isolation rates in childhood acute gastroenteritis in Turkey and to clarify clinical presentations of C. jejuni enteritis. C. jejuni was found to be the second most common isolate with a rate of 8.3%, the first being Shigella strains. The highest isolation rate was in the 6 to 14-year age range at 12%. The most frequent symptoms in patients with C. jejuni enteritis were abdominal pain (51.5%), vomiting (36.4%) and fever (30.3%). Stool examination revealed bloody mucous stool in 51.5% of the patients, and erythrocytes and/or leucocytes were detected in 42.4%. Only 12.1% of the patients with C. jejuni enteritis were hospitalized in this study.
Infection
PMID:Campylobacter jejuni gastroenteritis in Turkish children. 918 83

Rotaviruses are the commonest cause of diarrhea and are responsible for more than 25% of all deaths from diarrhea worldwide. Children become infected early in life and most infections in infants older than 3 months are symptomatic. These viruses account for 18 million cases of moderate or severe disease and 900,000 deaths each year. The incidence of rotaviral disease is similar in developed and developing countries but the number of deaths is higher in developing countries. Infections occur throughout the year in developing countries but are seasonal in developed countries, occurring mainly between October and March. The mean age at first infection is 6 to 9 months in developing countries and 9 to 15 months in developed countries. The greater severity of infections in developing countries is associated with malnutrition, lower hygiene standards and the lactose malabsorption and deficiencies of zinc and vitamin A that accompany diarrhea. Many mixed infections also increase the severity of the rotavirus infection. The clinical symptoms of the disease in hospitalized patients are diarrhea, vomiting and dehydration. There is more vomiting than with bacterial infections. The severity of the clinical symptoms depends on the virulence of different strains. The disease is more severe and persistent in patients with reduced immunity. Age also has an effect. All children may have rotavirus in their feces but the percentage of children developing diarrhea is highest at an age of 3 to 6 months and decreases steadily thereafter. Rotaviruses can survive in air and may remain on surfaces for several hours. They are thus often responsible for nosocomial infections. Rotavirus was first identified in cattle in 1969. The virulence of the strain and the age of the calf at infection are important in the pathogenesis of rotaviral infection in cattle. Replacement of villous enterocytes is slow in newborn calves. This means that newborn calves are susceptible to disease caused by strains that are only moderately virulent. They are, however, protected during the first days of life by antibodies transmitted via the colostrum. There is competition between the rate of replication of rotavirus and replacement of enterocytes in older animals so only more virulent strains cause diarrhea in six-week-old calves. Adult animals become resistant to disease, but not to infection. The rotavirus genome consists of 11 segments of double-stranded RNA. Genetic recombination between these segments occurs naturally and can be reproduced in vitro. Recombinants between human and bovine strains have been identified but the epidemiological importance of this is unknown. The genomic segments encode 6 structural proteins (VP) and 5 non-structural proteins (NSP). VP6, the major capsid antigen, present can be used to identify groups of rotaviruses. The presence of VP7 indicates that the virus belongs to the G (glycoprotein) group of serotypes. There are 14 G serotypes, 10 of which can infect humans. The four main G serotypes are G1 to G4, with G1 accounting for 60% of human serotypes. The presence of VP4 identifies the P (protease-sensitive) serotype. The serotypes have different geographic distributions with G1P8 responsible for more than 50% of epidemics worldwide. The WHO project for the control of rotaviral infections focuses on avoiding fecal contamination. This is achieved by ensuring high standards of food hygiene, sewage treatment and chlorinated running water and by introducing vaccination when vaccines become available. Recombinant animal (bovine or simian) and human rotaviruses are currently being tested in phase III studies. Attenuated live human viruses, including cold-adapted strains are being tested in phase I trials. The quadrivalent recombinant rhesuslhuman vaccine had only mild side-effects in children and was effective, giving 82-92% protection against severe diarrhea over two years and 50% protection on average. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
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PMID:[Rotaviruses in human and veterinary medicine]. 929 11

Neonatal rotaviral infection generally causes an asymptomatic or mild illness. Once introduced into a nursery, it is very difficult to eradicate. We prospectively studied an outbreak of rotavirus infection in a normal newborn nursery from October 1994 through May 1995. Stool samples from infants more than 24 hours old were tested for rotaviral infection, either weekly, biweekly, or monthly. Rotavirus was identified in 164 (16%) of 1,037 tested neonates. Ninety-four (57%) rotavirus-positive neonates became symptomatic: 56 had diarrhea, 26 developed fever (rectal temperature > 38 degrees C), 25 experienced vomiting, 17 showed poor feeding, and 14 had an elevated core temperature. In total, 24 neonates were evaluated for suspected sepsis. RNA electropherotyping of samples from 91 neonates revealed infection by the same rotavirus strain in all cases. This strain differed from that isolated from 64 rotavirus-infected infants and toddlers in the pediatric ward during the same period. Infection control procedures (hand washing, isolation of infected neonates, and careful management of diapers) and early discharge of uninfected neonates were instituted, and the outbreak was eradicated 8 months after the onset. Our findings indicate that many rotavirus-infected term neonates become symptomatic and have signs suggestive of sepsis. Extended hospital stay may be an important factor in promoting rotaviral transmission. Thus, early discharge may be an additional effective method of controlling rotavirus outbreaks in a nursery.
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PMID:Outbreak and control of a rotaviral infection in a nursery. 940 21

Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever (C-CHF) re-emerged recently in the United Arab Emirates. The clinical outcome of 11 cases of viral haemorrhagic fever patients admitted to hospital between June 1994 and January 1995 is described. Four cases were laboratory confirmed retrospectively as C-CHF, the other patients were diagnosed likely to have the same disease on epidemiological and clinical grounds. In 72.7% of the patients, infection was fatal. Symptoms started 3.5 days before hospitalization. On admission, 81.8% of patients had high fever, 45.5% were vomiting, 63.6% had diarrhoea, 45.5% had haemorrhagic signs, and 18.2% had throat pain. Fatalities occurred 6.8 days after admission. Survivors were hospitalized for 9.3 days. Nosocomial transmission was not observed.
Infection
PMID:Clinical features of Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever in the United Arab Emirates. 942 56

This report describes a 12-year-old girl who developed vaccine-type pneumococcal septicemia (type 4, Danish nomenclature) 2 years after splenectomy for recurrent idiopathic thrombocytopenia despite vaccination with the 23-valent vaccine 4 weeks before surgery and antibiotic prophylaxis with penicillin V. The disease presented as high fever with shivering and vomiting followed by disseminated petechiae and a deteriorated general condition. Initial laboratory studies showed severe sepsis with leucocytopenia and thrombocytopenia, a markedly elevated CRP, and disseminated intravascular coagulation. Despite antibiotic treatment, which was initiated with clindamycin, cefotaxime and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole and was switched to cefotaxime and penicillin after the result of the blood culture had been obtained, the patient had to be ventilated, and hemofiltration became necessary because of acute renal insufficiency. Furthermore, she required amputation of all her toes because of severe necrosis. No type-specific pneumococcal antibody titers were detected during and after infection. It remains unclear whether the susceptibility to Streptococcus pneumoniae was due to primary failure of antibody production or a decline in antibody levels after vaccination. Patients and/or their relatives should be informed that neither vaccination nor continuous antibiotic prophylaxis can guarantee full protection against infection with S. pneumoniae in patients after splenectomy.
Infection
PMID:Overwhelming postsplenectomy infection with vaccine-type Streptococcus pneumoniae in a 12-year-old girl despite vaccination and antibiotic prophylaxis. 942 57

Forty-three cases of diabetic ketosis were analysed to determine the mode of presentation, treatment modalities and outcome. Among these cases 62.8% were non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) patients and 37.2% belonged to the insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) group. Six patients had blood glucose levels of more than 250 mg/dl but less than 300 mg/dl who were grouped separately for analysis under the term "euglycaemic diabetic ketoacidosis (EGDK)". Infection was the commonest precipitating factor in diabetic ketosis in all groups. Abdominal pain and vomiting occurred with NIDDM and EGDK cases. Drowsiness was common and coma was rare. Acute myocardial infarction (MI) and pulmonary oedema occurred with NIDDM cases. Shock, acidosis, acquired respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and mucor mycosis were seen with IDDM cases. Mortality was 7 out of 43(16.3%). Saline requirement was lower in NIDDM and EGDK cases. Intensive insulin therapy with hourly intravenous doses were needed for IDDM cases while majority of NIDDM cases could be managed with 6 hourly doses of insulin given subcutaneously or intramuscularly.
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PMID:Changing profile of diabetic ketosis. 956 97

In May 1994 an outbreak of vomiting and diarrhoea occurred in a 28-bed long-stay ward for the mentally infirm. The predominant symptoms were vomiting, diarrhoea, malaise and abdominal pain lasting for approximately 12 h in most cases. The attack rate was 62% (13/21) for patients and 46% (16/35) for staff members. Infection control measures were implemented (containment of infectious individuals, hand hygiene among staff and environmental decontamination) and the ward was closed to admissions. Affected staff were excluded from contact with patients and their food until asymptomatic for 72 h. The outbreak lasted for 17 days. Faecal samples from nine symptomatic persons were negative for bacterial enteric pathogens, Giardia, Cryptosporidium and group A rotavirus. Electron microscopy of 12 faecal samples and one sample of vomitus revealed small round structured virus (SRSV) particles in one faecal sample. A further 30 faecal samples and seven vomitus samples were tested by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for SRSV of which 12 (40%) and 1 (14%) were positive respectively. Twenty-eight throat swabs from symptomatic and asymptomatic patients were collected, three (9.5%) of which were positive for SRSV by RT-PCR. Thirty-six environmental swabs were collected on the affected ward, and 11 (30%) were positive by RT-PCR. Positive swabs were from lockers, curtains and commodes and confined to the immediate environment of symptomatic patients. The distribution of contamination supports the rationale of cohorting sick patients.
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PMID:The role of environmental contamination with small round structured viruses in a hospital outbreak investigated by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction assay. 961 83

We examined the association among elevations in acute phase proteins, reported illness, and hyporetinolemia in 234 pregnant Nepali women with (cases) and without (controls) night blindness. Serum alpha1-acid glycoprotein (AGP) and C-reactive protein (CRP) were inversely associated with serum retinol concentrations. Elevations in the concentration of CRP in both cases and controls and of AGP in cases were associated with significant reductions (approximately 0.2-0.3 micromol/L) in serum retinol. The risk of a low serum retinol concentration (< 0.7 micromol/L) with elevated AGP (> or = 1 g/L) and CRP (> or = 5 mg/L) concentrations was significantly higher in cases (odds ratios = 8.6 and 4.3, respectively) than in controls (odd ratios = 1.9 and 2.4, respectively). A 7-d morbidity history indicated that cases were significantly more likely than controls to report symptoms of infections of the urinary, reproductive, and gastrointestinal tracts. Only a few of these symptoms (diarrhea, nausea, and vomiting) were significantly associated with low serum retinol concentrations. Illness in the previous week and elevated CRP or AGP concentrations were synergistically associated with lower serum retinol. For example, the reduction in serum retinol in women with diarrhea and elevated AGP was 0.54 micromol/L, compared with a reduction of 0.03 micromol/L in those with diarrhea only. AGP and CRP may provide useful information about the effect of reported illness on hyporetinolemia in pregnancy. Infection-related hyporetinolemia may predispose women to night blindness during pregnancy in Nepal.
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PMID:Hyporetinolemia, illness symptoms, and acute phase protein response in pregnant women with and without night blindness. 1087 52


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