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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Yersinia infections in 16 adults and 9 children are reported. 15 cases were caused by Yersinia
pseudotuberculosis
, 8 of them were proved by serological findings. In 4 cases the infection by Yersinia
pseudotuberculosis
was likely, in 3 other cases possible only. Real infections caused by serotype IV are demonstrated too. Furthermore there were 10 cases caused by Yersinia enterocolitica, 3 of them were proved by bacterial, the other ones by serological findings. Both germs caused identical symptoms: fever (80%), abdominal pains (56%), diarrhoea (52%), erythema nodosum (44%), arthritis (40%),
vomiting
(16%), weight loss (16%), lymphoma (12%) and others. In children 50% of erythema nodosum was produced by intestinal yersiniosis. The beginning with gastroenteritis and fever mostly was followed by a second phase with returning fever, abdominal pains, erythema nodosum and/or arthritis. Antibiotic therapy had a definite effect only in the first phase of gastroenteritis and in the two possibly relapsing cases. In two of 5 patients with long standing arthritis the HL-AB 27 was present.
...
PMID:[Intestinal yersiniosis: 25 cases of infections with Yersinia pseudotuberculosis and Yersinia enterocolitica (author's transl)]. 20 60
Yersinia
pseudotuberculosis
(Y.
pseudotuberculosis
) infection is an intestinal infectious disease comparable in importance as those with Campylobacter or Salmonella. Clinical symptoms of Y.
pseudotuberculosis
infection vary. In this report, we will describe the clinical symptoms and immunological conditions of the patients with Y.
pseudotuberculosis
infection, including 2 or our own cases. Case 1 was a 4 years old male infant admitted to the hospital with major complaints of fever, diarrhea, and
vomiting
. Kawasaki disease was the most suspected diagnosis from the clinical viewpoint. These symptoms improved by symptomatic treatments. Serum examination during hospitalisation revealed the infection of Y.
pseudotuberculosis
4a. Case 2 was a 7 months old male baby with psychomotor developmental delay. The patient was admitted to hospital with major complaints of fever and eruptions. The patient was diagnosed to have a severe infectious disorder based on the clinical symptoms and findings of laboratory tests. Treatments with antibiotics improved the conditions. Serum examination during hospitalisation also revealed the Y.
pseudotuberculosis
5a infection. Both of these cases showed decreased cellular immunity during the acute phase of the infection which was normalized with the improvement in clinical conditions. It was thus suggested that Y.
pseudotuberculosis
had a possibility to influence the cellular immunity of hosts transiently but significantly.
...
PMID:[Two cases of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis infection in children]. 228 88
We report two cases of acute interstitial nephritis associated with Yersinia
pseudotuberculosis
infection. The patients had fever, abdominal pain,
vomiting
and acute renal failure coinciding with elevated agglutination antibody titer for Y.
pseudotuberculosis
. Renal biopsy revealed interstitial nephritis in both patients. Although it is well known that yersiniosis sometimes affects glomeruli, this is the first report to demonstrate acute interstitial nephritis in patients with Y.
pseudotuberculosis
infection.
...
PMID:Acute interstitial nephritis associated with Yersinia pseudotuberculosis infection. 266 63
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.
...
PMID:Yersinia pseudotuberculosis infection in children, resembling Izumi fever and Kawasaki syndrome. 634 44
The in-vitro activity of flumequine against 157 strains of bacteria isolated from birds was determined. The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of 96.3% of the Enterobacteriaceae, Proteus spp. and Yersinia
pseudotuberculosis
studied (n = 135) was less than or equal to 1 microgram/ml. Pharmacokinetics of flumequine in pigeons (Columba livia) was investigated after intravenous, intramuscular and oral administration. From the blood disappearance curves after i.v. bolus injection (10 mg/kg body weight) clearance rate, blood half-time and distribution volume were calculated. The recovery of unchanged flumequine from the droppings in 24 h was 37 +/- 10% of the administered dose. Flumequine was also given i.m. at two dose levels, 10 and 60 mg/kg body weight. The availability of flumequine as intact drug was 22 and 23%, respectively, in 24 h. Therapeutic blood levels were maintained for 4 and 10 h, respectively. After an oral dose of flumequine (60 mg/kg body weight) an availability of 6.7 +/- 2.5% and a peak blood concentration of 2.68 +/- 0.92 microgram/ml at 2 h after administration were found. The recovery of unchanged flumequine from the droppings in 24 h was 1.55 +/- 0.79% of the administered dose. With the exception of the i.m. dose of 10 mg/kg, all flumequine administrations made the pigeons vomit. It appears that blood concentrations below 3 micrograms/ml will not induce
vomiting
. On the basis of the present data, a dosage regimen for flumequine in pigeons of a priming dose of 30 mg/kg i.m., followed after 8 h by oral administration of 30 mg/kg, this dose being repeated every 8-12 h, would be expected to give blood concentrations between 1.44 and 2.88 micrograms/ml.
...
PMID:Clinical pharmacology and pharmacokinetics of flumequine after intravenous, intramuscular and oral administration in pigeons (Columba livia). 666 41
A 4-year-old girl was diagnosed as having acute renal failure due to tubulointerstitial nephritis. The girl presented with remittent fever,
vomiting
and non-oliguric acute renal failure with sterile pyuria and tubular reabsorptive dysfunction. Ultrasound examination revealed that the kidneys were markedly enlarged with diffuse hyperechogenicity in the cortex when the abnormal renal function was present and were restored in size and echogenicity when the renal function normalised. A diagnosis of Yersinia
pseudotuberculosis
infection was based on a rise in haemagglutination titres against the organism.
...
PMID:Acute tubulointerstitial nephritis in association with Yersinia pseudotuberculosis infection. 774 29
Yersinia
pseudotuberculosis
is an enteric pathogen that induces a variety of clinical symptoms, fever, scarlatiniform rash, diarrhea,
vomiting
, and arthritis. Characteristic histopathologic findings in Y.
pseudotuberculosis
infection such as lymphoid hyperplasia, typically seen in mesenteric lymph nodes, suggest that the stimulation of a large proportion of T lymphocytes may be involved in the pathogenesis of this infection. In this study, we assessed the mitogenic activity of culture supernatants of the clinical isolates of Y.
pseudotuberculosis
and investigated the mechanism by which these culture sups activate T cells. The culture sups, as well as partially purified fractions obtained by gel filtration, were found to selectively stimulate T cells bearing V beta 3, V beta 9, V beta 13.1, and V beta 13.2 compared with stimulation by anti-CD3. Furthermore, fibroblasts transfected with different HLA class II molecules, either HLA-DPw9, -DQw6, -DR1, or -DR4 Dw15, were capable of presenting Y.
pseudotuberculosis
culture supernatants to purified T cells. The T cell response to this sup was not restricted by donor HLA-DR types and was not neutralized by antibodies against the known staphylococcal superantigens, Staphylococcal enterotoxin (SE)A, SEB, SEC2, SED, SEE, and TSST1. These results suggest that Y.
pseudotuberculosis
produces superantigenic toxins that may mediate some of the systemic illnesses associated with infection by this organism.
...
PMID:Evidence for superantigen production by Yersinia pseudotuberculosis. 840 95
In June 1991, there were large scale outbreaks of Yersinia
pseudotuberculosis
at 4 primary schools and 1 junior high-school in Noheji-machi in Aomori Prefecture. A total of 732 patients (725 pupils and school children, 7 teachers and personnel) were affected and 134 were hospitalized. Sex ratio of incidence was 1.1:1.0 without appreciable difference. Clinical symptoms (478 patients) were represented frequently by pyrexia (86.4%), eruption (73.8%), abdominal pain (66.7%),
vomiting
nausea (63.4%), etc., and were characterized by a strawberry tongue, pharyngeal redness, membranous desquamation of the fingers and arthralgia during convalescence. Yersinia
pseudotuberculosis
was isolated from 27 (81.8%) of 33 patients stool specimens, 1 waste water specimen and 2 (11.7%) of cooking employees' stool specimens. The isolates were confirmed serotype 5a, and positive for calcium-dependency and autoagglutination, and harboring 40-50 megadalton virulent plasmid. Restrictive endonuclease digestive pattern of plasmid proved to be identical. In many cases, patients' serum antibody titer showed a significant increase ratio to the isolated strain. In term of drug susceptibility, all the strains were sensitive to cefem, penicillin and amino-glycoside series and resistant to macrolide and sulfa series. The infectious source was limited to the school feeding, but the responsible food remained unknown. Mean latency and exposure day were presumed to be 6.5 days and May 30, respectively.
...
PMID:[Large scale outbreak of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis serotype 5a infection at Noheji-machi in Aomori Prefecture]. 845 Feb 73
We report 45 pediatric cases of Yersinia
pseudotuberculosis
infection confirmed by stool culture between May 1993 and June 1994. In 41 (91.1%) cases there had been contact with untreated well or mountain water. Y.
pseudotuberculosis
was also isolated from 4 samples of mountain spring water thought to be the sources of infection. During the course of the illness, acute renal failure (ARF) developed in 6 patients (13.6%). The age distribution of the ARF group (12.3 +/- 1.2 years) was significantly different from the non-ARF group (8.0 +/- 3.2 years). The serogroups of Y.
pseudotuberculosis
isolates from stool samples were 5 (n = 30) and 4 (n = 15). Isolates from the water samples were all serogroup 5. The main symptoms of both groups were fever, rash, abdominal pain, and
vomiting
. ARF developed between the 2nd and 14th days (mean 6 days) after the onset of fever, and oliguria (< 400 ml/m2 per day) developed in 3 patients (3/6, 50%) immediately after their fevers had subsided. ARF underwent a benign course, with complete recovery within a maximum of 4 weeks (mean 10.2 days), with 1 exceptional patient requiring hemodialysis. Renal biopsy showed evidence of tubulointerstitial nephritis. Y.
pseudotuberculosis
should be included as one of the causes of acute interstitial nephritis causing ARF in children, especially when the children have histories of drinking untreated water in endemic areas.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure associated with Yersinia pseudotuberculosis infection in children. 889 60
Three children were diagnosed as having acute renal failure due to acute tubulointerstitial nephritis (TIN) associated with Yersinia
pseudotuberculosis
infection. The kidneys were observed ultrasonically during the disease course. The subjects presented with remittent fever,
vomiting
or diarrhea, and nonoliguric acute renal failure with sterile pyuria and tubular reabsorptive dysfunction. Ultrasound examination delineated marked enlargement of the kidneys with diffuse hyperechogenicity in the cortex, suggesting the diagnosis of TIN. The renal swelling was marked in the descending order of width, depth and length, respectively, and reached more than 200% in volume in 1 of the children who was examined at the culminating stage of acute renal failure. The enlarged kidneys reduced in size in parallel as the elevated serum creatinine levels decreased. However, the enlarged kidneys did not seem to return to their original sizes: the kidney size in 1 of the children remained well above the upper allowance limit of the body-height-related normals and in the other 2 they were only a little smaller than the upper limits. These ultrasound findings should help with the diagnosis and follow-up of the disease.
...
PMID:Ultrasonographic findings of acute tubulointerstitial nephritis. 891 33
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