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

Evidence is provided that the enterotoxin of Bacillus cereus variously described in the literature as diarrheagenic toxin, diarrheal agent, fluid accumulation factor, vascular permeability factor, dermonecrotic toxin, and intestinonecrotic toxin is a single relatively unstable protein of molecular weight approximately 50,000 and isoelectric point of the order of 4.9. It is presumed to be the enterotoxin responsible for the diarrheal-type B. cereus food poisoning syndrome and it may also be the pyogenic and pyrogenic factor in nongastrointestinal B. cereus infections of man and animals. The enterotoxin is a vegetative growth metabolite produced to one degree or another by almost all B. cereus strains and is readily separated from phospholipase and heat-labile cereolysin but less readily differentiated from a heat-stable hemolysin. It is lethal to mice but may also be separable from another mouse lethal factor by electrofocusing. The emetic toxin responsible for the vomiting-type B. cereus food poisoning syndrome is clearly distinguishable from the diarrheal and other toxic factors and appears to be a highly stable compound of molecular size less than 5000.
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PMID:Properties and production characteristics of vomiting, diarrheal, and necrotizing toxins of Bacillus cereus. 10 14

In a total of 720 faecal specimens from patients with secretory diarrhoea, vomiting, dehydration, gastroenteritis, cholera and cholera like illnesses, 18 strains of V. mimicus were isolated as pure culture. These were characterized for various toxin types and virulence factors using conventional in vitro and in vivo assays. Labile and stable toxins were elaborated by 15 and 2 strains respectively by ligated rabbit ileal loop (RIL) and suckling mouse assays. While 15 of the whole cell culture elaborated labile toxin, only 7 strains produced the same when culture filtrate was tested in RIL assay. Culture filtrates of 15 strains exhibited vascular permeability factor (PF) on adult rabbit skin, none of the strains were invasive as indicated by Sereny's test. Culture supernatants of all strains produced a cytotoxic factor to Vero and Chinese hamster ovary cells. Four of the 18 strains (22%) were resistant to multiple drugs (a combination of 3 or more drugs). The results emphasize the significance of continuous screening and identification of V. mimicus and to include in the differential diagnosis of patients with acute diarrhoea.
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PMID:Toxigenicity & drug sensitivity of Vibrio mimicus isolated from patients with diarrhoea. 899 33