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Query: UMLS:C0740441 (acute diarrhea)
2,275 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although intestinal tuberculosis is rare in this country, increasing numbers of patients are now being seen, particularly in the immigrant population. We present the history of a lady who had acute diarrhoea and in whom the radiological and endoscopic findings looked very similar to those seen in Crohn's disease. The radiological presentation included widespread aphthous ulceration, a feature that has rarely been reported in tuberculous colitis.
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PMID:Case report: tuberculous colitis mimicking Crohn's disease. 139 2

From May 1989 to January 1991, 20 patients were investigated for antibiotic-associated acute diarrhea. Colonoscopy or rectosigmoidoscopy was performed in each patient. Cultures of colonic mucosal biopsies were carried out using conventional culture grounds (cystine-lactose-electrolyte-deficient). The aim of this study was to investigate the role of a gram negative bacillus: Klebsiella oxytoca. Among the 20 patients with antibiotic-associated acute diarrhea, 11 had bloody and mucus diarrhea and colitis ranging from a right-sided hemorrhagic to diffuse acute ulcerative or erosive colitis, 7 had a grossly normal colonic appearance, while 2 had mucus diarrhea and pseudomembranous colitis. Of colonic biopsies cultures obtained from 36 control patients, 15 had a normal colonic appearance, 15 had ulcerative or crohn's colitis, 6 had well-tolerated amoxicillin therapy. Klebsiella oxytoca was never found in the 36 control patients; Klebsiella oxytoca was noted among 8/11 patients with mucus-discharging and bloody diarrhea. These results suggest that antibiotic-associated, non pseudomembranous colitis is frequently associated with Klebsiella oxytoca infection, which may be the cause of this type of colitis.
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PMID:[Post-antibiotic diarrheas: role of Klebsiella oxytoca]. 148 55

Collagenous colitis is a newly recognized entity presenting clinically as chronic watery diarrhea and histologically by a thickened subepithelial collagenous band in colonic biopsies. We report the case of a middle aged woman affected of acute diarrhea in whom, after ruling out its main etiologies, the diagnosis of collagenous colitis was made.
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PMID:[Collagenous colitis as a cause of acute diarrhea]. 149 63

In 109 patients with chronic diarrhea colonic biopsies were examined for the presence of specific microorganisms. A positive result was obtained in 48% of patients with ulcerative colitis, 50% with Crohn's disease, 21% with non-specific colitis and 36% with non-specific proctitis. Chlamydiae were found most frequently in all groups. Obligate enteropathogenic bacteria were isolated in only three cases of nonspecific colitis. Of the facultatively enteropathogenic organisms Klebsiella and Pseudomonas aeruginosa were isolated in 31% and 24%, respectively, of patients with ulcerative colitis, in 21% and 7% of patients with Crohn's disease, and in 10% and 6% of patients with non-specific colitis. Whereas chlamydial proctitis is a well-known disease, the results of this study point also to a possible pathogenic role of chlamydiae in the proximal colon. Facultatively enteropathogenic organisms causing acute diarrhea might have aetiologic relevance in some cases of chronic non-specific colitis.
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PMID:Frequency and spectrum of microorganisms isolated from biopsy specimens in chronic colitis. 177 36

It has been suggested that strains of Escherichia coli producing Vero-Toxin (VTEC) may cause diarrhea or hemorrhagic colitis; however, there are not enough studies to support this hypothesis. We studied the frequency of isolation of VTEC strains in patients with acute diarrhea from rural and urban communities. A total of 1430 strains were analyzed, 361 coming from 118 patients from the rural community (Cadereyta, Qro.) and 1069 from the urban district (D.F.); 95 of these patients were asymptomatic, 213 suffered from watery diarrhea and 43 had bloody diarrhea. For production of toxins, strains were grown in tryptic soy broth for 24h and the culture supernatant was inoculated on HeLa cells; strains were considered cytotoxic when they caused lysis in at least 50% of the cells. In the rural community, VTEC strains were isolated in 20% of the asymptomatics, in 45% of the watery diarrhea patients and in 76% of patients with bloody diarrhea. Frequency of isolation was significantly higher in patients with diarrhea than in asymptomatics (P less than 0.05). The relative risk to present watery diarrhea was 3 and to present bloody diarrhea was 12. In the urban district, VTEC strains were isolated in 13, 7.9 and 4.5% from asymptomatics, watery diarrhea and bloody diarrhea patients, respectively; the relative risk for diarrhea was 1. Colonization by VTEC strains is significantly higher in patients from the rural community and these infected patients have an important risk to develop diarrhea.
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PMID:Frequency of identification of cytotoxigenic strains of Escherichia coli in cases of diarrhea from rural and urban communities. 181 97

We present a case of colonic histoplasmosis in a young HIV antibody-positive homosexual male who presented with acute diarrhea. The diagnosis was made by flexible sigmoidoscopy with biopsy which revealed organisms morphologically consistent with Histoplasma capsulatum, and was later confirmed by fungal culture of the biopsy specimens. At colonoscopy, skip areas with plaques, ulcers, and a pseudopolyp were observed. The colitis resolved endoscopically after a 6-wk course of intravenous amphotericin B, and the patient has had no recurrence of symptoms while on maintenance therapy with amphotericin B. However, the organisms continue to be noted on biopsies of normal-appearing areas in the rectum and sigmoid 5 months after diagnosis. Colonic involvement with H. capsulatum, an organism endemic to the Midwest, may be seen more frequently as the total number of cases of HIV-infected individuals increases in this region.
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PMID:Colitis due to Histoplasma capsulatum in the acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 205 39

Amebiasis, an infection of humans with the protozoan Entamoeba histolytica, has a wide distribution in Mexico. The lumenal, asymptomatic infection, as measured by the presence of cysts in stools has been recorded from 2.4% at Ometepec, Guerrero to over 55% at Mixquic, D.F., but only a small percentage of those having intestinal infection will develop invasive amebiasis, the main clinical forms being dysentery and liver abscess. In Mexico City, from 0.8 up to 14% of cases of acute diarrhoea in children requiring hospitalization were found to be associated with E. histolytica. Serological surveys for antibodies, suggest that approximately 5.98% of people had intestinal mucosal or liver invasion, but amebic dysentery may be five to 50 times more frequent than liver abscess, namely in children. Amebiasis may cause death when it manifests itself as fulminating colitis or liver abscess. Lethality in adults has been estimated to be around 0.2 to 2%, but in children with liver abscess it may be 1.1 to 26%. In addition to being a potentially lethal disease, it has important socioeconomic consequences, because incapacitating infections are rather frequent in wage-earning adult males requiring several weeks of hospitalization and from two to three months for full recovery. In Mexico, amebiasis has been more closely associated with poverty and low levels of sanitation than to climate, and in view of the high rates of morbidity and mortality caused by E. histolytica, more research into better and cheaper methods of diagnosis, treatment and prevention is clearly necessary plus a substantial improvement in control strategies.
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PMID:[Invasive amebiasis as a public health problem]. 271 60

When a patient presents with acute diarrhoea, the most important question is whether it represents the first episode of chronic inflammatory bowel disease (CIBD) or acute self-limited colitis (ASLC). The early changes in the rectal mucosa of patients with ASLC have been claimed to be highly diagnostic, the presence of an unspecific inflammatory infiltrate in the lamina propria and the absence of disturbances in the crypt architecture being the characteristic features. Thirty-two patients who in the period 1980-1984 presented with their first episode of acute diarrhoea and whose rectal mucosa showed these histologic features were followed up for 1.5-7 years. Forty-one per cent of the patients were finally classified as having ASLC and 28% as having diseases other than CIBD or ASLC. Thirty-one per cent eventually developed CIBD. Thus the features claimed to be diagnostic of ASLC could not predict the final outcome of the disease in patients presenting for the first time with acute diarrhoea. The histologic interpretation can provide significant information in these patients but should never replace a careful clinical judgement and, if doubt remains, further observation of the patients.
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PMID:The final outcome of patients presenting with their first episode of acute diarrhoea and an inflamed rectal mucosa with preserved crypt architecture. A clinicopathologic study. 292 31

One-hundred and fifteen infants aged 1 to 31 days from two intensive-care units were grouped into 6 classes according to clinical criteria (enterocolitis with or without anatomopathological examination and pneumatosis intestinalis, "haemorrhagic colitis", acute diarrhoea or absence of intestinal disorders). The total number of viable bacteria, the number of Clostridium and, in some cases, the presence of rota- and/or coronavirus were determined in their stools. The incidence of Clostridium in the stools of infants with enterocolitis (with or without pneumatosis intestinalis) or haemorrhagic colitis was not significantly different from that of infants without intestinal disorders, whereas stools of infants with acute diarrhoea less often contained Clostridium than those of other infants. C. butyricum, C. difficile, C. perfringens, C. tertium, and C. sordellii were identified. Correspondence analysis comparing the variable, "clinical profile", with 23 other variables, suggested that the variables of gemellity, a birthweight below 1900 g, a gestational age of less than 35 weeks, respiratory distress, umbilical catheterization and a Clostridium count above 10(7)/g at the onset of clinical signs, i.e. between 8 to 12 days of age, were linked to the clinical profile of necrotizing enterocolitis with pneumatosis intestinalis. Conversely, the absence of gemellity, a high birthweight and gestational age, the absence of respiratory distress or umbilical catheterization, the onset of diarrhoea within 8 days, and the presence of rota- and/or coronavirus in the stools were linked with a clinical profile of acute diarrhoea.
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PMID:[Comparison between the number and nature of fecal clostridia and other risk factors implicated in the intestinal pathology of newborn infants]. 343 54

When a patient presents for the first time with acute diarrhoea, it can be difficult to distinguish acute self-limited colitis from idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease. This study was designed to determine whether detailed interpretation of rectal histology can enable this distinction to be made early in the course of the illness. Seventy-two rectal biopsies, taken at the time of presentation from patients with undiagnosed colitis, were reviewed independently by two observers without access to clinical information. Distorted crypt architecture, crypt atrophy, basal lymphoid aggregates and dense lymphocytic infiltrates each emerged as features with a 76 to 86 per cent probability of predicting idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease, but their discriminant value was limited by inter-observer disagreement (16-29 per cent). Isolated basal giant cells, epithelial surface erosions and epithelioid granulomas were found to be the most reliable histological features in the early diagnosis of idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease, and their interpretation was associated with the lowest inter-observer disagreement (6 per cent).
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PMID:The value of rectal biopsy in distinguishing self-limited colitis from early inflammatory bowel disease. 345 54


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