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Query: UMLS:C0740441 (
acute diarrhea
)
2,275
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Longitudinal studies of acute and persistent diarrhea in 677 children less than 3 years old were conducted for 27 months in an underprivileged, periurban community near Lima, Peru. Incidence rates and accurate durations of diarrhea were obtained by twice-weekly community-based surveillance and clinical and laboratory features of diarrheal episodes were documented. Study children had an overall incidence of diarrhea of 8.1 episodes per child-year and an incidence of persistent (greater than 14 days) diarrhea of 0.25 episodes per child-year. Episodes of longer duration were associated with young age (0-5 months) and more severe illness (greater than or equal to 6 diarrheal stools per day) in the first week. None of the laboratory tests performed in the first week of illness (fecal leukocytes, blood, reducing substances, pH, or fat) proved of value to identify episodes that would become persistent. Although
steatorrhea
was commonly present in the acute phase of the illness, it became less frequent by the third or subsequent week of illness in the persistent diarrheas. These results suggest that there are no clinical or laboratory features of
acute diarrhea
that are strongly predictive of the subset of diarrheas that persist. Thus, it is important that all diarrheal episodes should have appropriate fluid and dietary management and follow-up to detect the persistent diarrheas that may need special intervention.
...
PMID:Epidemiologic, clinical, and laboratory characteristics of acute vs. persistent diarrhea in periurban Lima, Peru. 206 84
Although few episodes of diarrhea last longer than 14 days these episodes are particularly associated with growth faltering and malnutrition. We have examined the role of the duodenal microflora in prolonging diarrhea in Peruvian children ages 3 to 36 months by comparing the microflora in 89 children with persistent diarrhea, 38 children with
acute diarrhea
and 34 diarrhea-free controls from the same environment. Bacteria were retrieved from 93% of all aspirates, including 94% of those from controls. There were no significant differences among the 3 groups with respect to total bacterial count, to the proportion of children with duodenal Enterobacteriaceae and to the proportion with anaerobes, lending no support to the hypothesis that proliferation of bacteria in the small intestine during the acute illness prolongs diarrhea. When only children older than 18 months were compared, anaerobes were cultured more frequently from those with persistent diarrhea than from controls, but the presence of anaerobes was not associated with adverse clinical outcome. Although malabsorption, especially
steatorrhea
, was common, there was no association between elevated bacterial counts and fecal loss of nutrients in 69 children who received the same diet. In this population
steatorrhea
could not be attributed to bacterial overgrowth.
...
PMID:Lack of a role of the duodenal microflora in pathogenesis of persistent diarrhea and diarrhea-related malabsorption in Peruvian children. 237 Oct 81
Cow's milk allergy (CMA) is multifaceted disease representing systemic, skin or gastrointestinal reactions to cow's milk (CM) protein. This article shortly reviews the intestinal form of CMA (ICMA). According us the child is allergic to CM when the immunologic reaction to CM is associated with clinical symptoms. The incidence of CMA is 1.3-1.9% in general, but the ICMA only 0.6 pro mille among the children less than six months of age. The majority of infants shows symptoms within a month of starting CM feeding. The majority of children with CMA have gastrointestinal symptoms. Manx of these infants has additionally dermatological symptoms and some respiratory symptoms. The mode of onset is often
acute diarrhoea
and vomiting, as in acute gastroenteritis. Laboratory findings indicate iron deficiency anemia in 20-70%. Half to two thirds of infants with chronic diarrhoea have moderate to severe
steatorrhoea
. The morphologic lesion in the gastrointestinal tract in ICMA is widespread, often being present from stomach to rectum. Jejunal lesion is most severe in the proximal part of the intestine and nowadays most patients have only partial villous atrophy or slight changes of the villi. Both the epithelium and the lamina propria of the jejunum are infiltrated with inflammatory cells. The morphology of the small intestine speaks for a strong immune reaction which leads increased destruction of surface epithelial cells. We recommend elimination of CM proteins to the age of 1.5 to 2 years. Most patients tolerate CM by the age of 2 years without symptoms. Prolonged breast-feeding and avoidance of early contact with CM are important in reducing the severity and frequency of CMA.
...
PMID:Intestinal cow's milk allergy. 404 93
Diarrhea is defined as reduced stool consistency, increased water content and number of evacuations per day. A wide array of causes and pathophysiological mechanisms underlie acute and chronic forms of diarrhea. This review focuses on the major clinical aspects which should aid clinicians to diagnose chronic diarrhea. Clinical history, physical examination and stool evaluation and the predominant stool characteristic, i.e., bloody, watery, and fatty diarrhea, may narrow the differential diagnosis. Although mainly involved in
acute diarrhea
, many different infectious agents, including bacteria, viruses and protozoa, can be identified in chronic bloody/inflammatory diarrhea by appropriate microbiological tests and colonoscopic biopsy analysis. Osmotic diarrhea can be the result of malabsorption or maldigestion, with a subsequent passage of fat in the stool leading to
steatorrhea
. Secretory diarrhea is due to an increase of fluid secretion in the small bowel lumen, a mechanism often identified in gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors. The evaluation of the fecal osmotic gap may help to characterize whether a chronic diarrhea is osmotic or secretory. Fatty diarrhea (
steatorrhea
) occurs if fecal fat output exceeds the absorptive/digestive capacity of the intestine.
Steatorrhea
results from malabsorption or maldigestion states and tests should differentiate between these two conditions. Individualized diagnostic work ups tailored on pathophysiological and clinical features are expected to reduce costs for patients with chronic diarrhea.
...
PMID:Clinical approach to diarrhea. 2307 66