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Query: UMLS:C0740441 (
acute diarrhea
)
2,275
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fifty-seven Tanzanian children, 6-25 months, hospitalized with
acute diarrhoea
were grouped according to whether there was clinical evidence of systemic infection (SI) (n = 35) or not (n = 22). Serum acute phase proteins were measured in samples taken within 48 h of admission. Means for
C-reactive protein
(
CRP
) and serum amyloid A (SAA) were significantly higher in children with SI compared to those without (geometric means (95% CI);
CRP
, mg/l: 22.1 (13.6-35.5) vs. 7.4 (4.4-12.4); SAA, mg/l: 12.2 (6.8-22.1) vs. 4.9 (2.5-9.7)). Levels of alpha1-acid glycoprotein were similar in both groups (1.16 g/l (0.95-1.43) vs. 1.04 (0.83-1.29), respectively).
CRP
> or =30 mg/l had a positive predictive value of 95%, and specificity of 96% for correctly identifying SI, but a low sensitivity (51%) and negative predictive value (55%). Clinical outcome of diarrhoea was worse in children with SI: more needed intravenous fluids (23% vs. 5%), the duration of diarrhoea was longer (59.4 vs. 34.2 h) and mortality was higher (6% vs. 0%). APPs were not found to be useful markers of systemic illness in
acute diarrhoea
in this population.
...
PMID:Acute phase proteins as markers of systemic illness in acute diarrhoea. 1022 34
The aim of the study was to identify serum markers able to differentiate bacterial and viral origin in
acute diarrhoea
. Interferon-alpha (INF-alpha),
C-reactive protein
(
CRP
) and interleukin-6 were determined on admission in the sera of 119 children aged between 1 mo and 14 y who were hospitalized for rotavirus (n = 60) or bacterial diarrhoea (Salmonella spp. 39 cases, Shigella spp. 15 cases, Campylobacter jejuni 5 cases).
CRP
concentration was >10 mg/l in 48.3% of children with viral gastroenteritis and 86.4% of children with bacterial gastroenteritis. IL6 concentration was >100 pg/ml in 11.7% and 26.3% of cases, respectively. INF-alpha was detected in 79.1% of children with rotavirus (sens 79%) and in 3.5% (spec 93%) with bacterial gastroenteritis. However the INF-alpha assay takes 48 h and pathogens are often identified from stools before interferon results are available. We found that serum markers are not discriminating enough to differentiate between viral and bacterial gastroenteritis in emergency cases.
...
PMID:Interferon-alpha in viral and bacterial gastroenteritis: a comparison with C-reactive protein and interleukin-6. 1041 39
Type II diabetes is an hemorheological disease in which hyperglycemia increases the shear stress contributing to inflammation and dysfunction of endothelium. The purpose of this study was to identify the relationship between serum
C-reactive protein
and glucose levels in noncontrolled type II diabetic subjects. A cross-sectional study was conducted, including 62 noncontrolled type II diabetic subjects that were assigned to two groups. One group was patients with
acute diarrhea
or urinary tract infection and the other group was diabetic subjects who were infectious-disease free. Sixty-two subjects without diabetes constituted the respective control groups. Heart failure, other acute febrile illnesses, asymptomatic infection, renal, hepatic, malignant or chronic inflammatory illness, and macrovascular disease were considered as exclusion criteria. Laboratory measurements were performed. Thirty (96.7%) and 29 (93.5%) diabetic patients in the groups with and without infectious disease, and 28 (90.3%) control subjects with infectious disease had elevated
C-reactive protein
levels (> or =10 mg/L). In contrast, healthy control subjects did not have elevated serum
C-reactive protein
levels. Multiple regression analysis showed a significant association between
C-reactive protein
levels and hyperglycemia (Odds ratio = 7.4; IC95% 2.3-11.2). This study show that hyperglycemia is a related factor to the increase of serum CRP levels in noncontrolled type II diabetic subjects.
...
PMID:Increased levels of C-reactive protein in noncontrolled type II diabetic subjects. 1061 61
The aim of the study was to identify immediate clinical and/or laboratory findings able to differentiate bacterial from viral etiology of acute gastroenteritis in pediatric patients. We studied 52 children, aged between 5 months and 12 years, consecutively admitted to hospital with
acute diarrhoea
lasting less than 5 days. All the patients were divided into 4 groups according to etiologic agent, subsequently demonstrated by culture: salmonellae (group A), rotavirus (group B); combined salmonellae and rotavirus (group C) and no pathogen (group D). The contemporary presence of fever > 39 degrees C, number of daily liquid stools > 6, presence of bloody diarrhoea, positivity of
C-reactive protein
and hyponatremia (< 135 mEq/l) allowed to recognize the etiology (viral or bacterial) before results of culture (sensitivity was 71% and specificity was 97%). In particular, hyponatremia resulted significantly lower in group A and C than in group B and D. We concluded that hyponatremia can be considered a marker for acute gastroenteritis caused by salmonellae.
...
PMID:[Predictive factors of etiology (bacterial or viral) in acute gastroenteritis in childhood]. 1138 64
We evaluated the effect of Saccharomyces boulardii administration in otherwise healthy children aged between 6 months and 10 years who were admitted for
acute diarrhoea
(15 males, 12 females). The patients were randomized into two groups: group 1 (n = 16) received 250 mg S. boulardii dissolved in 5 ml of water orally twice daily for 7 days and group 2 (n = 11) received placebo. Clinical and laboratory assessments were performed on admission and on day 7 of follow-up. Both groups experienced reduced daily stool frequency, the decrease being significantly greater in group 1 on days 3 and 4 compared with group 2. Group 1 demonstrated significant increases in serum immunoglobulin A and decreases in
C-reactive protein
levels on day 7. The percentage of CD8 lymphocytes on day 7 was significantly higher in group 1 than group 2. This study confirmed the efficacy of S. boulardii in paediatric acute gastroenteritis and the findings suggest that S. boulardii treatment enhances the immune response.
...
PMID:Effect of Saccharomyces boulardii in children with acute gastroenteritis and its relationship to the immune response. 1754 7
High rates of Campylobacter fluoroquinolone resistance highlight the need to evaluate diagnostic strategies that can be used to assist with clinical management. Diagnostic tests were evaluated with U.S. soldiers presenting with
acute diarrhea
during deployment in Thailand. The results of bedside and field laboratory diagnostic tests were compared to stool microbiology findings for 182 enrolled patients. Campylobacter jejuni was isolated from 62% of the cases. Clinical and laboratory findings at the time of presentation were evaluated to determine their impact on the posttest probability, defined as the likelihood of a diagnosis of Campylobacter infection. Clinical findings, the results of tests for inflammation (stool occult blood testing [Hemoccult], fecal leukocytes, fecal lactoferrin, plasma
C-reactive protein
), and the numbers of Campylobacter-specific antibody-secreting cells in peripheral blood failed to increase the posttest probability above 90% in this setting of Campylobacter hyperendemicity when these findings were present. Positive results by a Campylobacter-specific commercial enzyme immunoassay (EIA) and, less so, a research PCR were strong positive predictors. The negative predictive value for ruling out Campylobacter infection, defined as a posttest probability of less than 10%, was similarly observed with these Campylobacter-specific stool-based tests as well the fecal leukocyte test. Compared to the other tests evaluated, the Campylobacter EIA is a sensitive and specific rapid diagnostic test that may assist with diagnostic evaluation, with consideration of the epidemiological setting, logistics, and cost.
...
PMID:Diagnostic approach to acute diarrheal illness in a military population on training exercises in Thailand, a region of campylobacter hyperendemicity. 1823 69
Acute diarrhea
is one of commonest pediatric illnesses worldwide. Although the importance of norovirus as a cause of gastroenteritis outbreaks is well documented, its role in sporadic acute gastroenteritis is not well characterized. The aim of this study was to clarify the prevalence and clinical characteristics of norovirus gastroenteritis among hospitalized children. Between November 2007 and April 2008, inpatients under 12 years of age with acute gastroenteritis in a single hospital in Japan were investigated. A stool sample from each patient was screened for enteropathogenic bacteria and tested by reverse transcription polymerase reaction for norovirus and by an immunochromatographic method for rotavirus and enteric adenoviruses. The clinical features of children with norovirus gastroenteritis were compared with those of children with rotavirus and children without noro- or rotovirus infections. Among 107 patients included in this study, norovirus and rotavirus were detected in 36 (34%) and 37 (35%) patients, respectively. Compared with rotavirus enteritis, the duration of vomiting and diarrhea was significantly longer, and serum
C-reactive protein
concentrations were higher, in patients with norovirus enteritis. Norovirus was detected as frequently as rotavirus in hospitalized pediatric gastroenteritis patients. Our results suggest that norovirus gastroenteritis among hospitalized young children is not less severe than rotavirus gastroenteritis.
...
PMID:Clinical characteristics of norovirus gastroenteritis among hospitalized children in Japan. 2288 84