Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0740441 (
acute diarrhea
)
2,275
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bacillus piliformis infection (Tyzzer's disease) occurred in two young guinea pigs, causing unthriftiness and
diarrhea
which resulted in death. There was necrosis and inflammation of the ileum, cecum, and colon. Intestinal epithelial cells contained organisms resembling Bacillus piliformis. Spirochetes were found in the cecum and colon, mainly in crypts.
Acute diarrhea
occurred in another guinea pig which became cachetic and was killed. Histologically, large numbers of spirochetes were present in the wall of both the cecum and colon, and they were associated with severe necrosis and inflammation. Bacillus pilformis was not found in this animal.
...
PMID:Naturally occurring Tyzzer's disease and intestinal spirochetosis in guinea pigs. 64 40
Swedish children and adults (648 patients) with
acute diarrhoea
were investigated for enterotoxigenic strains in stool cultures. A total number 74 strains were isolated from 28 patients and assayed in the rabbit intestinal loop test and the adrenal cell test. Only three of the enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) isolates belonged to classical enteropathogenic serotypes of E. coli (EPEC). Two enterotoxigenic strains of Proteus morganii, two of Enterobacter hafniae and one of Citrobacter freundii were isolated. None of 67 EPEC strains were found to produce a heat-labile enterotoxin (LT) in either of the two test systems. A number of Yersinia enterocolitica and Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains from stool cultures often produced toxic effects in the cell test but no enterotoxin activity was detected for any of the strains investigated either in the adrenal cell test for heat-labile enterotoxin (LT) or the suckling mouse test for heat-stable enterotoxin (ST). All EPEC isolates were also tested for ST and for invasive properties in the Sereny test; each isolate was negative in both test systems. It is concluded that production of LT and ST enterotoxin were common in stool isolates from Ethiopian children but a rare phenomenon among Swedish children with acute infantile
diarrhoea
. Isolation of aerobic stool bacteria with invasive properties seems to be uncommon both in Ethiopian and Swedish children. However, since both LT and ST as well as invasive properties seem to be very unstable genetic properties in many of these stool isolates improved sensitive methods for the last two properties will probably change this picture in the future.
...
PMID:Relative importance of enterotoxigenic and invasive enteropathogenic bacteria in infantile diarrhoea. 73 53
22 infants under age two years were admitted to the Ubol Provincial Hospital in Northeast Thailand with
acute diarrhea
. The house physician saw them and judged them to have moderate dehydration. 11 infants aged from 4-10 months were given nasogastric infusion; another 11 infants aged from 5-17 months received intravenous fluid. The absorption of nasogastric infusion fluid was remarkable as could be seen by the amount of stool loss, weight gain, reduction of serum specific gravity and urea nitrogen. Biochemical study showed high incidence of hypernatremia which could be explained by the limited fluid intake in these infants during
diarrhea
. Nasogastric infusion fluid which contained only table salt and cane sugar could provide effective volume. Electrolyte imbalance and metabolic acidosis were gradually corrected at a similar rate to bicarbonate containing solution as reported by others. Balance study indicated taht nasogastric infusion retained less nitrogen and sodium during the course of treatment as compared to intravenous infusion. All the infants recovered from diarrheal disease once dehydration was corrected without complications.
...
PMID:Oral hydration in infantile diarrhoea. 74 26
Etiology and Pathophysiology. The present article is a comprehensive review of recent research results in the field of
acute diarrhea
. The most important new idea in contrast to older views is that almost all acute diarrheas are associated with a disturbance of intestinal bacterial homeostasis: overgrowth of the small intestine with apathogenic or pathogenic organisms is followed by changes in intestinal metabolism with increase in intestinal water and electrolyte secretion. Anaerobic organisms cause by enzymatic deconugation and dydroxylation of bile acids secretion of fluid into the small intestine and inhibition of fluid absorption from the large intestine. 10-OH-fatty acids, which are formed intraluminally by enzymatic hydroxylation of long-chain unsaturated fatty acids from the diet by similar anaerobic organisms, produce profuse secretion of fluid into the small intestine. The ability of numerous strains of E. coli to produce enterotoxin, which has a qualitatively similar action to cholera toxin, is now considered to be a major cause of infantile
diarrhea
. The separation of two completely different pathophysiologic mechanisms of E. Coli, the enterotoxic and the enteroinvasive action which are determined by extranuclear chromosomal material, is an important result of recent research. Overgrowth of the small intestine with different bacteria is followed by loss of actiivity of lactase, and later of all disaccharidases in the intestinal mucosa.
...
PMID:[Old and new data on diarrhetic diseases in childhood I. Etiology and pathophysiology]. 77 Mar 35
Bacteriological studies of jejunal mucosal biopsy specimens and contents were performed on 22 hospitalized adult patients with
acute diarrhoea
and 24 control normal subjects. None of the washed homogenates of the mucosal specimens were sterile and only one fluid specimen obtained from a control subject was sterile. A definite enteric pathogen was found in only five of the 22
diarrhoea
patients. There was no qualitative difference in the bacterial profile of the jejunal mucosa and contents of the
diarrhoea
patients from that of the control subjects, but there were significant quantitative differences for some bacterial categories. In the control as well as
diarrhoea
subjects, there was no qualitative difference in the bacterial profile of the jejunal mucosa from that of the fluid, but there were significant quantitative differences for some bacterial categories. The significance of the findings is discussed.
...
PMID:A bacteriological study of the intestinal mucosa and luminal fluid of adults with acute diarrhoea. 77 81
Planning the strategy in diagnosis of
diarrhea
some questions need to be answered: 1. Do the complaints in question fulfill the defined criteria of diarrhea? 2. Is it an
acute diarrhea
of infectious origin requiring fast microbiologic diagnosis? 3. Is it a chronic diarrhea? A) Do anamnestic findings and present status induce a certain suspected diagnosis, as in hyperthyreoidism, drugs, intestinal resections? B) Is a complete stepwise diagnostic planning needed as in Crohn's disease, insufficiency of the pancreas, non tropical sprue? Diagnostic measures have to be taken into consideration according to the answers given.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic strategy in diarrhea]. 78 30
The reported incidence of "pathogenic" bacteria, as judged by serotype, in the stools of children with
acute diarrhoea
has varied from 4 to 33% over the last twenty years. Techniques such as tissue culture provide a means for detecting enterotoxin-producing strains of bacteria, strains which often do not possess "pathogenic" serotypes. "Pathogenicity" requires redefinition, and the aetiological importance of bacteria in
diarrhoea
is probably considerably greater than previous reports have indicated. Colonization of the bowel by a pathogen will result in structural and/or mucosal abnormalities, and will depend on a series of complex interactions between the external environment, the pathogen, and the host and its resident bacterial flora. Enteropathogenic bacteria may be broadly classified as (i) invasive (e.g. Shigella, Salmonella and some Escherichia coli) which predominantly affect the distal bowel, or (ii) non-invasive (e.g. Vibrio cholerae and E. coli) which affect the proximal bowel. V. cholerae and E. coli elaborate heat-labile enterotoxins which activate adenylate cyclase and induce small intestinal secretion; the secretory effects of heat-stable E. coli and heat-labile Shigella dysenteriae enterotoxins are not accompanied by cyclase activation. The two major complications of
acute diarrhoea
are (i) hypernatraemic dehydration with its attendant neurological, renal and vascular lesions, and (ii) protracted
diarrhoea
which may lead to severe malnutrition. Deconjugation of bile salts and colonization of the small bowel with toxigenic strains of E. coli may be important in the pathophysiology of the protracted
diarrhoea
syndrome. The control of bacterial diarrhoea requires a corrdinated political, educational, social, public health and scientific attack. Bacterial diarrhoea is a major health problem throughout the world, and carries an appreciable morbidity and mortality. This is particularly the case during infancy, and in those developing parts of the world where malnutrition is common. This paper is concerned mainly with acute bacterial diarrhoea, and reviews the problem as a whole.
...
PMID:The problem of bacterial diarrhoea. 79 97
A clinic was established at Universidad de las Americas, Cholula, Puebla, Mexico for the study of
acute diarrhea
rates in newly-arrived students and full-time students.
Diarrhea
occurred in 22 of 55 newlly-arrived U.S. summer students (40%), compared to 28 of 142 U.S. full-time students (20%), 4 of 29 Venezuelan summer and full-time students (14%) and 7 of 66 Mexican full-time students (11%) (the differences were significant, p less than 0.005). Recurrent episodes of
diarrhea
during the month of study occurred in 15% of U.S. summer students, 4% of U.S. full-time students, and were non-existent in students from Latin America. As well as the 61 students with
diarrhea
enrolled in the incidence study, all students who developed
diarrhea
at the univeristy were encouraged to visit the clinic. This gave a total population of 130 cases of
diarrhea
. The illness that developed in students form the U.S. varied widely, but it typically consisted of seven to 13 unformed stools during the first 48 hours of illness, with illness persiting three to five days. Illness tended to be more severe in the U.S. students. Fifty per cent of the U.S. students with
diarrhea
had "severe" illness (greater than or equal to 10 unformed stools in first 48 hours) compared to 23% of the Latin Americans. This study indicates that the agents responsible for
diarrhea
in Latin America are widespread and that resistance to infection develops after prolonged or repeated exposure.
...
PMID:Diarrhea of travelers to Mexico. Relative susceptibility of United States and Latin American students attending a Mexican University. 83 63
The effects of two different formulas in the treatment of
acute diarrhea
were tested in a prospective study with 40 infants. The formulas differ in content of lactose, fructose, starch, sodium and potassium. Both groups reached normal food intake at the same time and could be discharged from clinical observation. The patients were divided into two groups with equal degrees of
diarrhea
. During nutrition with lactose-reduced formula, body-weight was rising and the water-binding capacity of chymus seemed to be better. From significant higher percentages of prae-beta-liproproteins in electrophoresis better endogenous metabolic efficiency could be derived. Phospholipids were also significantly increased when lactose-reduced formula was given. The comparative formula led, due to the higher content of potassium to significantly higher serum levels. The results of this investigation indicate, that reduction of lactose in the formula for infants with
diarrhea
has some advantages. Whether more effectiveness of formulas in
diarrhea
could be expected from addition of medium chain triglycerides (Gracey et al. 1970, Schreier und Porath 1971) requires further investigations.
...
PMID:[Nutrition in infant enteritis]. 83 36
We studied 27 infants admitted to the hospital with
acute diarrhea
caused by human rotavirus (HRV) and obtained additional data on fecal excretion from ten outpatients with the same infection. The disease was characterized by watery
diarrhea
with fever and vomiting at the onset, isotonic dehydration, compensated metabolic acidosis, and increased concentrations of sodium and chloride but low concentrations of sugar in stools.
Diarrhea
usually ceased in three to four days when oral feedings were reduced or stopped but recurred mildly in four patients. Of 57 household contacts, 12 were symptomatic, 6 had HRV in their stools, and 19 had significantly increased serum HRV antibody titers. These features of the disease accord with available information on the pathogenesis of HRV infection. Knowledge of the clinical pattern of this newly diagnosable infection should help physicians to recognize and treat quickly this highly infectious, potentially dangerous illness.
...
PMID:Clinical, laboratory, and epidemiologic features of a viral gastroenteritis in infants and children. 88 36
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>