Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0740441 (acute diarrhea)
2,275 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Nine strains of Campylobacter species other than Campylobacter jejuni, Campylobacter coli, and Campylobacter laridis were isolated from patients with acute diarrhea. All nine strains showed preferred growth at 37 degrees C under microaerophilic conditions. Conventional microbiological tests and DNA-DNA dot blotting were used to identify these strains. Three of the nine Campylobacter strains hydrolyzed hippurate, reduced nitrate, produced catalase, were resistant to cephalothin, and were shown to be highly related to C. jejuni type strains. Two strains had negative or weak catalase activity and were hippurate negative. Three other strains had characteristics similar to those of Campylobacter cinaedi. The ninth strain, isolated from a homosexual man with antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus (human T-cell lymphotropic virus type III), showed unique features different from those of all the known campylobacters used in this study. This strain grew well at 25 and 37 degrees C and was catalase and nitrate positive, hippurate negative, and resistant to cephalothin.
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PMID:Atypical campylobacters associated with gastroenteritis. 361 17

8 cases of methemoglobinemia are observed in infants of 28 days to 138 days of age, who have all acute diarrhea. They are divided in two groups. --4 infants who have eaten for a long time a rich nitrate and nitrite content carrot soup. --4 cases of severe diarrhea with probable endogenous nitrification due to microbial proliferation. The methemoglobinemia level is here not very high and represents more a witness that an alarming symptom. Those infants are compared with 10 infants who have diarrhea without methemoglobinemia. Symptoms and treatment of methemoglobinemia are revisited.
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PMID:[Methemoglobinemia in acute diarrhea in infants]. 662 42

Australian Aboriginal children hospitalized with diarrhoeal disease have severe manifestations with acidosis, hypokalaemia, osmotic diarrhoea and abnormal small bowel permeability. Nitric oxide (NO) production is increased in diarrhoeal disease, but its relationship to mucosal function and diarrhoeal complications is not known. We examined the relationship between NO production and complications of acute diarrhoea in Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children between February 1998 and February 2000. We enrolled 318 children admitted to Royal Darwin Hospital into one of three groups: acute diarrhoea, non-diarrhoeal controls with no inflammatory illness, and non-diarrhoeal controls with inflammatory illness. Nitric oxide production was measured by urine nitrate-creatinine (NOx/Cr) excretion on a low nitrate diet. Small bowel intestinal permeability was measured by the lactulose-rhamnose (L/R) ratio on a timed blood specimen. The NOx/Cr ratios were markedly elevated in Aboriginal diarrhoeal cases (geometric mean [GM] = 1.23, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 1.07-1.44), lowest in non-Aboriginal non-inflammatory controls (GM = 0.13, 95% CI 0.10-0.16) and intermediate in all other groups (GM = 0.35, 95% CI 0.28-0.43). Convalescent levels (day 5) in the Aboriginal diarrhoeal group (GM = 1.02, 95% CI 0.82-1.28) were slower to fall than L/R ratios. Multivariate analysis in the diarrhoeal group indicated that high NO production was associated with abnormal permeability, hypokalaemia and malnutrition, but not with the severity of diarrhoea, acidosis or osmotic diarrhoea. We concluded that increased NO production may contribute to impaired mucosal barrier function and hypokalaemia in acute gastroenteritis, which may be the cost of the known gut-protective and antimicrobial effects mediated by NO in acute intestinal inflammation.
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PMID:Increased nitric oxide production in acute diarrhoea is associated with abnormal gut permeability, hypokalaemia and malnutrition in tropical Australian aboriginal children. 1288 17