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)

During 1988-1991, an epidemiological survey was conducted in Tirana (Albania) on group A rotavirus strains which cause gastroenteritis in infants and young children. Rotaviruses were detected in 312 of 1,241 (25.1%) examined specimens from children with acute diarrhoea. Viruses were detected throughout the study period. Among the 72 rotavirus strains tested for double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) electrophoretic migration pattern, 9 different electropherotypes were recognized, 1 of those being more frequent than the others. At the beginning and at the end of the examined period (1988 and 1990-1991) two different long electropherotypes were predominant, whereas in 1989 (middle period) short electropherotypes were common indicating an involvement of virus strains with short electropherotypes in hospitalization-requiring diarrhoeas occurring in the area surveyed in that year.
Acta Virol 1995 Dec
PMID:Electropherotypes of rotavirus strains causing gastroenteritis in infants and young children in Tirana, Albania, from 1988 to 1991. 872 94

Risk factors associated with the recall of a recent episode of acute respiratory infection (ARI) were evaluated in 1,553 Ecuadorian preschool children enrolled into a cross-sectional health and nutrition survey. In a univariate analysis, ARI recall was significantly higher in children living in low altitude regions (Relative Risk, RR = 2.4), in younger children (RR = 1.6), in children from larger families (RR = 1.3), in children with diarrhoea recall (RR = 1.9), in children served with poor quality drinking water (RR = 1.3) and in anaemic children (RR = 1.2) than that in the appropriate control groups. After taking into account the confounding effect of altitude, no association was found between ARI recall and low height-for-age values. Stepwise logistic regression analysis identified living in low altitude regions, diarrhoea recall, and younger age as independent factors associated with a higher recall of ARI. In contrast to the recall of acute diarrhoea, no association between ARI recall and nutritional status was found. The impact of nutritional interventions in children from developing countries may be greater on enteric than on respiratory diseases.
J Diarrhoeal Dis Res 1995 Dec
PMID:Risk factors associated with the recall of respiratory diseases in the Ecuadorian children. 883 22

In April 1994, Vibrio metschnikovii was isolated from five infants with watery diarrhoea in Arequipa, Peru, as part of a passive cholera surveillance system. The children ranged in age from 11 to 20 months and had acute diarrhoea, with two cases showing moderate dehydration. Two children also had traces of blood in liquid stool. The children were seen at two different hospitals, and no evidence of a common source of infection was found. No additional V. metschnikovii isolates were identified in the remaining surveillance period that covered the rest of 1994 and 1995. However, stool samples were not screened for enteric pathogens other than vibrios. V. metschnikovii strains isolated from stool samples produced opaque and translucent colonies on agar plates, suggesting capsular material. All isolates were resistant to ampicillin, erythromycin and streptomycin. Plasmid analysis revealed a common 200-kb plasmid in isolates from all cases and an additional 2.7-kb plasmid in three of the isolates. Ribotyping of each isolate after restriction with BglI and HindIII endonucleases demonstrated identical ribotyping patterns. The cases reported suggest that V. metschnikovii may be associated with diarrhoea in man by mechanisms so far unknown.
J Med Microbiol 1996 Dec
PMID:Clinical manifestations and molecular epidemiology of five cases of diarrhoea in children associated with Vibrio metschnikovii in Arequipa, Peru. 895 56

Piglet cryptosporidiosis is characterized by intestinal villous damage and malabsorption and by reduced NaCl absorption in response to prostaglandin (PG) release from inflamed tissue. We hypothesized that the PG effect is mediated by the enteric nervous system. Piglets were infected with cryptosporidium and ileal mucosa was studied in Ussing chambers. Studies with tetrodotoxin and indomethacin showed that 75% of the PG-induced alteration in NaCl transport was mediated by the enteric nervous system. Prostacyclin was elevated in infected tissue, and its analog, carbacyclin, mimicked the altered transport response in indomethacin-treated tissue. This carbacyclin response was abolished by tetrodotoxin. The vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) receptor antagonist, VIP-10-28, and the muscarinic antagonist, atropine, individually reduced and together abolished the response to carbacyclin, whereas the nicotinic blocker, hexamethonium, reduced the carbacyclin response by 75%. The somatostatin analog, octreotide, and the a-2 adrenergic agonist, clonidine, each abolished the carbacyclin response and partially or completely rectified the altered NaCl transport of the infection. These results indicate that PGs alter NaCl transport in this infection primarily by stimulating cholinergic interneurons that innervate VIPergic and cholinergic motor nerves. The enteric nervous system may be a potential target for pharmacological control of the acute diarrhea in this infection.
J Pharmacol Exp Ther 1996 Dec
PMID:Role of the enteric nervous system in piglet cryptosporidiosis. 896 31

Twenty horses, ponies, and foals referred with acute diarrhoea were divided at random into two treatment groups. One group was treated intravenously with trimethoprim/ sulfadiazine and the other group with ampicillin/gentamicin. Both groups were given the same standardized symptomatic therapy. All animals were evaluated clinically and 5 variables (general impression, heart rate, rectal temperature, appetite, and consistency of the faeces) were estimated on a five point scale (0-4). Jugular blood samples were taken at admittance and at regular intervals for routine screening. Three blood variables (packed cell volume, white blood cell count, and base excess) were also classified in a 5-point scale. The 'diarrhoea prognosis index' was the total sum of the eight variables scaled. Faecal samples were cultured aerobically and examined for worm eggs and larvae. A definite diagnosis was only reached in 11 horses (55%). Salmonellosis and parasitic infections were the most common causes of the diarrhoea. Seven horses (35%), three from the ampicillin/gentamicin group and four from the trimethoprim/sulfadiazine group, died or were euthanized because of a poor prognosis. Only the packed cell volume differed significantly between horses that died and horses that survived. No single clinical or haematological/biochemical variable did forecast the prognosis for the individual patient reliably, nor did the 'diarrhoea prognosis index'. The only reliable indication for the outcome of an individual horse appeared to be the clinical response to treatment within 4 days. The clinical outcome of both treatment groups did not differ significantly. In conclusion, it was difficult to reach a specific diagnosis in these horses with diarrhoea. It was not possible to forecast the prognosis of an individual patient by a single variable or by a combination of variables. No significant differences were found between the two antibiotic treatment groups.
Vet Q 1996 Dec
PMID:A survey of horses with acute diarrhoea: diagnosis, assessment of the prognosis, and comparison of two antibiotic therapies. 897 65

A 56-year-old man with alcoholic liver cirrhosis (Child-Pugh class C), ascites and hepatocellular carcinoma developed acute diarrhoea and fever. Ascites granulocyte count was 5760 per microliters. Campylobacter jejuni grew in cultures from faeces, blood and ascites. The patient was successfully treated with erythromycin. Although the incidence of bacterial infections including peritonitis is high in patients with end-stage liver cirrhosis, this is one of very few cases in which Campylobacter jejuni has been identified as the causative microorganism.
Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol 1996 Dec
PMID:Campylobacter jejuni peritonitis in a patient with liver cirrhosis. 898 Sep 44

Urinary tract infection (UTI) in infancy and childhood has received scant attention at primary health care (PHC) level, rarely featuring as one of the common diseases. In a prospective study conducted at a PHC clinic, 16 of 94 children (17%) from whom urine was collected by strict aseptic catheterization had bacteriuria (BU). Twelve of these had associated leucocyturia (> 5 WBC/HPF). The median age of those with BU was 9 months (range 1-30 months). BU rarely occurred in isolation (6%), but was most often detected in association with acute respiratory infection (43%) and acute diarrhoea (19%). No association of BU with mild malnutrition was detected in the 50% of children who were underweight for age. Gram-negative pathogens accounted for 14 cases (87.5%). These pathogens were resistant to commonly recommended antibiotics for UTI. Only five cases of BU returned for follow-up at 3 months; no abnormalities were detected on repeat catheter urine samples, urinary tract ultrasonography, voiding cystourethrogram and DMSA studies in them. From these and other findings we conclude that BU is probably often present in young children with common diseases attending PHC centres in developing countries. Further studies are required to establish exactly the role these pathogens play in the pathogenesis of UTI.
Ann Trop Paediatr 1996 Dec
PMID:Bacteriuria in children attending a primary health care clinic: a prospective study of catheter stream urine samples. 898 26

In a total of 720 faecal specimens from patients with secretory diarrhoea, vomiting, dehydration, gastroenteritis, cholera and cholera like illnesses, 18 strains of V. mimicus were isolated as pure culture. These were characterized for various toxin types and virulence factors using conventional in vitro and in vivo assays. Labile and stable toxins were elaborated by 15 and 2 strains respectively by ligated rabbit ileal loop (RIL) and suckling mouse assays. While 15 of the whole cell culture elaborated labile toxin, only 7 strains produced the same when culture filtrate was tested in RIL assay. Culture filtrates of 15 strains exhibited vascular permeability factor (PF) on adult rabbit skin, none of the strains were invasive as indicated by Sereny's test. Culture supernatants of all strains produced a cytotoxic factor to Vero and Chinese hamster ovary cells. Four of the 18 strains (22%) were resistant to multiple drugs (a combination of 3 or more drugs). The results emphasize the significance of continuous screening and identification of V. mimicus and to include in the differential diagnosis of patients with acute diarrhoea.
Indian J Med Res 1996 Dec
PMID:Toxigenicity & drug sensitivity of Vibrio mimicus isolated from patients with diarrhoea. 899 33

Although both malaria and diarrhoea are major public health problems in developing countries, and separately each has been the subject of intense research, few studies have investigated the interaction between these two conditions. The interaction between diarrhoea and malaria among children aged 4 months to 12 years in two tertiary health-care facilities, University College Hospital, Ibadan, and Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Lagos, Nigeria was studied. In Ibadan, the prevalence of diarrhoea among the cerebral malaria patients on admission as 11.7% (7/60) compared to 9.3% (215/2312) among other admissions in 1990 (chi square = 0.16; p = 0.6913). Similarly, no significant difference in the prevalence of diarrhoea was found between the cerebral malaria patients (14.3%) and other patients (16.1%) seen in Lagos in 1992 (chi square = 0.06, p = 0.81). Thus, cerebral malaria does not seem to be associated with an increased or decreased prevalence of diarrhoea when compared with other conditions. The prevalence of malarial parasitaemia among the 554 diarrhoea patients studied in Ibadan during 1993-1994 was 13.6% compared with 17.9% among the 347 controls (chi square = 3.75, p = 0.053). However, of the children with diarrhoea, malarial parasitaemia was more common among the dehydrated patients (25.4%) than among the well-hydrated patients (11.6%) (chi square = 8.11, p = 0.004). These data suggest that diarrhoea is merely coincidental in severe malaria and conversely, malarial parasitaemia is similarly coincidental in children with acute diarrhoea, although it may be more frequent among dehydrated diarrhoea patients than well-hydrated ones.
J Diarrhoeal Dis Res 1996 Dec
PMID:Interaction between acute diarrhoea and falciparum malaria in Nigerian children. 920 90

Until recently, information concerning carbohydrate intolerance complicating acute infantile diarrhea of outpatients in Thailand has been lacking. This prospective study was undertaken to determine the incidence and risk factors of secondary carbohydrate intolerance in outpatients. Of 197 well-nourished infants with acute diarrhea who were seen at the outpatient department of Songklanagarind Hospital between July 1991 and June 1992, 62 infants (31.3%) had carbohydrate intolerance, and 7 of the 62 (3.5%) also had acquired monosaccharide intolerance. The clinical characteristics that predicted infants with carbohydrate intolerance were : a low bodyweight relative to the length, dehydration (OR 4.55, 95% CI 1.1.5-17.9), the presence of mucus in diarrheal stools (OR 2.79, 95% CI 1.23-6.32) and rotavirus infection (OR 3.49, 95% CI 1.20-10.18).
Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health 1996 Dec
PMID:Incidence and risk factors for carbohydrate intolerance in Thai infants with acute diarrhea: an outpatient-based study. 925 85


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