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Acute Infectious Diarrhea

Acute infectious diarrhea (AID) is one of the most common diseases in pediatric age with relevant burden both in high and in low-income countries. Thanks to their direct action on enterocyte functions and indirect actions on the mucosal and systemic immune system and on intestinal microbiome, probiotics are an ideal intervention to treat AID in ...
Poeta M.   +3 more
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Acute diarrhea.

American family physician, 2014
Acute diarrhea in adults is a common problem encountered by family physicians. The most common etiology is viral gastroenteritis, a self-limited disease. Increases in travel, comorbidities, and foodborne illness lead to more bacteria-related cases of acute diarrhea.
Wendy, Barr, Andrew, Smith
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Acute and Persistent Diarrhea

Pediatric Clinics of North America, 2009
Socially disadvantaged Indigenous infants and children living in western industrialized countries experience high rates of infectious diarrhea, no more so than Aboriginal children from remote and rural regions of Northern Australia. Diarrheal disease, poor nutrition, and intestinal enteropathy reflect household crowding, inadequate water and poor ...
Grimwood, Keith, Forbes, David A.
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ACUTE DIARRHEA IN INFANCY

Pediatrics, 1948
An analysis of acute diarrheas in infancy is made, based on the clinical study of two groups of patients: the first is made up of 1,505 infants who had 3,391 diarrheal episodes in a period of six years; and the second, of 199 infants who had a dysentery-like diarrhea in a period of one year's observation.
A, ARIZTIA, C, GARCES
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ASSESSING ACUTE DIARRHEA

Gastroenterology Nursing, 2020
Jayne Jennings, Dunlap   +1 more
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Acute Diarrhea

2018
Abstract This chapter guides the reader on the general principles, clinical manifestations, and management of acute diarrhea in hospitalized patients.
Sameer D. Saini, Akbar K. Waljee
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Management of Acute Diarrhea

Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology, 1983
Acute diarrhea in adults is usually caused by bacterial infection, parasitic infestation, food poisoning, or drugs. In this review, we summarize the pros and cons of medical therapies, point out certain areas of controversy, and propose a rationale for early intervention. Discussion is limited to the use of antidiarrheal agents and antibiotics in acute
Lawrence Johnson   +4 more
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Pathophysiology of acute diarrhea

The American Journal of Medicine, 1990
Diarrhea, a major health problem worldwide, is both a sign and a symptom. As a symptom, diarrhea has been described as an increase in stool frequency, an increase in stool volume, and/or a decrease in stool consistency. As a sign, diarrhea is characterized by an increase in stool water excretion to greater than 150 to 200 ml every 24 hours.
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Acute Diarrhea in Children

Pediatrics in Review, 1989
Acute diarrhea is a common problem in children. Understanding the different pathologic processes that cause diarrhea, and the agents that are associated with those processes, can aid the clinician in predicting the etiology of the diarrhea in an individual patient. Small bowel involvement, most commonly caused by Rotavirus, produces a high incidence of
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Treatment of Acute Diarrhea

Pediatric Clinics of North America, 1985
The application of new pathophysiologic information to the treatment of diarrheal diseases has greatly enhanced the outlook for millions of young patients in many developing countries. This article outlines the basis and nature of these therapeutic advances in the belief that they are relevant, not only in Asia and South America, but also throughout ...
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