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Gastroenteritis

Pediatrics In Review, 1994
Diarrheal disease is so common and so often short-lived and apparently benign that neither physicians nor parents may give it the attention it deserves. Unfortunately, this lack of concern plays an important role in the high mortality rate from diarrhea among children in developing countries.
R S, Northrup, T P, Flanigan
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Eosinophilic gastroenteritis

Current Gastroenterology Reports, 2002
Eosinophilic gastroenteritis is a rare gastrointestinal (GI) disorder of undetermined cause characterized by infiltration of eosinophils in the GI tract. Eosinophils accumulate in tissues and may release highly cytotoxic granular proteins, which cause severe tissue damage characteristic of eosinophilic gastroenteritis.
Nicholas J. Talley, Rahim Daneshjoo
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Gastroenteritis

2015
This chapter examines gastroenteritis, which, broadly defined, refers to any inflammatory process of the stomach or intestinal mucosal surface. However, the term usually refers to acute infectious diarrhea, a diarrheal syndrome of less than 2 weeks' duration, which may be accompanied by fever, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, dehydration, and weight ...
Douglas R. Morgan   +2 more
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Gastroenteritis in Infancy

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1957
This paper is concerned with a well-recognized disorder of infancy and childhood—especially infancy—and commonly called "gastroenteritis of infants." It is characterised chiefly by vomiting and diarrhea; fever is common, and there is a marked tendency to rapid dehydration and to dangerous alterations in the constituents of the blood.
M. M. Rogerson, R. J. Derham
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Viral gastroenteritis

Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases, 1997
A large number of viruses can be found in the human intestine. Some (bacteriophages) infect the bacteria present as normal flora and others use the gut as a portal of entry. This review examines the virology, pathogenesis, immunology, epidemiology, clinical features, treatment and prevention of the viral enteropathogens.
C A, Hart, N A, Cunliffe
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Norovirus gastroenteritis

Current Infectious Disease Reports, 2006
Recent epidemiologic studies have shown that norovirus is one of the most frequent causes of acute nonbacterial gastroenteritis. Reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction and nucleotide sequencing are the means by which the hundreds of norovirus strains have been identified, named, and classified into genogroups and genetic clusters.
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Rotavirus gastroenteritis

Advances in Therapy, 2005
Rotavirus is the single most important cause of severe, dehydrating gastroenteritis in infants and young children worldwide. Rotavirus gastroenteritis is associated with high morbidity in developed countries and significant mortality in developing countries. Virtually all children are infected with rotavirus by 3 years of age.
James D. Kellner   +2 more
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