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Diarrhea Etiology in a Pediatric Emergency Department: A Case Control Study
by
Tarr, Phillip I.
, Shaikh, Nurmohammad
, Stapp, Jenny R.
, Qin, Xuan
, Hutter, Carolyn M.
, Stevens, Harold J.
, Klein, Eileen J.
, Wood, Kelly M.
, Jones, Robert
, Denno, Donna M.
, Hoffman, Valerie
, Mooney, Jody C.
in
and Commentaries
/ ARTICLES AND COMMENTARIES
/ Astrovirus
/ Bacterial Infections - epidemiology
/ Bacterial Infections - microbiology
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ Campylobacter
/ Case-Control Studies
/ Child, Preschool
/ Childhood
/ Children
/ Clostridium difficile
/ Cytotoxicity
/ Diarrhea
/ Diarrhea - epidemiology
/ Diarrhea - etiology
/ E coli
/ Emergency medical care
/ Emergency Service, Hospital - statistics & numerical data
/ Escherichia coli
/ Escherichia coli O157
/ Etiology
/ Feces - microbiology
/ Feces - parasitology
/ Feces - virology
/ Female
/ Gastroenterology. Liver. Pancreas. Abdomen
/ Humans
/ Infant
/ Infectious diseases
/ Male
/ Medical sciences
/ Norovirus
/ Other diseases. Semiology
/ Parasites
/ Parasitic Diseases - epidemiology
/ Parasitic Diseases - parasitology
/ Pathogens
/ Pediatrics
/ Polymerase Chain Reaction
/ Prospective Studies
/ Rotavirus
/ Salmonella
/ Shigella
/ Stomach. Duodenum. Small intestine. Colon. Rectum. Anus
/ Toxins
/ Vibrio
/ Virus Diseases - epidemiology
/ Virus Diseases - virology
/ Washington - epidemiology
2012
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Diarrhea Etiology in a Pediatric Emergency Department: A Case Control Study
by
Tarr, Phillip I.
, Shaikh, Nurmohammad
, Stapp, Jenny R.
, Qin, Xuan
, Hutter, Carolyn M.
, Stevens, Harold J.
, Klein, Eileen J.
, Wood, Kelly M.
, Jones, Robert
, Denno, Donna M.
, Hoffman, Valerie
, Mooney, Jody C.
in
and Commentaries
/ ARTICLES AND COMMENTARIES
/ Astrovirus
/ Bacterial Infections - epidemiology
/ Bacterial Infections - microbiology
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ Campylobacter
/ Case-Control Studies
/ Child, Preschool
/ Childhood
/ Children
/ Clostridium difficile
/ Cytotoxicity
/ Diarrhea
/ Diarrhea - epidemiology
/ Diarrhea - etiology
/ E coli
/ Emergency medical care
/ Emergency Service, Hospital - statistics & numerical data
/ Escherichia coli
/ Escherichia coli O157
/ Etiology
/ Feces - microbiology
/ Feces - parasitology
/ Feces - virology
/ Female
/ Gastroenterology. Liver. Pancreas. Abdomen
/ Humans
/ Infant
/ Infectious diseases
/ Male
/ Medical sciences
/ Norovirus
/ Other diseases. Semiology
/ Parasites
/ Parasitic Diseases - epidemiology
/ Parasitic Diseases - parasitology
/ Pathogens
/ Pediatrics
/ Polymerase Chain Reaction
/ Prospective Studies
/ Rotavirus
/ Salmonella
/ Shigella
/ Stomach. Duodenum. Small intestine. Colon. Rectum. Anus
/ Toxins
/ Vibrio
/ Virus Diseases - epidemiology
/ Virus Diseases - virology
/ Washington - epidemiology
2012
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Diarrhea Etiology in a Pediatric Emergency Department: A Case Control Study
by
Tarr, Phillip I.
, Shaikh, Nurmohammad
, Stapp, Jenny R.
, Qin, Xuan
, Hutter, Carolyn M.
, Stevens, Harold J.
, Klein, Eileen J.
, Wood, Kelly M.
, Jones, Robert
, Denno, Donna M.
, Hoffman, Valerie
, Mooney, Jody C.
in
and Commentaries
/ ARTICLES AND COMMENTARIES
/ Astrovirus
/ Bacterial Infections - epidemiology
/ Bacterial Infections - microbiology
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ Campylobacter
/ Case-Control Studies
/ Child, Preschool
/ Childhood
/ Children
/ Clostridium difficile
/ Cytotoxicity
/ Diarrhea
/ Diarrhea - epidemiology
/ Diarrhea - etiology
/ E coli
/ Emergency medical care
/ Emergency Service, Hospital - statistics & numerical data
/ Escherichia coli
/ Escherichia coli O157
/ Etiology
/ Feces - microbiology
/ Feces - parasitology
/ Feces - virology
/ Female
/ Gastroenterology. Liver. Pancreas. Abdomen
/ Humans
/ Infant
/ Infectious diseases
/ Male
/ Medical sciences
/ Norovirus
/ Other diseases. Semiology
/ Parasites
/ Parasitic Diseases - epidemiology
/ Parasitic Diseases - parasitology
/ Pathogens
/ Pediatrics
/ Polymerase Chain Reaction
/ Prospective Studies
/ Rotavirus
/ Salmonella
/ Shigella
/ Stomach. Duodenum. Small intestine. Colon. Rectum. Anus
/ Toxins
/ Vibrio
/ Virus Diseases - epidemiology
/ Virus Diseases - virology
/ Washington - epidemiology
2012
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Diarrhea Etiology in a Pediatric Emergency Department: A Case Control Study
Journal Article
Diarrhea Etiology in a Pediatric Emergency Department: A Case Control Study
2012
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Overview
Background. The etiology of childhood diarrhea is frequently unknown. Methods. We sought Aeromonas, Campylobacter, Escherichia coli O157:H7, Pleisiomonas shigelloides, Salmonella, Shigella, Vibrio, and Yersinia (by culture), adenoviruses, astroviruses, noroviruses, rotavirus, and Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC; by enzyme immunoassay), Clostridium difficile (by cytotoxicity), parasites (by microscopy), and enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC; by polymerase chain reaction [PCR] analysis) in the stools of 254 children with diarrhea presenting to a pediatric emergency facility. Age- and geographic-matched community controls without diarrhea (n = 452) were similarly studied, except bacterial cultures of the stool were limited only to cases. Results. Twenty-nine (11.4%) case stools contained 13 Salmonella, 10 STEC (6 O157:H7 and 4 non-O157:H7 serotypes), 5 Campylobacter, and 2 Shigella. PCR-defined EAEC were present more often in case (3.2%) specimens than in control (0.9%) specimens (adjusted odds ratio [OR], 3.9; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.1–13.7), and their adherence phenotypes were variable. Rotavirus, astrovirus, and adenovirus were more common among cases than controls, but both groups contained noroviruses and C. difficile at similar rates. PCR evidence of hypervirulent C. difficile was found in case and control stools; parasites were much more common in control specimens. Conclusions. EAEC are associated with childhood diarrhea in Seattle, but the optimal way to identify these agents warrants determination. Children without diarrhea harbor diarrheagenic pathogens, including hypervirulent C. difficile. Our data support the importance of taking into account host susceptibility, microbial density, and organism virulence traits in future case-control studies, not merely categorizing candidate pathogens as being present or absent.
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Subject
/ Bacterial Infections - epidemiology
/ Bacterial Infections - microbiology
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ Children
/ Diarrhea
/ E coli
/ Emergency Service, Hospital - statistics & numerical data
/ Etiology
/ Female
/ Gastroenterology. Liver. Pancreas. Abdomen
/ Humans
/ Infant
/ Male
/ Parasitic Diseases - epidemiology
/ Parasitic Diseases - parasitology
/ Shigella
/ Stomach. Duodenum. Small intestine. Colon. Rectum. Anus
/ Toxins
/ Vibrio
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