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eRAM

encyclopedia of Rare Disease Annotation for Precision Medicine




Disease hyperthermia
Comorbidity C0017160|gastroenteritis
Sentences 10
PubMedID- 21550928 In ten patients (32%) reason for consultation and clinical early stage was a secretory gastroenteritis with fever and abdominal pain.
PubMedID- 21749188 Clinically, the infection can vary from asymptomatic and sub clinic forms, which are more common in older children and adults, to acute gastroenteritis with fever, vomiting and self-limiting watery diarrhea which persist for 3 to 8 days.
PubMedID- 21682863 Seven patients (28%) developed infections (one trachiobronchitis, one h1n1 virus infection of the upper respiratory tract, one gastroenteritis with fever, one soft tissue abscess, and three lower urinary tract infections), which led to a transient discontinuation of the immunosuppressive treatment.
PubMedID- 25752853 The emerging new variants of norovirus gii.4 caused a distinct clinical syndrome of acute gastroenteritis with severe fever and a high rate of intestinal haemorrhage in children.
PubMedID- 25685987 Non-typhoidal salmonella infection can cause gastroenteritis leading to diarrhoea, fever and vomiting [76] but in certain instances can lead to more serious conditions such bacteraemia, septic arthritis, pneumonia and meningitis.
PubMedID- 19875333 Severe gastroenteritis with secondary fever in a 10-month-old boy.
PubMedID- 20718189 Convulsion mostly occurred in mild gastroenteritis accompanied with fever and positive history of febrile convulsion in first-degree relatives.
PubMedID- 23988202 The infected dogs develop an acute gastroenteritis characterized by loss of appetite, vomiting, fever, diarrhea (from mucoid to haemorrhagic) and leucopenia[1].
PubMedID- 24649440 In conclusion, in our study, the prognosis of both febrile convulsions without acute gastroenteritis and of convulsions associated with acute gastroenteritis was favorable, with respect to the average number of days of hospitalization; however, there were differences in the distribution of the month of admission, the age of occurrence, the family history of febrile convulsions, the recurrence of convulsions during hospitalization, and the frequency of afebrile convulsions.
PubMedID- 21494634 Non-typhoidal salmonella (nts) generally produce a self-limited gastroenteritis (vomiting, fever and diarrhea) in healthy humans [2]–[4].

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