sodium-bicarbonate and Escherichia-coli-Infections

sodium-bicarbonate has been researched along with Escherichia-coli-Infections* in 7 studies

Trials

2 trial(s) available for sodium-bicarbonate and Escherichia-coli-Infections

ArticleYear
Randomized control trials using a tablet formulation of hyperimmune bovine colostrum to prevent diarrhea caused by enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli in volunteers.
    Scandinavian journal of gastroenterology, 2011, Volume: 46, Issue:7-8

    Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) is the leading cause of travelers' diarrhea. The aim of this study was to investigate the ability of a powdered extract of hyperimmune bovine colostrum to protect against diarrhea in volunteers challenged with ETEC.. Tablets were manufactured from a colostrum extract from cattle immunized with 14 ETEC strains, including serogroup O78. Two separate randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials involving 90 healthy adult volunteers were performed to investigate the ability of different tablet formulations to protect against diarrhea following an oral challenge with an O78 ETEC strain.. The first study with 30 participants evaluated the efficacy of tablets, containing 400 mg of colostrum protein, taken thrice daily with bicarbonate buffer. This regimen conferred 90.9% protection against diarrhea in the group receiving the active preparation compared with the placebo group (p = 0.0005). The second study examined the efficacy of tablets containing 400 mg colostrum protein given with buffer (83.3% protection; p = 0.0004) or without buffer (76.7% protection; p = 0.007), and tablets containing 200 mg colostrum protein given without buffer (58.3% protection; p = 0.02), compared with placebo. The difference between buffered and unbuffered treatments was not significant (p > 0.1).. Active tablet formulations were significantly more effective than placebo in protecting volunteers against the development of diarrhea caused by ETEC. These results suggest that administration of a tablet formulation of hyperimmune bovine colostrum containing antibodies against ETEC strains may reduce the risk of travelers' diarrhea.

    Topics: Adult; Animals; Antibodies, Bacterial; Buffers; Cattle; Colostrum; Diarrhea; Double-Blind Method; Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Infections; Humans; Sodium Bicarbonate; Tablets

2011
Oral rehydration solution containing trisodium citrate for treating severe diarrhoea: controlled clinical trial.
    BMJ (Clinical research ed.), 1991, Jan-12, Volume: 302, Issue:6768

    Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Bicarbonates; Child; Cholera; Citrates; Citric Acid; Diarrhea; Double-Blind Method; Escherichia coli Infections; Fluid Therapy; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Rehydration Solutions; Sodium; Sodium Bicarbonate; Time Factors

1991

Other Studies

5 other study(ies) available for sodium-bicarbonate and Escherichia-coli-Infections

ArticleYear
Clinical, microbiological and histological findings in lambs affected by 'salivary abomasum disease'.
    The Veterinary record, 2013, Jan-26, Volume: 172, Issue:4

    'Salivary abomasum disease' is a common syndrome in Greece affecting lambs and kids from three to 17 days of age. In this case series, we present clinical and laboratory findings from 37 affected lambs presented alive and subsequently euthanased for welfare reasons and necropsied, and also from 24 other lambs submitted dead that were also necropsied. The clinical signs in the 37 lambs presented alive included lethargy (100 per cent), absence of sucking (83.8 per cent), weakness (37.8 per cent), abdominal distension (40.5 per cent) and increased frequency of urination (24.3 per cent). Diarrhoea was not observed in any affected lambs. At necropsy of these 37 lambs, the abomasum was distended with gas (70.3 per cent), saliva (43.2 per cent) along with mixed milk clots and gastric secretions; while multiple small mucosal and serosal haemorrhages with blood clots ('coffee grains') were recorded (91.9 per cent). Eight of 37 lambs that were examined alive, had elevated blood urea nitrogen concentrations (21.6 per cent). The pH of the abomasal contents ranged from 1.0 to 2.8; Escherichia coli was cultured from six of 37 (16.2 per cent) abomasal fluid samples. A mild to moderate inflammatory cell infiltrate was present in the mucosal lamina propria of 13 of 15 abomasal samples (86.6 per cent). Kidneys were paler than normal in 13 of the total 61 lambs necropsied (21.3 per cent); while acute tubular necrosis was evident on histopathological examination of 11 of 12 examined pale kidneys (91.6 per cent). The low abomasal pH and reported successful treatment with oral sodium bicarbonate suggest that metabolic acidosis may develop during the disease; however, further studies, including blood gas analysis, and determination of D- and L-lactic acid concentrations, are necessary to confirm this hypothesis.

    Topics: Abomasum; Acidosis; Animals; Animals, Newborn; Blood Gas Analysis; Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Infections; Female; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Male; Sheep; Sheep Diseases; Sodium Bicarbonate; Stomach Diseases

2013
Infection-induced lung injury is worsened after renal buffering of hypercapnic acidosis.
    Critical care medicine, 2009, Volume: 37, Issue:11

    Prolonged hypercapnia is commonly encountered during the treatment of acute respiratory distress syndrome and acute respiratory failure attributable to other causes with protective ventilation strategies. In these circumstances, compensatory renal buffering returns pH to normal establishing a condition of buffered hypercapnia. It is also common intensive care practice to correct the pH more rapidly using bicarbonate infusions. Although it is well-established that hypercapnic acidosis has potent anti-inflammatory and protective effects, the effect of buffered hypercapnia on acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome is unknown. We therefore wished to determine the effects of buffered hypercapnia on acute lung injury induced by endotoxin or Escherichia coli infection in vivo.. Prospective, randomized animal study.. University research laboratory.. Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats.. We established buffered hypercapnia by exposing rats to a hypercapnic environment for 3 days before the induction of lung injury. Buffered hypercapnia rats (initial pH >7.35, FiCO2 = 0.05) and normocapnic controls (initial pH >7.35, FiCO2 = 0.00) were then anesthetized, mechanically ventilated, and lung injury induced by intra-tracheal inoculation of endotoxin (series I) or Escherichia coli (series II).. Buffered hypercapnia significantly increased both endotoxin and Escherichia coli-induced lung injury when compared to normocapnic controls, as assessed by arterial oxygenation, lung compliance, pro-inflammatory pulmonary cytokine concentrations, and measurements of structural lung damage. In additional in vitro experiments buffered hypercapnia did not alter neutrophil phagocytosis ability but did impaired epithelial wound healing.. Our results demonstrate that infection-induced injury in vivo is worsened after renal buffering of hypercapnic acidosis independently of any changes in tidal volume. These findings have important implications for our understanding of the pathogenesis of infection-induced lung injury during the use protective ventilation strategies that permits buffered hypercapnia and during infective exacerbations of chronic lung diseases associated with sustained hypercapnia.

    Topics: Acidosis, Respiratory; Acute Lung Injury; Animals; Buffers; Endotoxins; Escherichia coli Infections; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Hypercapnia; In Vitro Techniques; Male; Neutrophils; Phagocytosis; Prospective Studies; Random Allocation; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Sodium Bicarbonate; Wound Healing

2009
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli protein secretion is induced in response to conditions similar to those in the gastrointestinal tract.
    Infection and immunity, 1997, Volume: 65, Issue:7

    The pathogenicity of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) is associated with the expression and secretion of specific bacterial factors. EspB is one such secreted protein which is required to trigger host signaling pathways resulting in effacement of microvilli and cytoskeletal rearrangements. These events presumably contribute to the ensuing diarrhea associated with EPEC infections. EPEC encounters several environmental changes and stimuli during its passage from the external environment into the host gastrointestinal tract. In this paper we show that the secretion of EspB is subject to environmental regulation, and maximal secretion occurs under conditions reminiscent of those in the gastrointestinal tract. Thus, secretion is maximal at 37 degrees C, pH 7, and physiological osmolarity. In addition, maximal secretion requires the presence of sodium bicarbonate and calcium and is stimulated by millimolar concentrations of Fe(NO3)3. The secretion of the four other EPEC-secreted proteins appears to be modulated in a manner similar to that of EspB. Our results also show that secretion is not dependent on CO2, as originally reported by Haigh et al. (FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 129: 63-67, 1995), but that CO2 more likely acts as a component of the medium buffering system, since CO2 dependence was abolished by the use of alternative buffers.

    Topics: Ammonium Chloride; Bacterial Proteins; Calcium; Carbon Dioxide; Digestive System; Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Infections; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; In Vitro Techniques; Osmolar Concentration; Sodium Bicarbonate; Temperature

1997
[Salmonella m'bandaka isolated in a nursery].
    Archives de l'Institut Pasteur d'Algerie. Institut Pasteur d'Algerie, 1992, Volume: 58

    A epidemic of enteric pathogens bacteria occurred in december 1989 and caused two deaths in a nursery. There were many investigations between december 1989 and september 1990 trying to clarify this epidemic context. A new serovar of Salmonella had for the first time been isolated from babies' feces in Algeria. Salmonella m'bandaka has been identified in more than 50% of analysis. During an hygienic investigation in this nursery the above Salmonella m'bandaka was isolated in a open physiologic solution flask.

    Topics: Algeria; Bicarbonates; Campylobacter Infections; Comorbidity; Cross Infection; Diarrhea, Infantile; Disease Outbreaks; Drug Contamination; Drug Resistance, Microbial; Escherichia coli Infections; Feces; Humans; Infant; Rotavirus Infections; Salmonella; Salmonella Infections; Sodium; Sodium Bicarbonate; Solutions

1992
Blood biochemical response to sodium bicarbonate infusion during sublethal endotoxemia in ponies.
    American journal of veterinary research, 1990, Volume: 51, Issue:9

    Hypertonic NaHCO3 infusion caused blood volume expansion, increased blood bicarbonate concentration, and delayed the onset of hypophosphatemia in ponies with endotoxemia. However, NaHCO3 infusion did not normalize blood pH, and it increased blood L-lactate concentration, and caused hypokalemia, hypernatremia, and hyperosmolality. The deleterious effects of NaHCO3 infusion in endotoxemia ponies outweighed the beneficial effects. The role of hypertonic NaHCO3 given IV for treatment of endotoxemia in equids must be reevaluated.

    Topics: Animals; Bicarbonates; Endotoxins; Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Infections; Female; Horse Diseases; Horses; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Infusions, Intravenous; Lactates; Lactic Acid; Male; Shock, Septic; Sodium; Sodium Bicarbonate

1990