tetracycline and Anorexia

tetracycline has been researched along with Anorexia* in 3 studies

Other Studies

3 other study(ies) available for tetracycline and Anorexia

ArticleYear
Serological evidence of exposure to Ehrlichia species in dogs in Spain.
    Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2000, Volume: 916

    Topics: Animals; Anorexia; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Ehrlichiosis; Female; Imidocarb; Male; Phagocytosis; Spain; Tetracycline; Thrombocytopenia

2000
A case of ovine tick-borne fever in December in Norway.
    Acta veterinaria Scandinavica, 1999, Volume: 40, Issue:4

    Topics: Adrenal Cortex Hormones; Animals; Anorexia; Body Temperature; Ehrlichia; Ehrlichiosis; Fatal Outcome; Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Indirect; Ixodes; Leukocyte Count; Male; Norway; Parasitemia; Seasons; Sheep; Sheep Diseases; Tetracycline

1999
Factors responsible for weight loss in tropical sprue.
    The American journal of clinical nutrition, 1977, Volume: 30, Issue:10

    The respective roles of reduced dietary intake and malabsorption in the pathogenesis of weight loss in persons with chronic tropical sprue have been evaluated . Dietary intake was found to be significantly (P less than 0.001) less in a group of 45 patients with tropical sprue, all of whom had anorexia due to deficiency of folate and/or vitamin B12, than in a group of 51 healthy Puerto Ricans. Weight loss was equally prominent in those patients with tropical sprue who had normal absorption of fat and protein as in those who had excessive fecal loss and reduced absorption of these nutrients. Treatment of five sprue patients with folic acid or vitamin B12 for 2 weeks resulted in improved appetite and increased in dietary intake with weight gain in the absence of significant improvement in intestinal absorption. Treatment with oral tetracycline for a similar period of time in five other patients was not associated with vitamin repletion, return of appetite or weight gain. These observations indicate that reduced dietary intake resulting from anorexia caused by vitamin deficiency is a significant, and sometimes the most important, factor in the pathogenesis of weight loss in persons with chronic tropical sprue.

    Topics: Anorexia; Body Weight; Diet; Dietary Fats; Folic Acid; Humans; Intestinal Absorption; Lipid Metabolism; Nitrogen; Sprue, Tropical; Tetracycline; Vitamin B 12

1977