Etiology of Diarrhea Among Travelers and Foreign Residents in Nepal
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ID: 119655
1988
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Abstract
A bacterial pathogen was isolated from 47% of 328 expatriate patients with diarrhea seen at two medical clinics in Nepal in 1986. Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (24%), Shigella (14%), and Campylobacter species (9%) were isolated most frequently. Enteroinvasive and adherence factor-positive E coli were isolated from 2% and 1% of patients,...
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| Authors | David N. Taylor;Robin Houston;David R. Shlim;Manoon Bhaibulaya;Beth L. P. Ungar;Peter Echeverria; |
| Journal | JAMA |
| Year | 1988 |
| DOI |
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| Keywords |
National Center for Biotechnology Information
NCBI
NLM
MEDLINE
humans
pubmed abstract
nih
national institutes of health
national library of medicine
adult
Diarrhea / etiology*
Diarrhea / parasitology
travel*
time factors
rotavirus infections / epidemiology
diarrhea / microbiology
protozoan infections / epidemiology
bacterial infections / complications
seasons
p echeverria
bacterial infections / epidemiology
rotavirus infections / complications
pmid:3404637
d n taylor
r houston
nepal
protozoan infections / complications
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