Inflammatory events that are associated with laminitis include sepsis, endotoxemia, retained placenta, carbohydrate overload ( excessive grain or pasture ), enterocolitis, pleuropneumonia, and contact with black walnut shavings.
32.
"' Enterocolitis "'or "'coloenteritis "'is an inflammation of the digestive tract, involving enteritis of the small intestine and colitis of the colon.
33.
While as many as 15 percent of neonatal intensive-care patients develop necrotizing enterocolitis, Sward says, fewer than 2 percent of those patients who start life on breast milk develop the deadly disease.
34.
The anticancer drug methotrexate causes severe enterocolitis in high doses . " L . reuteri " greatly mitigates the symptoms of methotrexate-induced enterocolitis in rats, one of which is bacterial translocation.
35.
The anticancer drug methotrexate causes severe enterocolitis in high doses . " L . reuteri " greatly mitigates the symptoms of methotrexate-induced enterocolitis in rats, one of which is bacterial translocation.
36.
In it, the authors claimed to have identified a new syndrome they called autistic enterocolitis, raising the possibility of a link between a novel form of bowel disease, autism, and the MMR vaccine.
37.
They survived a bowel operation soon after birth and were doing well until they developed a rare bowel infection, neo-natal necrotizing enterocolitis, which affected their hearts, lungs and breathing systems, doctors said.
38.
Despite others describing common bowel features, there have been no peer reviewed studies yet published, as of 2006, corroborating the existence of " autistic enterocolitis "; other studies have explicitly refuted its existence.
39.
However, the concept of " autistic enterocolitis " has not been accepted in the medical community due to lack of rigorous studies confirming the condition, as many studies purportedly showing this diagnosis have been marred by numerous methodological faults.
40.
His cause of death was listed in the camp records as " enterocolitis ", a catch-all term that covered, among other things, dysentery and cholera, both of which were common causes of death in the camps.