Sequential changes in small intestinal structure and function during rotavirus infection in neonatal rats.
TL;DR: Infection causes a reversible flat mucosa resulting from enterocyte loss associated with a net secretory state for water and impaired sodium absorption as a functional correlate, which may have relevance for the pathogenesis of human rotavirus infection.
read more
Abstract: Rotavirus infection is the most common cause of acute diarrhoea in children worldwide. The structural and functional consequences of mammalian rotavirus infection in the small intestine have been incompletely studied and the mechanism of enterocyte damage poorly defined. This study used a neonatal rat model of group B rotavirus infection to study the natural history, clinical features, and the structural and functional consequences of infection in the small intestine. Group B rotavirus infection in eight day old neonatal rats produced diarrhoea by 24-36 hours, which was accompanied by weight loss during the early stages of infection. By seven days the diarrhoea had ceased and body weight was similar to noninfected controls. Rotavirus could be recovered in faeces from 24-72 hours. Light microscopy and morphometry confirmed reduction in villous height in both jejunum and ileum, with a reduction in total mucosal thickness indicating true flat mucosa. Increase in crypt depth followed villous shortening and continued as villous height progressively increased between 96-168 hours. Steady state perfusion of the entire small intestine with a plasma electrolyte solution confirmed the presence of a net secretory state for water between 12-48 hours, with a parallel reduction in sodium absorption. Group B rotavirus infection produces a self limiting acute diarrhoeal illness in neonatal rats similar to human rotavirus infection. Infection causes a reversible flat mucosa resulting from enterocyte loss associated with a net secretory state for water and impaired sodium absorption as a functional correlate. These findings may have relevance for the pathogenesis of human rotavirus infection.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Postinfectious Irritable Bowel Syndrome
Robin C. Spiller,Klara Garsed +1 more
TL;DR: The prognosis for patients with PI-IBS is somewhat better than for those with unselected IBS, but PI- IBS can still take years to resolve.
1K
Viruses causing gastroenteritis.
TL;DR: The future development of a safe and highly effective vaccine against rotavirus could prevent, at least, cases of severe diarrhea and reduce mortality from this disease.
420
Natural Pathogens of Laboratory Mice, Rats, and Rabbits and Their Effects on Research
TL;DR: Investigators using mice, rats, and rabbits in biomedical experimentation should be aware of the profound effects that many of the natural pathogens of these laboratory animals may alter host physiology, rendering the host unsuitable for many experimental uses.
399
Rome Foundation Working Team Report on Post-Infection Irritable Bowel Syndrome
Giovanni Barbara,Madhusudan Grover,Premysl Bercik,Maura Corsetti,Uday C Ghoshal,Lena Öhman,Mirjana Rajilić-Stojanović +6 more
TL;DR: An algorithm for diagnosis and treatment of PI-IBS is presented, based on clinical presentation and potential disease mechanisms, and a consensus-based treatment algorithm is presented based on team consensus is presented.
233
Pathogenesis of rotavirus diarrhea.
Ove Lundgren,Lennart Svensson +1 more
TL;DR: This review is mainly devoted to the effects of Rotavirus on intestinal epithelial transport and to the pathophysiological mechanisms proposed to underlie the intestinal fluid secretion caused by the virus.
225
References
Virus particles in epithelial cells of duodenal mucosa from children with acute non-bacterial gastroenteritis.
TL;DR: Electron microscopy of duodenal mucosa from nine children with acute non-bacterial gastroenteritis revealed virus particles in epithelial cells from six patients, believed to have been an important cause of sporadic gastroEnteritis in children in Melbourne during the 3 months of the survey.
994
Waterborne outbreak of rotavirus diarrhoea in adults in china caused by a novel rotavirus
Hung Tao,Wang Changan,Fang Zhaoying,Chou Zinyi,Chang Xuejian,Liong Xiaoquang,Chen Guangmu,Yao Henli,Chao Tungxin,Ye Weiwe,Den Shuasen,Chang Weicheng +11 more
TL;DR: During two epidemics of acute diarrhoea in China in late 1982/early 1983, more than 12 000 adults in two coal mining districts were affected, and the virus isolated from stool samples resembled a rotavirus morphologically and lacked the group antigen shared by known rotaviruses.
234
Structural and functional abnormalities of the small intestine in infants and young children with rotavirus enteritis.
G. P. Davidson,Graeme L. Barnes +1 more
TL;DR: The study clearly shows that rotavirus can cause a marked structural and functional lesion in the upper small intestine which is rapidly reversible.
175
Rotavirus infections of neonates
TL;DR: Persisting endemic rotavirus infection is apparently common in hospital nurseries in Sydney and the virus is probably transmitted by environmental spread from neonate to neonate.
135
•Journal Article
Pathogenesis of porcine rotaviral infection in experimentally inoculated gnotobiotic pigs.
TL;DR: Immunofluorescent microscopy methods demonstrated that the principal site of rotaviral replication was the villous columnar epithelial cells in the small intestine, and villous atrophy was the consistent lesion observed in pigs with clinical signs of rotviral infection.
118