Akademik

Dysentery
Inflammation of the intestine, often with pain, diarrhea, bloody stools, etc. It is usually caused by infestation of the bowel by an ameba. Dysentery can be fatal, usually due to severe dehydration. Treatment includes rapid rehydration, sometimes via IV, and medication. From the Greek “dys-“ meaning “abnormal or painful” + “enteron” meaning “intestine” = abnormal or painful intestine.
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A disease marked by frequent watery stools, often with blood and mucus, and characterized clinically by pain, tenesmus, fever, and dehydration. [G. dysenteria, fr. dys-, bad, + entera, bowels]
- amebic d. diarrhea resulting from ulcerative inflammation of the colon, caused chiefly by infection with Entamoeba histolytica; may be mild or severe and also may be associated with amebic infection of other organs.
- bacillary d. infection with Shigella dysenteriae, S. flexneri, or other organisms.
- balantidial d. a type of colitis resembling in many respects amebic d.; caused by the parasitic ciliate, Balantidium coli.
- bilharzial d. d. due to infection with Schistosoma mansoni, S. haematobium, or S. japonicum.
- fulminating d. SYN: malignant d..
- helminthic d. d. caused by infection with parasitic worms.
- malignant d. d. in which the symptoms are intensely acute, leading to prostration, collapse, and often death. SYN: fulminating d..
- viral d. profuse watery diarrhea thought to be caused by infection with a virus.

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dys·en·tery 'dis-ən-.ter-ē n, pl -ter·ies
1) a disease characterized by severe diarrhea with passage of mucus and blood and usu. caused by infection
2) DIARRHEA

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n.
an infection of the intestinal tract causing severe diarrhoea with blood and mucus. Amoebic dysentery (amoebiasis) is caused by the protozoan Entamoeba histolytica and results in ulceration of the intestines and occasionally in the formation of abscesses in the liver (amoebic or tropical abscesses), lungs, testes, or brain. The parasite is spread by food or water contaminated by infected faeces. Symptoms appear days or even years after infection and include diarrhoea, indigestion, loss of weight, and anaemia. Prolonged treatment with drugs, including metronidazole, is usually effective in treating the condition. Amoebic dysentery is mainly confined to tropical and subtropical countries.
Bacillary dysentery is caused by bacteria of the genus Shigella and is spread by contact with a patient or carrier or through food or water contaminated by their faeces. Epidemics are common in overcrowded insanitary conditions. Symptoms, which develop 1-6 days after infection, include diarrhoea, nausea, cramp, and fever and they persist for about a week. An attack may vary from mild diarrhoea to an acute infection causing serious dehydration and bleeding from the gut. In most cases, provided fluid losses are replaced, recovery occurs within 7-10 days; antibiotics may be given to eliminate the bacteria. Compare cholera.

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dys·en·tery (disґən-ter″e) [L. dysenteria, from Gr. dys- + enteron] any of various disorders marked by inflammation of the intestines, especially of the colon, and attended by pain in the abdomen, tenesmus, and diarrhea or frequent defecation containing blood and mucus. Causes include chemical irritants, bacteria, protozoa, or parasitic worms. dysenteric adj

Medical dictionary. 2011.