* * *
An acute epidemic infectious disease caused by the bacterium Vibrio cholerae. A soluble toxin elaborated in the intestinal tract by the bacterium activates the adenylate cylase of the mucosa, causing active secretion of an isotonic fluid resulting in profuse watery diarrhea, extreme loss of fluid and electrolytes, and dehydration and collapse, but no gross morphologic change in the intestinal mucosa. SYN: Asiatic c.. [L. a bilious disease, fr. G. chole, bile]
- Asiatic c. SYN: c..
- c. infantum old term for a disease of infants, characterized by vomiting, profuse watery diarrhea, fever, prostration, and collapse.
- c. morbus old term for acute severe gastroenteritis of unknown etiology, marked by severe colic, vomiting, and diarrhea with watery stools; formerly common during hot weather.
- pancreatic c. SYN: diarrhea pancreatica.
- c. sicca an old term for a malignant form of disease seen during epidemics of Asiatic c. in which death occurs without diarrhea.
- typhoid c. old term for c. (2) with predominantly cerebral manifestations such as confusion or dementia.
* * *
chol·era 'käl-ə-rə n any of several diseases of humans and domestic animals usu. marked by severe gastrointestinal symptoms: as
a) an acute diarrheal disease caused by an enterotoxin produced by various strains of a comma-shaped gram-negative bacterium of the genus Vibrio (V. cholerae syn. V. comma) when it is present in large numbers in the proximal part of the human small intestine see ASIATIC CHOLERA
b) FOWL CHOLERA
c) HOG CHOLERA
chol·e·ra·ic .käl-ə-'rā-ik adj
* * *
n.
an acute infection of the small intestine by the bacterium Vibrio cholerae, which causes severe vomiting and diarrhoea (known as ricewater stools) leading to dehydration. The disease is contracted from food or drinking water contaminated by faeces from a patient. Cholera often occurs in epidemics; outbreaks are rare in good sanitary conditions. After an incubation period of 1-5 days symptoms commence suddenly; the resulting dehydration and the imbalance in the concentration of body fluids can cause death within 24 hours. Initial treatment involves replacing the fluid loss by oral rehydration therapy; tetracycline eradicates the bacteria and hastens recovery. The mortality rate in untreated cases is over 50%. Vaccination against cholera is effective for only 6-9 months.
* * *
chol·era (kolґər-ə) [Gr., from cholē bile] 1. an acute infectious, sometimes fulminant, enteritis endemic in India and Southeast Asia and periodically spreading in epidemics or pandemics to other warm regions of the world; it is spread by feces-contaminated water and food. The cause is a potent enterotoxin called a choleragen, elaborated by Vibrio cholerae, that acts on epithelial cells in the small intestine to cause copious secretion of isotonic fluid from the mucosal surface. Severe cases are marked by painless watery diarrhea called rice-water stools, which are diagnostic and result in massive fluid loss, saline depletion, acidosis, and shock that can be fatal. 2. any of several infections that resemble this disease, particularly in veterinary medicine, but are not caused by Vibrio cholerae. choleraic adjMedical dictionary. 2011.