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  2. Scombroid food poisoning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scombroid_food_poisoning

    Scombroid food poisoning, also known as simply scombroid, is a foodborne illness that typically results from eating spoiled fish. [2] [4] Symptoms may include flushed skin, sweating, headache, itchiness, blurred vision, abdominal cramps and diarrhea.

  3. Dropsy in fish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dropsy_in_fish

    However, it is standard practice to quarantine sick fish to prevent spreading the underlying cause to the other fish in the tank community in case the disease causing dropsy is contagious. [1] However, this quarantine is only effective when the disease is caught early. Traditionally, when fish would exhibit dropsy, it was advised to “destroy ...

  4. Aquarium granuloma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquarium_granuloma

    [6] [10] Antibiotic treatment ranged from 1–25 months with a median treatment time of 3.5 months. Since M. marinum has a high tendency for multi-drug resistance, treatment by one particular drug will not be effective. [4] Often, up to six different antimicrobial regimes may be needed before the infection responds to a particular drug combination.

  5. Antimicrobials in aquaculture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antimicrobials_in_aquaculture

    Sometimes the antibiotics are used to treat diseases, but more commonly antibiotics are used to prevent diseases by treating the water or fish before disease occurs. [3] While this prophylactic method of preventing disease is profitable because it prevents loss and allows fish to grow more quickly, there are several downsides.

  6. Gastroenteritis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gastroenteritis

    Antimotility medication has a theoretical risk of causing complications, and although clinical experience has shown this to be unlikely, [43] these drugs are discouraged in people with bloody diarrhea or diarrhea that is complicated by fever. [77] Loperamide, an opioid analogue, is commonly used for the symptomatic treatment of diarrhea. [78]

  7. Intestinal parasite infection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intestinal_parasite_infection

    Drugs are frequently used to kill parasites in the host. In earlier times, turpentine was often used for this, but modern drugs do not poison intestinal worms directly. Rather, anthelmintic drugs now inhibit an enzyme that is necessary for the worm to make the substance that prevents the worm from being digested. [citation needed]

  8. Bloating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloating

    Abdominal bloating (or simply bloating) is a short-term disease that affects the gastrointestinal tract. [1] [2] Bloating is generally characterized by an excess buildup of gas, air or fluids in the stomach. A person may have feelings of tightness, pressure or fullness in the stomach; it may or may not be accompanied by a visibly distended ...

  9. Neutropenic enterocolitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutropenic_enterocolitis

    The condition is usually caused by Gram-positive enteric commensal bacteria of the gut (). Clostridioides difficile is a species of Gram-positive bacteria that commonly causes severe diarrhea and other intestinal diseases when competing bacteria are wiped out by antibiotics, causing pseudomembranous colitis, whereas Clostridium septicum is responsible for most cases of neutropenic enterocolitis.