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Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (
alkaline phosphatase
)
47,916
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We evaluated gastrointestinal absorption in six consecutive patients with metastatic serotonin-secreting carcinoid tumors. One patient had a consistent defect in fat absorption and two other patients malabsorbed fat during spontaneous or dopamine-induced exacerbation of the carcinoid syndrome. The
steatorrhea
of the patient with the persistent defect in fat absorption was reduced when tumor serotonin production was reduced by the tryptophan hydroxylase inhibitor parachlorophenylalanine. The six patients had normal hemoglobin levels and the serum concentration of the following urinary constituents was normal in most of the patients: albumin, carotene, 25-hydroxycalciferol, parathyroid hormone, calcitonin, calcium, phosphorous, osteogenous
alkaline phosphatase
, cholesterol, triglycerides, and serum lipoproteins. The excretion of the following urinary constituents was also normal in most of the patients: creatinine clearance, tubular reabsorption of phosphorous, calcium, D-xylose, cyclic 3'5' monophosphate and hydroxyproline. We conclude that patients with the carcinoid syndrome may have
steatorrhea
, and that their hyperserotoninemia plays a role in this process.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal and metabolic function in patients with the carcinoid syndrome. 19 79
The authors discuss the main features of the complex pathophysiology of patients subjected to duodenocephalopancreatectomy, and particularly the difficulties inherent in clinical assessment of the digestive and metabolic impairment consequent upon the duodeno-gastro-pancreatic mutilation. Out of a total of 57 cases of this description, they singled out for recheck 23 patients who had undergone duodenocephalopancreatectomy not less than six months and not more than seven years before (chronic pancreatitis, 11 cases; various malignancies of the periampullar area, 10 cases; Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, 1 case; retroperitoneal lymphoma, 1 case). Seventy-six per cent of patients who had been gainfully employed were able to resume their jobs after surgery.
Steatorrhea
, assessed in terms of fecal fats, was present in all cases; notwithstanding, 70% of the patients gained weight (average increase 7 kg). All patients were on enzyme replacement therapy. Only 4% developed diabetes, and none developed postoperative peptic ulcers. Conversely there was a high incidence (65%) of bone structure reshuffling, signally osteoporosis, probably imputable to
steatorrhea
and vitamin D malabsorption, plus the often associated increase of serum
alkaline phosphatase
activity.
...
PMID:[The biological results of duodenocephalopancreatectomy. Clinical evaluations based on a long-term follow-up]. 53 2
Digestive enzymatic activities (disaccharidases,
alkaline phosphatase
, peptide hydrolases) have been determined in the mucosa of 14 patients with chronic pancreatitis. All had an abnormal secretin-pancreozymin test. Four patients had insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, four a pathological glucose tolerance test. Nine patients had
steatorrhoea
. Maltase, sucrase, and
alkaline phosphatase
activity was significantly elevated in patients with exocrine pancreatic insufficiency, whereas those of lactase, trehalase, and peptide hydrolase were normal. Patients with
steatorrhoea
had higher maltase and sucrase activity than those without
steatorrhoea
, whereas decreased glucose tolerance had no effect on brush border enzymatic activity. It is suggested thatdecreased exocrine rather than decreased endocrine pancreatic function is responsible for the increase in intestinal disaccharidase and
alkaline phosphatase
activity, possible by the influence of pacreatic enzymes on the turnover of brush border enzymes from the luminal side of the mucosal membranes or by direct hormonal stimulation though cholecystokinin.
...
PMID:Influence of exocrine and endocrine pancreatic function on intestinal brush border enaymatic activities. 109 2
Gastrointestinal symptoms were present at the time of diagnosis in 81 (76%) of 107 patients with coeliac disease: 56% had diarrhoea/
steatorrhoea
, 32.7% abdominal pain and 15% constipation. Gastrointestinal symptoms were commonest in young adults (20-39 years) and less frequent in children (0-19 years). Anaemia, low serum levels of folic acid, albumin and calcium, and raised serum
alkaline phosphatase
may be of help in raising the index of diagnostic suspicion, but in over half of our patients with clinically and histologically active disease these values were within normal limits. In patients adhering to a gluten free diet remission of symptoms correlated well with histological response; the continuation of symptoms indicated a higher incidence of histological abnormality. No patient not complying to the diet had normal histology on repeat biopsy. Five patients died over the ten year period, one from a small bowel lymphoma.
...
PMID:Coeliac disease: clinical presentations, correlations of dietary compliance, symptomatic response and repeat biopsy findings. 148 2
The prevalence of biliary and hepatic diseases is increasing in patients with cystic fibrosis as more of them reach adult life. There is no effective treatment or method of preventing cholestasis in cystic fibrosis, although beneficial effects have been ascribed to the tertiary bile acid, ursodeoxycholate, in other forms of chronic cholestasis. We evaluated prospectively the effects of a six month course of ursodeoxycholate (15-20 mg/kg per day) in eight, mostly adult, patients with cystic fibrosis and chronic cholestasis. Bile acid treatment improved inflammatory activity (average decrease in alanine aminotransferase, 60%, p less than 0.005) and cholestasis (
alkaline phosphatase
, 47%; p less than 0.01) in all patients. Quantitative liver function, measured by 45 minute sulphobromophthalein retention and by the 14C-aminopyrine breath test, improved in all patients while galactose elimination capacity showed a slight decrease. Patients' nutritional state improved as evidenced by a 1.8 kg weight gain and an increase in muscle mass suggested by a 26% increase in 24 hour urinary creatinine excretion.
Steatorrhea
was not affected by bile acid treatment. Ursodeoxycholic acid may be beneficial in the treatment of chronic cholestasis in cystic fibrosis by improving liver function and also the patient's nutritional state.
...
PMID:Effects of ursodeoxycholic acid treatment on nutrition and liver function in patients with cystic fibrosis and longstanding cholestasis. 238 18
The hydrophilic bile acid ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) has recently been shown to improve indexes of liver function in adult patients with various liver diseases. The clinical and biochemical responses to UDCA administration (10 to 15 mg/kg body weight per day) were therefore investigated in nine patients with cystic fibrosis and evidence of liver disease. All patients were receiving pancreatic enzymes and taurine supplementation. Liver function tests were done and serum bile acid concentrations and biliary bile acid composition were determined before and during UDCA therapy; fat balance studies and fecal bile acid excretion were carried out before and 6 months after UDCA treatment. After 2 months of bile acid therapy, biliary bile acid composition was enriched in UDCA from approximately 5% before treatment to 25%, at the expense of cholic and chenodeoxycholic acids, thus making the pool more hydrophilic. This enrichment is lower than that reported for adults with chronic liver diseases. Serum concentrations of UDCA increased significantly but variably. UDCA became the predominant fecal bile acid excreted (12% to 67%), indicating a variable absorption of the administered bile acid. Liver function improved in all patients after 2 to 6 months of therapy, although the degree of improvement (aspartate aminotransferase, -34%; alanine aminotransferase, -41%; gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase, -41%
alkaline phosphatase
, -19%) was lower than that observed in adults with chronic liver diseases. Mean coefficient of fat absorption and growth rate were, on average, unaffected by UDCA therapy, although an improvement was noted for three patients with greater severity of
steatorrhea
. The study indicates that UDCA can be used safely in this patient population but that higher doses of UDCA may be of greater benefit in the treatment of the liver disease associated with cystic fibrosis.
...
PMID:Effects of ursodeoxycholic acid therapy for liver disease associated with cystic fibrosis. 239 10
To investigate the pathophysiology of
steatorrhea
in primary biliary cirrhosis, the severity of
steatorrhea
, small bowel histology and function, cholestasis, exocrine pancreatic secretion and liver histology were studied. Twenty-four primary biliary cirrhotic patients had a quantitative stool fat collection, serum bilirubin and
alkaline phosphatase
and liver biopsies. From this group, ten had further studies: a small bowel biopsy (n = 7); a D-xylose test (n = 9); measurement of pancreatiobiliary concentrations and outputs after intravenous cholecystokinin (n = 10); essential amino acid perfusion of the duodenum (n = 9), and eating a test meal (n = 7). D-xylose absorption was normal, and only one patient had a minimal small bowel mucosal abnormality. Pancreatic lipase outputs in response to cholecystokinin were low in two primary biliary cirrhotic patients, but were greater than 10% of normal. Postprandial lipase outputs were normal except in one patient who had abnormal duodenal acidification. Mean enzyme outputs in primary biliary cirrhotic patients were normal in response to essential amino acid perfusion; but 6 had low lipase and 5 had low trypsin outputs which were associated with decreased bile acid outputs (p less than 0.03). Severity of
steatorrhea
was associated with reduced bile acid outputs and concentrations (r = 0.82; p less than 0.0001), degree of cholestasis (serum bilirubin; r = 0.88; p less than 0.001) and advanced histologic stages (p less than 0.005). Severe intraluminal bile acid deficiency combined with a submaximal intraluminal stimulus (essential amino acids) may be associated with decreased exocrine pancreatic secretion in primary biliary cirrhosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pathogenesis of steatorrhea in primary biliary cirrhosis. 241 48
A case report is presented of a 43-year-old woman with generalized peliosis hepatitis that developed during longterm use of oral contraceptives (OCs). The patient had been in good health until the last 2 years when she began to experience vague epigastric pains and a feeling of abdominal distension. Several months prior to admission, she had started to complain of itching and fatigue. There was no history of dark urine, white stools, or hepatitis. On physical examination, no jaundice or cutaneous stigmata of chronic liver disease were observed. Laboratory studies showed a normal erythrocyte sedimentation rate and hematological blood count. A radionuclide study of the liver showed hepatomegaly; especially the left lobe was enlarged. A computerized tomographic scan of the liver showed multiple areas of decreased density in both of the enlarged lobes. There was no evidence of a tumor. Selective transfemoral angiography of the celiac artery also showed hepatic enlargement but no signs of a space-occupying lesion. At laparoscopy, the liver was grossly enlarged and had a lumpy appearance, but again there were no signs of a tumor. No evidence of veno-occlusive disease or hepatocellular adenoma was found. The diagnosis was peliosis hepatitis. The OCs were withdrawn, and the patient was discharged. Regular follow-up in the outpatient department showed no decrease in the size of the liver. The
alkaline phosphatase
level rose. The fatigue became worse, and cholestyramine was prescribed for progressive itching. In September 1980, the patient was admitted for reevaluation. A repeated CT scan and angiography of the liver again yielded no evidence of a tumor. Esophagoscopy showed the presence of varices grade 2. The liver at laparoscopy had the same appearance as it had in 1976. Histological examination of a biopsy specimen showed occasional dilated sinusoids and locally marked periportal and intralobular fibrosis. No regeneration nodules were found. The diagnosis was liver fibrosis. The patient's condition deteriorated gradually in the following years. She experienced increasing fatigue.
Steatorrhea
developed, and the patient lost weight. She needed increasing doses of cholestyramine and oral supplementation of vitamins A, D, and K. She was admitted for a 3rd time in February 1985. Esophagoscopy revealed varices grade 4. A CT scan of the liver showed no change. The patient successfully underwent an orthotopic liver transplantation in January 1987. The diagnosis of peliosis hepatis was well documented in this patient.
...
PMID:Generalized peliosis hepatis and cirrhosis after long-term use of oral contraceptives. 312 33
A syndrome of intrahepatic cholestasis leading to death in early childhood was studied in 16 Greenland Eskimo children. The pedigrees are compatible with autosomal recessive inheritance. Jaundice, bleeding, pruritus, malnutrition,
steatorrhoea
, osteodystrophy and dwarfism were typical clinical features. Eight had died between the ages of six weeks and three years due to bleeding or infections. Hyperbilirubinaemia, profound hypoprothrombinaemia, thrombocytosis and elevated
alkaline phosphatase
levels were evident. Serum calcium, phosphate and parathyroid hormone levels indicated a secondary hyperparathyroidism. Hepatic fibrosis developed with increasing age. Follow-up of the surviving patients was 4 to 30 months. The aetiology of the disease is unknown. The syndrome has some features in common with previously described patients with familial intrahepatic cholestasis. No specific treatment is available. Genetic counselling is essential.
...
PMID:Fatal familial cholestatic syndrome in Greenland Eskimo children. 356 58
Bilateral adrenalectomy produces a reduction in the
alkaline phosphatase
concentration in rat intestine, which is not prevented by the administration of saline, but is prevented by the administration of cortisone. The administration of A.C.T.H. to normal rats leads to a rise in intestinal alkaline phosphatase levels associated with a small increase in the weight of the adrenals, while the administration of hydrocortisone produces large increases in the enzyme, even with doses which cause significant hypoplasia of the adrenal glands. The significance of these findings in relation to mechanisms of fat absorption and the treatment of
steatorrhoea
is discussed.
...
PMID:Rgulation of intestinal alkaline phosphatase levels in the rat. Role of the adrenal cortex. 430 10
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