Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.2.1.108 (
lactase
)
2,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Parietal measurements of pH values in patients with various intestinal diseases and in normal subjects have revealed that alkaline medium with gradual elevation of the values in the caudal direction is characteristics of the normal large intestine; acid pH values were registered in patients with
lactase
insufficiency, nonspecific ulcerative colitis, in contrast to those with post-dysentery
colitis
and tumors of the large intestine. Lactulose and sodium sulfate were found the factors that significantly influence the large intestine parietal pH values, the effects of wheat bran were lower; magnesium sulfate and sodium hydrocarbonate mineral water with medium mineral content had no effect on parietal pH values.
...
PMID:[The use of parietal pH-metry in the diagnosis of intestinal diseases]. 170 48
This review of the literature and current knowledge concerning a nutritional disorder of disaccharidase deficiency discusses the following topics: 1) a description of disorders of disaccharide digestion; 2) some historical perspective on the laboratory and bedside advances in the past 10 years that have helped define a group of these digestive disorders; 3) a classification of conditions causing disaccharide intolerance; and 4) a discussion of some of the specific clinical syndromes emphasizing nutritional consequences of these syndromes. The syndromes described include congenital
lactase
deficiency, acquired
lactase
deficiency in teenagers and adults, acquired generalized disaccharidase deficiency secondary to diffuse mucosal damage, acquired lactose intolerance secondary to alterations in the intestinal transit, sucrase-isomaltase deficiencies, and other disease associations connected with
lactase
deficiency such as
colitis
.
...
PMID:Disaccharidase deficiency. 488 29
Among 228 relatives of 101 gluten-sensitive patients, 13 anti-endomysium antibody (EmA) positive persons (7 children and 6 adults) were identified. In 12/13 cases jejunal biopsy confirmed severe villous atrophy consistent with celiac disease. In the single EmA positive sibling without villous atrophy the histology is thought to be influenced by a steroid treatment because of pulmonary disease. By routine EmA-testing 12 unexpected EmA positive patients were found out of 756 children with complaints and laboratory results otherwise not justifying jejunal biopsy at the first evaluation. Their initial diagnoses were: proteinuria,
colitis
, Crohn's disease, rickets, recurrent vomiting, resolved postinfectious
lactase
deficiency, "previously excluded" celiac disease. Severe villous atrophy could be demonstrated in all EmA positive patients subsequently. In further 204 EmA negative children the biopsy showed no atrophy. EmA positivity may reveal clinically not apparent severe villous atrophy emphasizing the role of a new non invasive and highly specific serological screening method for celiac disease.
...
PMID:[New cases of celiac disease detected by anti-endomysial antibody test in families of gluten-sensitive patients and among children examined for non-specific gastrointestinal complaints]. 841 43
This study aims to describe the morphological alterations in the small and large intestines as well as the expression of some enterocyte enzymes and carriers in a rat model of iodoacetamide-induced
colitis
. Biopsies from the large and small intestines were taken at 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16 days postinduction and studied by light microscopy. The expressions of
lactase
, sucrase, aminopeptidase, and Glut-5 in the jejunum were studied by immunohistochemistry. Gene expressions of enterocyte
lactase
and sucrase were determined by RT-PCR using specific oligonucleotides. Microscopic examination of the large intestines revealed manifestations concordant with inflammation. Such alterations peaked at 2 days, were maintained to a lesser extent for 4 days, regressed by 8 days, and healed by 16 days. In the jejunum, the expression of
lactase
, sucrase, and aminopeptidase decreased 2 days after
colitis
induction, and recovered 2 days later. Similarly, Glut-5 expression decreased transiently with partial recovery by day 8. Compared with sham, gene expression of jejunal brush border enzymes sucrase and
lactase
showed a 4-fold increase in
lactase
and a 9-fold increase in sucrase after 4 days. We conclude that
colitis
can induce significant functional abnormalities in distant noninflamed small bowel regions.
...
PMID:Morphological and biochemical alterations in the jejunum following iodoacetamide-induced colitis in rats. 1721 84
This study was aimed to evaluate the role of commensal Gram-negative bacterium Bacteroides ovatus in murine model of chronic intestinal inflammation. The attempt to induce chronic
colitis
was done in Bacteroides ovatus-monoassociated, germ-free and conventional mice either in immunocompetent (BALB/c) mice or in mice with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID), using 2.5 % dextran-sodium sulfate (DSS) in drinking water (7 days DSS, 7 days water, 7 days DSS). Conventional mice developed chronic
colitis
. Some of germ-free BALB/c and the majority of germ-free SCID mice did not survive the long-term treatment with DSS due to massive bleeding into the intestinal lumen. However, monocolonization of germ-free mice of both strains with Bacteroides ovatus prior to long-term treatment with DSS protected mice from bleeding, development of intestinal inflammation and precocious death. We observed that though DSS-treated Bacteroides ovatus-colonized SCID mice showed minor morphological changes in colon tissue, jejunal brush-border enzyme activities such as gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase,
lactase
and alkaline phosphatase were significantly reduced in comparison with DSS-untreated Bacteroides ovatus-colonized mice. This modulation of the enterocyte gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase localized to the brush border membrane has been described for the first time. This enzyme is known to reflect an imbalance between pro-oxidant and anti-oxidant mechanisms, which could be involved in protective effects of colonization of germ-free mice with Bacteroides ovatus against DSS injury.
...
PMID:Monocolonization with Bacteroides ovatus protects immunodeficient SCID mice from mortality in chronic intestinal inflammation caused by long-lasting dextran sodium sulfate treatment. 1819 84
Characterized by colonic mucosa intraepithelial lymphocytosis, lymphocytic
colitis
is primarily an entity presented in the middle-aged to elderly patient population. Very few large series of lymphocytic
colitis
of childhood occurrence are available in the medical literature. Ten cases each of lymphocytic
colitis
and of colonic lymphocytosis of other diagnosis, all with duodenal disaccharidases analysis data, were collected from the files of our institution. The electronic medical records were reviewed and multiple variables were analyzed. The ten patients with lymphocytic
colitis
presented with diarrhea. Of these, three had abdominal pain. The age range was 2-18 years. Nearly all patients were Caucasian (90%) and 70% were female. Endoscopically, most had normal appearing colonic mucosa. Significant past medical history, family medical history and associated comorbidities included celiac disease, Down syndrome, juvenile arthritis and other autoimmune diseases. Interestingly, the most revealing observation was that the majority of cases (80%) were associated with
lactase
deficiency and, for the most part, gastrointestinal symptoms improved simply by treatment with Lactaid or avoidance of dairy products. This association is statistically significant. Our clinicopathological study indicates that the typical pediatric patient is a female Caucasian. A large of portion of the patients had associated
lactase
deficiency and improved on Lactaid supplement alone.
...
PMID:Association of lymphocytic colitis and lactase deficiency in pediatric population. 2552 28