Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.2.1.108 (lactase)
2,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

7 infants, aged 5 weeks to 11 months, with clinically documented intolerance to cow's milk protein, chronic diarrhea, and failure to thrive, underwent small intestinal (peroal, suction) biopsy before and after withdrawal of milk proteins. Mucosal specimens were examined by light microscopy and assayed for disaccharidase activities. In all patients, moderate to severe mucosal changes were presented, associated with marked inflammation of lamina propria and damages to the brushborder. Disaccharidase activities (lactase, sucrase, maltase and palatinase) were markedly depressed in all. Follow-up biopsies were obtained in 6 infants, after 3-5 months on a milk-protein-free diet. At the time of the second biopsy, the disaccharidase activities had risen significantly and histologic improvement had occurred in each instance. In infancy, intestinal mucosal lesions due to intolerance to cow's milk protein are histologically indistinguishable from those seen in gluten-sensitive enteropathy and are associated with marked secondary disaccharidase deficiencies. Following therapy, the activity of the disaccharidases become normal or near normal prior to the complete morphologic recovery of the small intestinal mucosa.
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PMID:Disaccharidase deficiency in infants with cow's milk protein intolerance. Response to treatment. 62 28

Follow-up studies on 36 children, in whom celiac disease (gluten-sensitive enteropathy) was established by gluten challenge, were carried out after management on gluten-free diets for a mean of six years. Evaluations included measurement of height and weight, which for the group approximated normal distributions, and histologic examination of the duodenal or jejunal mucosa. Mucosal morphology was regarded as normal in 16, and there were minimal changes in 20. Epithelial cell height was within the normal range in all the children. Interepithelial lymphocytes were within normal range in the majority and lymphoid cells in the lamina propria were not different from those in control subjects. Mucosal lactase was significantly lower in patients than in control subjects in the duodenum and the jejunum, whereas sucrase and alkaline phosphatase values were significantly lower in the jejunum but not in the duodenum. Low content of mucosal lactase and increased numbers of interepithelial lymphocytes may be sensitive indicators of persisting ingestion of gluten in mucosa that is otherwise normal or approximately so in appearance.
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PMID:Mucosal recovery in treated childhood celiac disease (gluten-sensitive enteropathy). 95 66

Lactase deficiency, manifested clinically by lactose malabsorption, is often the only biochemical evidence of a residual disturbance of jejunal mucosal function after Escherichia coli enteropathy in the infant. Villous morphology is usually normal. A sustained depression of the processes of biochemical differentiation of lactase biosynthesis has been postulated to explain similar states of lactase deficiency, but a possible influence of altered epithelial cell turnover on the mucosal lactase levels has not been investigated. In ten infants with a residual lactose malabsorption, after E. coli infection, jejunal cell renewal activity and disaccharidase activities were studied by analysis of the exfoliated cells collected by lumenal perfusion. Significant increases in DNA and protein exfoliation and in the brush border activities of sucrase and lactase were observed during recovery from the malabsorptive disturbance. DNA and protein efflux increased almost linearly during a 20-day period. Lactase was initially four times more deficient than sucrase activity in the exfoliated cells. Both enzyme activities increased at almost identical rates. Therefore, it took longer for lactase activity to return to normal levels. The lactase/sucrase ratios approached normal at the end of the 20-day period. The changes in the exfoliating levels of the two enzymes, when analysed in relation to the increases in cell renewal activity, suggested a relationship between sucrase and lactase levels and cell age.
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PMID:Intestinal exfoliated cells in infant diarrhoea: changes in cell renewal and disaccharidase activities. 104 54

Data are presented on scanning electron microscopy (SEM) on small intestinal biopsies of children with chronic diarrhea. In particular, there were 230 patients aged 3 months to 13 years with the following diagnoses: chronic nonspecific diarrhea, cow's milk protein intolerance, soy protein intolerance, giardiasis, cystic fibrosis, gluten-sensitive enteropathy, isolated lactase deficiency, isolated sucrase-isomaltase lactase deficiency, microvillus inclusion disease, rotavirus enteritis, protracted diarrhea of infancy, chylomicron retention disease, visceral myopathy and villous asthenia. Examination of biopsied intestinal mucosa by SEM has yielded important new information and insights on structural pathology and ultrastructural topography. Many of the observed changes helped to better understand the pathophysiology of some of the diarrheal disorders. SEM was also able to detect new features such as mycoplasma-like microorganisms and the absence of the glycocalyx. To adequately assess small bowel mucosal pathology at the ultrastructural level, scanning electron microscopy is an indispensable tool.
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PMID:The scanning electron microscope: how valuable in the evaluation of small bowel mucosal pathology in chronic childhood diarrhea? 182 28

Clinical differences between the two human intestinal mucosal folate conjugases were assessed by measurement of their activities in normal individuals and in patients with chronic diarrhea of differing causes. Intracellular folate conjugase (ICFC) was 15-fold more active than brush border folate conjugase (BBFC) in jejunal mucosa from seven obese patients undergoing elective gastric bypass surgery. The activity of ICFC was similar among normal volunteers and patients with diarrhea of unknown origin (DUO), gluten-sensitive enteropathy (GSE), inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and the short bowel syndrome (IBD-SBS). By contrast, BBFC, sucrase, and lactase were decreased significantly in GSE, and BBFC was increased in IBD-SBS. The activity of BBFC correlated with lactase and with sucrase in the normal subjects and in patients with DUO, whereas no correlations were found with the activity of ICFC in any group. Our clinical studies confirm that ICFC and BBFC are different enzymes. ICFC is not affected by intestinal disease, whereas the activity of jejunal BBFC, like that of other brush border enzymes, is decreased by mucosal injury and is also capable of adapting to distal small intestinal disease or surgical resection.
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PMID:Clinical studies of intestinal folate conjugases. 308 71

Lifestyle and dietary patterns are in the process of rapid transformation in Soweto. Comparisons with whites indicate differences in bowel behaviour, lactase deficiency and breath methanes. The association between smoking pipe tobacco and cancer of the oesophagus is confirmed, but home-brew consumption has been found to be the major risk factor in this cancer. A recent swing to Western-type alcohol has led to the emergence of alcohol-induced pancreatitis in blacks. Urbanisation and westernisation have also affected the influence of the traditional healer and the incidence of duodenal ulcer disease. The fundamental environmental influence which determines non-infective large-bowel disease is diet. A dietary survey of Sowetans indicates that their present diet is low in fat and fibre. Despite the latter, appendicitis is still relatively uncommon. Other significant differences are observed in colorectal cancer and diverticular disease.
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PMID:The geography of chronic digestive disease in southern Africa. 313 86

To assess the course of recovery of gluten sensitive enteropathy in adults, histological and functional recovery was studied in 22 patients, aged 20-79 years. Biopsy specimens taken at the time of diagnosis were studied in 20; after adhering to a gluten free diet for nine to 19 (mean 14) months in 14; and after adhering to the same diet for 24-48 (mean 34) months in 10 patients. Histological recovery was assessed morphometrically in the proximal jejunum. Mucosal linings significantly improved over time, but did not completely return to normal with a gluten free diet: at diagnosis the surface: volume ratio was 22% of normal, increasing to 48% and 66% after nine to 19 and 24-48 months, respectively, of a gluten free diet. Disaccharidase activities progressively increased. After 24-48 months maltase, sucrase, and isomaltase had returned to normal in the proximal jejunum; they were still significantly decreased in the distal duodenum. Duodenal and jejunal lactase activities were both below normal after 24 to 48 months. It is concluded that recovery of the intestinal mucosa of adults with gluten sensitive enteropathy during a gluten free diet continues beyond nine to 19 months and is still incomplete after two to four years. The recovery of disaccharidase activities extends from the distal to the proximal part of the small intestine, and is aligned to histological recovery.
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PMID:Slow and incomplete histological and functional recovery in adult gluten sensitive enteropathy. 317 Jul 77

Fifty two children in whom coeliac disease was confirmed by persistent enteropathy while they were taking gluten were monitored to assess the effects of compliance with a gluten free diet (GFD). Between the ages of 17.8 and 18.5 years height (in 45 patients followed up for a mean of 14.9 years) and weight (in 43 followed up for a mean of 15.2 years) were significantly lower in those complying poorly with a GFD compared with those complying well. Of the 37 patients still attending the clinic after a mean of 25 years, having been followed up for a mean of 18.4 years, 16 who had complied well with the diet had normal or only slightly abnormal mucosal morphology whereas all 10 who had not complied had abnormal morphology. In these 10 lactase, sucrase, and alkaline phosphatase activities were significantly less than values in those who complied well. Mucosal sucrase and alkaline phosphatase activities in those who complied well were no different from those in a control population, whereas lactase activity was significantly lower. It is concluded that failure to comply with a GFD during childhood results in decreased adult stature and in persisting active enteropathy with depressed brush border enzyme activity.
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PMID:Compliance with gluten free diet in coeliac disease. 363 17

Food intolerant symptoms can have various causes, including enzyme deficiencies (of lactase or aldehyde dehydrogenase) and pharmacological effects (e.g., caffeine, salicylates). The irritable bowel syndrome can also be associated with intolerance to specific foods in some cases, but the mechanism is unclear. Immunological causes are less common but may explain the small bowel mucosal changes associated with gluten enteropathy, as well as the childhood enteropathy provoked by cow's milk or, rarely, by other foods. Food allergy of the more immediate and classical type is associated with reactions both within and outside the gastrointestinal tract. Where these include urticaria, asthma and eczema, immunoglobulin E antibodies are often demonstrable by skin or radioallergosorbent tests, but pseudo-allergic reactions can produce a similar clinical picture. Diagnosis of food intolerance depends on withdrawing the food concerned and assessing the response to a blind challenge. Objective ways of detecting subclinical reactions are also useful, including the detection of a mediator response involving prostaglandins, histamine or serotonin.
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PMID:Food intolerance. 392 73

Mucoid enteropathy was induced experimentally by ligation of the cecum, and the activities of mucosal disaccharidases and alkaline phosphatase were measured at different locations along the small intestine of the sick and control rabbits. In the duodenum of rabbits with mucoid enteropathy, the activity of acid beta-galactosidase II was elevated and hetero beta-galactosidase declined. In the jejunum, the activities of lactase, acid beta-galactosidase I and II, hetero beta-galactosidase, trehalase, sucrase and alkaline phosphatase were significantly lower in animals with mucoid enteropathy. In the ileum, acid beta-galactosidase II, hetero beta-galactosidase, maltase, trehalase, sucrase and alkaline phosphatase showed decreased activity in rabbits with mucoid enteropathy.
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PMID:Intestinal disaccharidase and alkaline phosphatase activities in experimental rabbit mucoid enteropathy. 409


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