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Query: KEGG:D03348 (
Lactase
)
283
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
There is controversy both in regard to the severity of small bowel mucosal damage attributable to giardiasis and to the causal relationship of these changes to the associated
diarrhoea
. In this series of 17 consecutive patients with giardiasis, small bowel histology and
diarrhoea
were independently assessed and compared. Disaccharidase assays were performed in 16 of these patients and a repeat biopsy obtained in seven cases. On histological examination the villous architecture varied from normal to sub-total villous atrophy. When these changes were compared with the severity of
diarrhoea
, a direct correlation was obtained, the more severe symptoms being associated with the more severe villous changes. Repeat biopsy after treatment demonstrated improvement in the histology which correlated with improvement in
diarrhoea
.
Lactase
activity was low in all patients with moderate or severe
diarrhoea
as well as in some patients with mild
diarrhoea
, two of whom had normal histology. This series demonstrates the occurrence of a spectrum of mucosal changes in giardiasis and supports the concept that these changes mediate the
diarrhoea
associated with this gut parasite.
...
PMID:Histopathology in giardiasis: a correlation with diarrhoea. 10 99
Examinations of faeces (pH, Clinitest and Clinistix) are liable to contribute to the diagnosis of lactose malabsorption. To confirm the diagnosis the test is to be repeated while
Lactase
500 is added to the child's milk. The enzyme does not split the lactase into the two monosaccharides, thus eliminating the malabsorption. The new drug
Lactase
500 was used as a diagnostic parameter and for the treatment of lactose malabsorption in 20 infants. The effect on both groups was confirmed as mentioned by foreign authors. In addition to a very simple diagnostic method, which can be performed in the practitioner's office, there are two methods of treating lactose malabsorption: 1. feeding milk free of lactose, 2. feeding milk with an addition of
Lactase
500. As in an earlier publication we assumed that about 10 per cent of the population suffers from secondary malabsorption of lactose, it seems advisable to check with the help of the described to simple methods all children with chronic
diarrhoea
.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis and therapy of lactose malabsorption]. 84 87
Twenty-eight Sioux and 29 Saluteaux Indians from a southern and an isolated northern Manitoban community were screened for lactose malabsorption; 55 were also screened for sucrose tolerance. Sixty percent of the subjects were lactose malabsorbers; the incidence increased with age.
Lactase
deficiency appeared, on the average, between 8 and 15 years of age. About 45% of the subjects were lactose intolerant. Malabsorbers who did not regularly drink milk had the highest symptom scores. The northern subjects consumed significantly more lactose and sucrose than the southern subjects. Two Sioux children were sucrose malabsorbers. It was hypothesized that the significantly greater sucrose consumption by the Saulteaux subjects were responsible for their markedly higher blood glucose curve following the sucrose tolerance tests. Dietary sucrose increases jejunal sucrase activity and the intestinal transport of glucose and fructose. Three of eight children less than 4 years were lactose malabsorbers; hence, medical personnel treating noninjective
diarrhea
in Indian children should examine for lactase deficiency. It was recommended that vitamin D fortified milk supplements to Indian school children be continued and that the milk be treated so as to reduce abdominal symptoms in the intolerant individuals.
...
PMID:Disaccharide consumption and malabsorption in Canadian Indians. 85 12
Lactase
and cellobiase were detectable in the fetal intestine by the 3rd month of gestation, and although there was little change by the 9th month, maximal levels were reached at birth and steadily declined after 4 months. Conversely maltase, sucrase and trehalase were barely discernible in the fetus, maltase being present at low levels at birth, but all increased during the suckling period to attain adult levels by 7 months of age. Alkaline phosphatase activity matured earlier than did disaccharidase activity. Mucosal enzymes other than alkaline phosphatase were virtually absent from meconium and the large intestine. Continued ingestion of lactose could be detrimental in foals suffering from severe
diarrhoea
.
...
PMID:The development and distribution of mucosal enzymes in the small intestine of the fetus and young foal. 106 Aug 71
Brush border lactase, sucrase and glucoamylase activities were assessed in jejunal mucosal biopsy specimens from 34 children (median age 11 months; range 1.5-38) having protracted
diarrhoea
with failure to thrive and 8 well nourished children with normal jejunal mucosal histology (median age 10.2 months; range 2-37). All enzymes showed progressive decrease in activity which was directly in relation to increasing degree of mucosal injury (P less than 0.002).
Lactase
was significantly reduced even in patients with protracted
diarrhoea
and normal mucosa (P less than 0.05). Glucoamylase and sucrase were significantly reduced only in the presence of mucosal injury (P less than 0.01). Our data suggest that most children with protracted
diarrhoea
may not tolerate lactose containing feeds and may need lactose-free diets preferably based on starch. A small number of children with protracted
diarrhoea
, who have severe mucosal injury may not be able to handle even starch and may require diets based on short chain glucose polymers. The findings of this study, need to be corroborated with well-controlled metabolic balance studies.
...
PMID:Intestinal glucoamylase & other disaccharidases in children with protracted diarrhoea. 211 15
Lactase
deficient subjects, who form the bulk of the world population, absorb yogurt lactose because the bacteria used for fermentation produce beta-galactosidase. From a milk fermented by these bacteria and dried by a temperature-controlled process a power could be obtained which possess residual lactase activity but, unlike yogurt, does not need storage at low temperature. The lactose of this fermented powdered milk is perfectly absorbed, as proved by hydrogen respiratory tests performed in 35 lactose intolerant African subjects living in isolated villages. In 25 malnourished children under 3 years of age, this milk allowed renutrition without inducing
diarrhoea
--a result which could not have been obtained with ordinary milk in two-thirds of the cases. This type of food is potentially valuable to feed the large population of the third world.
...
PMID:[Use of a fermented powdered milk in malnourished or lactose intolerant children]. 213 60
1. Biochemical estimates of lactase, sucrase and maltase activities, carried out on intestinal biopsies appearing histologically normal, were compared with those obtained from children suffering from coeliac disease, cow's milk protein intolerance/postenteritis syndrome and the intractable
diarrhoea
syndrome of infancy.
Lactase
deficiency in these children was found to be more pronounced than sucrase or maltase deficiencies. 2. Quantitative cytochemical investigations showed characteristic disease-induced changes in the ability of enterocytes to express alpha- and beta-glucosidases, but not alkaline phosphatase activities, during migration along stunted villi. 3. Separate estimates of the time course describing hydrolase development in normal and coeliac tissue showed the initial rate of lactase appearance to be halved in coeliac patients, while that for alpha-glucosidases remained constant and that for alkaline phosphatase increased by a factor of four. Enteroblastic replacement of mature enterocytes cannot provide a general explanation for hydrolase deficiency in diseased intestine.
...
PMID:Selective alteration of brush-border hydrolases in intestinal diseases in childhood. 312 20
Lactose malabsorption is not a cause of
diarrhea
during phototherapy. Jaundiced neonates under phototherapy develop
diarrhea
or loose stools during the treatment. These phenomena were attributed to an induced lactase deficiency caused by bilirubin breakdown products. We investigated lactose malabsorption in 59 neonates--29 normals and 30 jaundiced under phototherapy. Five-hour hydrogen breath tests were performed. Preprandial and postprandial (at 30, 60, 120, 180, 240, and 300 min) expired air samples were analyzed for hydrogen. Ten controls and five jaundiced neonates had positive hydrogen breath tests. Eighteen controls and 16 neonates under phototherapy had preprandial hydrogen (concentrations above 5 ppm). In our hands, lactase deficiency and lactose malabsorption were not induced by phototherapy.
Lactase
deficiency is therefore not the cause of
diarrhea
associated with phototherapy.
...
PMID:Lactose malabsorption is not a cause of diarrhea during phototherapy. 398 20
H2 breath analysis was carried out to determine the prevalence of lactase deficiency in different tribes of the South African black population.
Lactase
deficiency was common (78%), despite the fact that 2 of the largest tribes (Zulu and Xhosa) are cattle herders and milk drinkers. This apparent anomaly is due to the consumption of a traditional fermented buttermilk (amasi) which has a low lactose content, instead of milk. The most important reason for lactase deficiency, however, is that the South African blacks originated in the West and Central African zone of nonmilking and took up dairying and milk use fairly recently. Thus they have not had enough time for genetic selection for lactase deficiency through life. Experience in Africa has shown that introducing skimmed milk causes
diarrhea
which may have catastrophic results in terms of mortality and morbidity. The implications inherent in this study are that it would be more prudent to supply milk to developing countries in the form of a fermented milk product such as buttermilk, prepared under traditional conditions and without refrigeration, since commercially prepared products do not have much less lactose and would also cause
diarrhea
in this population.
...
PMID:Lactase deficiency in the South African black population. 665 Apr 48
The prevalence of lactase deficiency in British adults is unknown. Examination of the distribution of lactase activities in single and multiple biopsies of jejunum indicated that 0.8 U/g wet weight was a suitable cut-off point to separate lactase deficient patients from others. One hundred and fifty white British adults were selected, none of whom had significant intestinal disease and all of whom had normal histopathology of a jejunal biopsy and normal activities of other disaccharidases measured in the biopsy. The prevalence of lactase deficiency in this group was 4.7%. In contrast, 15 of 20 non-white adults were lactase deficient.
Lactase
deficiency was found in only three of 36 patients investigated because of
diarrhoea
after gastric surgery, and in 16 of 200 patients with irritable bowel syndrome (8%). As the prevalence of lactase deficiency is no higher in irritable bowel syndrome than in 'normal' individuals, lactase deficiency clearly is not a predisposing factor for irritable bowel syndrome in white British adults although the two conditions may occasionally coexist.
...
PMID:Prevalence of lactase deficiency in British adults. 669 44
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