Gene/Protein
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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Primary intestinal lymphangiectasia
(
PIL
) is a rare disorder characterized by dilated intestinal lacteals resulting in lymph leakage into the small bowel lumen and responsible for protein-losing enteropathy leading to lymphopenia, hypoalbuminemia and hypogammaglobulinemia.
PIL
is generally diagnosed before 3 years of age but may be diagnosed in older patients. Prevalence is unknown. The main symptom is predominantly bilateral lower limb edema. Edema may be moderate to severe with anasarca and includes pleural effusion, pericarditis or chylous ascites. Fatigue,
abdominal pain
, weight loss, inability to gain weight, moderate diarrhea or fat-soluble vitamin deficiencies due to malabsorption may also be present. In some patients, limb lymphedema is associated with
PIL
and is difficult to distinguish lymphedema from edema. Exsudative enteropathy is confirmed by the elevated 24-h stool alpha1-antitrypsin clearance. Etiology remains unknown. Very rare familial cases of
PIL
have been reported. Diagnosis is confirmed by endoscopic observation of intestinal lymphangiectasia with the corresponding histology of intestinal biopsy specimens. Videocapsule endoscopy may be useful when endoscopic findings are not contributive. Differential diagnosis includes constrictive pericarditis, intestinal lymphoma, Whipple's disease, Crohn's disease, intestinal tuberculosis, sarcoidosis or systemic sclerosis. Several B-cell lymphomas confined to the gastrointestinal tract (stomach, jejunum, midgut, ileum) or with extra-intestinal localizations were reported in
PIL
patients. A low-fat diet associated with medium-chain triglyceride supplementation is the cornerstone of
PIL
medical management. The absence of fat in the diet prevents chyle engorgement of the intestinal lymphatic vessels thereby preventing their rupture with its ensuing lymph loss. Medium-chain triglycerides are absorbed directly into the portal venous circulation and avoid lacteal overloading. Other inconsistently effective treatments have been proposed for
PIL
patients, such as antiplasmin, octreotide or corticosteroids. Surgical small-bowel resection is useful in the rare cases with segmental and localized intestinal lymphangiectasia. The need for dietary control appears to be permanent, because clinical and biochemical findings reappear after low-fat diet withdrawal.
PIL
outcome may be severe even life-threatening when malignant complications or serous effusion(s) occur.
...
PMID:Primary intestinal lymphangiectasia (Waldmann's disease). 1829 65
Primary intestinal lymphangiectasia
is a rare cause of protein-losing enteropathy and usually presents with intermittent diarrhea or malnutrition. Diagnosis depends largely on its pathologic condition demonstrating greatly dilated lymphatics mainly in the lamina propria of the mucosa. We report a case of primary intestinal lymphangiectasia, of the diffuse type, presenting with
abdominal pain
and voluminous diarrhea in a previously healthy 8-year-old boy. He had periumbilical pain for 3 months before presentation. He was managed by segmental bowel resections and end-to-end anastomoses. The histopathologic condition of the resected small intestine showed lymphatic dilation limited mainly to the subserosa and mesentery but was not prominent in the mucosa.
Abdominal pain
and diarrhea subsided postoperatively. The present case is the fourth report describing a response to operative resection.
...
PMID:Primary intestinal lymphangiectasia successfully treated by segmental resections of small bowel. 1985 33
Primary intestinal lymphangiectasia
(
PIL
) is a rare disorder characterized by dilated intestinal lymphatics and the development of protein-losing enteropathy. Patients with
PIL
develop hypoalbuminemia, hypocalcemia, lymphopenia and hypogammaglobulinemia, and present with bilateral lower limb edema, fatigue,
abdominal pain
and diarrhea. Endoscopy reveals diffusely elongated, circumferential and polypoid mucosae covered with whitish enlarged villi, all of which indicate intestinal lymphangiectasia. Diagnosis is confirmed by characteristic tissue pathology, which includes dilated intestinal lymphatics with diffusely swollen mucosa and enlarged villi. The prevalence of
PIL
has increased since the introduction of capsule endoscopy. The etiology and prevalence of
PIL
remain unknown. Some studies have reported that several genes and regulatory molecules for lymphangiogenesis are related to
PIL
. We report the case of a patient with
PIL
involving the entire small bowel that was confirmed by capsule endoscopy and double-balloon enteroscopy-guided tissue pathology who carried a deletion on chromosome 4q25. The relationship between this deletion on chromosome 4 and
PIL
remains to be investigated.
...
PMID:Primary intestinal lymphangiectasia diagnosed by capsule endoscopy and double balloon enteroscopy. 2211 Aug 41
A 24-year-old woman with a medical history of chronic lower extremity oedema,
abdominal pain
, diarrhoea and recurrent pulmonary infections presented with sepsis from right lower extremity cellulitis. Blood cultures grew
Morganella morganii
Laboratory evaluation revealed lymphopaenia, hypogammaglobulinaemia, a low CD4+ T-cell count and nutritional deficiencies resulting from protein-losing enteropathy (PLE). CT showed small bowel wall thickening in the jejunum and ileum.
Primary intestinal lymphangiectasia
(
PIL
) was the likely diagnosis that explained her PLE and immunodeficiencies. Video capsule endoscopy is an important diagnostic tool for distal small bowel pathology and confirmed patchy areas of lymphangiectasia of the jejunum and ileum. Secondary causes of lymphangiectasia were ruled out. Clinically significant immunodeficiency from
PIL
has not been frequently documented, and this case adds to the literature of rare infections associated with
PIL
. Treatment with intravenous antibiotics resolved her septicaemia, while dietary modifications improved her oedema,
abdominal pain
and diarrhoea.
...
PMID:Primary intestinal lymphangiectasia diagnosed by video capsule endoscopy in a patient with immunodeficiency presenting with
Morganella morganii
bacteraemia. 3292 20