Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0007570 (celiac disease)
13,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In an attempt to confirm the existence of latent coeliac disease--dose-related gluten-sensitive enteropathy--we have increased dietary gluten by 20 g daily for 2 weeks, in 6 healthy adults and 11 patients with dermatitis herpetiformis (DH). Six of the DH patients had entirely normal jejunal morphology on a normal diet. Jejunal biopsy specimens were taken before and at the end of the study. Measurements of crypts, villi, and crypt mitoses were made on microdissected specimens; disaccharidases were assayed, and intraepithelial lymphocyte counts performed. In one of the six adult volunteers, gluten loading produced diarrhoea and jejunal biopsy abnormalities. Five DH patients on a gluten-free diet had deterioration of biopsy pathology after the gluten challenge. Features suggestive of a latent gluten-sensitive enteropathy were found in one of the other six DH patients; he developed disaccharidase deficiencies and villus atrophy when 20 g gluten was added to his usual gluten-containing diet. This study supports previous suggestions that a gluten-sensitive enteropathy may be latent and dose-related.
...
PMID:Effects of additional dietary gluten on the small-intestinal mucosa of volunteers and of patients with dermatitis herpetiformis. 362 79

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.
...
PMID:Compliance with gluten free diet in coeliac disease. 363 17

A case of celiac disease presenting as an asymptomatic chronic persistent hepatitis in an 11-year-old girl is reported. Liver biopsy performed because of long-standing elevation of serum transaminase levels showed a mild portal fibrosis with mononuclear infiltrate. Immunofluorescence staining did not reveal deposits of immunoglobulins or complement in the liver specimen. Although the girl was totally asymptomatic, she had steatorrhea, a delayed bone age, and an abnormal D-xylose test. A jejunal biopsy showed villous atrophy and increased intraepithelial lymphocytes. On a gluten-free diet the level of transaminases fell to normal within 1 month and remained normal. According to biological remission, a second intestinal biopsy performed after 1 year of gluten-free diet revealed a normal intestinal mucosa. Our report suggests that an underlying chronic intestinal disorder, and particularly celiac disease, must be ruled out when evaluating a child with elevated levels of serum transaminase.
...
PMID:Celiac disease presenting as chronic hepatitis in a girl. 372 75

Subtotal villous atrophy in the proximal jejunum was observed in six patients affected by juvenile diabetes. Introduction of gluten free diet invariably led to clinical improvement, in the four patients in whom also rebiopsy was performed the jejunal mucosa exhibited improvement. In all cases gluten sensitive enteropathy was diagnosed after the onset of diabetes. Marked stunting in growth, strikingly labile carbohydrate tolerance, pronounced proneness to hypoglycaemia or development of Mauriac's syndrome were the symptoms pointing to coeliac disease. Protracted diarrhoea was seen only in two patients, pronounced deceleration in weight development occurred in none of the six children. In four patients out of six the presence of both HLA B8 and DR3 antigens was demonstrated, in a fifth patient only DR3 was present; this suggests a common genetic background of the simultaneous occurrence of the two disorders. Untreated coeliac disease aggravates preexisting diabetes. The importance of early recognition of latent coeliac disease is stressed.
...
PMID:Simultaneous occurrence of diabetes mellitus and coeliac disease. 387 51

Intestinal permeability was investigated in adult patients with atopic eczema by in vivo and in vitro techniques. Patients with symptoms of 'immediate' food allergy were specifically excluded. A 51Cr-labelled ethylenediaminetetraacetate absorption test was carried out in eighteen patients. Their mean (+/- s.d.) 24-hour urine excretion following oral administration of the test substance (2.1 +/- 0.9%) did not differ significantly from that of thirty-four normal controls (1.9 +/- 0.5%). Small bowel permeability was estimated directly in jejunal mucosal samples in ten patients with three permeability probes of differing molecular weight. Mucosal permeability did not differ significantly from that of fifteen control patients for any of the test substances. Two patients had abnormal results by both tests and in one this was due to coeliac disease. These results suggest that altered intestinal permeability is not important in the pathogenesis of eczema. Patients demonstrating increased intestinal permeability should undergo jejunal biopsy to exclude significant small bowel disease.
...
PMID:Intestinal permeability in patients with atopic eczema. 391 53

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.
...
PMID:Food intolerance. 392 73

Passive small intestinal permeability was investigated in 62 patients with atopic eczema, 29 with psoriasis and 18 with dermatitis herpetiformis, using the cellobiose/mannitol differential sugar absorption test. Urinary recovery of cellobiose and mannitol in patients with both psoriasis and eczema were similar to values in a control population, and were not affected by the extent or activity of skin disease. The cellobiose/mannitol recovery ratio was abnormally high in seven patients with eczema, six of whom underwent jejunal biopsy. Jejunal mucosal morphology was normal in five, and one patient was found to have coeliac disease. Cellobiose/mannitol recovery ratio was also abnormal in seven patients with psoriasis, and in 11 with dermatitis herpetiformis, seven of whom had a normal jejunal biopsy. These findings demonstrate that the passive permeability of the small intestine is normal in the majority of patients with atopic eczema and psoriasis. Increased absorption of macromolecules from the gut lumen cannot be ascribed to defective intestinal integrity, and is unlikely to be relevant to the pathogenesis of eczema. Abnormal intestinal permeability may be a more sensitive manifestation of gluten-sensitive enteropathy than jejunal biopsy in dermatitis herpetiformis.
...
PMID:Small intestinal permeability in dermatological disease. 393 45

Differential absorption of D-xylose and 3-O-methyl-D-glucose, and unmediated intestinal permeation of lactulose and L-rhamnose has been investigated in 14 patients with diarrhoea following tropical exposure and in 16 healthy control subjects. Five had malabsorption of fat, D-xylose and B12 ('tropical malabsorption' (TM) group), and that was absent or minimal in the others ('tropical diarrhoea' (TD) group). After combined ingestion of the four test sugars in iso-osmolar solution a marked depression in plasma D-xylose concentration (with a slow rise) occurred in all of the TM group; the TD group did not differ significantly from the controls. In contrast, 3-O-methyl-D-glucose absorption was similar in all three groups. Urine analysis demonstrated that intestinal permeation of lactulose was increased and that of rhamnose decreased in the TM group compared with the controls. Ingestion as a hyperosmotic solution further enhanced abnormal lactulose permeation in the TM group. Although some of the TD group showed one or the other of these changes, discrimination of the TM group from the TD and control groups was improved when results were expressed as lactulose/rhamnose differential permeation ratios, especially when using a hyperosmotic stress. Similar abnormalities have previously been demonstrated in untreated gluten-induced enteropathy (coeliac disease). The magnitude of the absorption defects demonstrated in TM are more severe than would be anticipated from the jejunal mucosal abnormalities alone; this suggests that there is probably significant pathology in the distal small intestine (including the ileum) in TM.
...
PMID:Intestinal absorption and unmediated permeation of sugars in post-infective tropical malabsorption (tropical sprue). 394 90

In 17 patients with coeliac disease the 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) concentration was measured in platelet-poor plasma (PPP) and in whole blood and compared with that of a control group of 30 healthy persons. The 5-HT level was determined by high-pressure liquid chromatography and electrochemical detection. In patients with coeliac disease the concentration of 5-HT in whole blood was elevated compared with the control group (p less than 0.001). The 5-HT level in PPP was significantly increased in patients with coeliac disease in whom the disease was untreated or treated with gluten-free diet for less than a year (p less than 0.01) but also compared with the patients with coeliac disease treated with a gluten-free diet for more than a year (p less than 0.01). In some untreated patients with newly diagnosed disease the 5-HT levels in PPP were markedly elevated and exceeded the levels ordinarily found in PPP in patients with carcinoid tumours. In these patients with coeliac disease the 5-HT concentration in PPP was reduced when the enteropathy was healed. There was no significant correlation between the 5-HT concentration in PPP versus whole blood in the different groups.
...
PMID:Increased levels of plasma 5-hydroxytryptamine in patients with coeliac disease. 400 41

We present two patients with biopsy proven primary intestinal lymphangiectasia in whom CT demonstrated diffuse nodular thickening of small bowel without adenopathy or hepatosplenomegaly. One patient had extensive ascites. Although the CT findings are not specific to lymphangiectasia, they may allow one to suggest the diagnosis in the patient with protein losing enteropathy and help distinguish it from inflammatory bowel disease, lymphoma, celiac disease, or Whipple disease.
...
PMID:Primary intestinal lymphangiectasia: clinical and CT findings. 401 33


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>