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)

Pancreatic function was determined (using the secretin-pancreozymin test) before the use of gluten-free diet in 22 patients with endemic (celiac) sprue. Water and bicarbonate secretion were within normal limits, if anything there was a trend to high-normal values. Remarkable and apparently characteristic for celiac sprue was the only slight contraction of the gallbladder after intravenous injection of submaximal doses of cholecystokinin-pancreozymin (CCK). Secretion of the 3 enzymes amylase, lipase and trypsin was decreased in about one third of cases, the difference relating both to the concentrations and the amount secreted, compared with normal control values was significant (P greater than 0.01). But in no case was the reduced enzyme secretion so marked that one would expect maldigestion. Multivariate non-linear discriminance analysis demonstrated that pancreatic secretion in sprue is quite distinct from that in healthy subjects and those with chronic pancreatitis. It is assumed that there is a pattern of exocrine pancreatic secretion typical for sprue.
...
PMID:[Pancreatic secretion in domestic sprue]. 257 24

Sixteen cases in which celiac plexus block with depot steroid was used to treat chronic pancreatitis pain were reviewed. Only 4 of 16 patients reported pain relief with the procedure. Of the 12 patients who did not obtain relief, narcotic dependence was present in 11 of 12. No patients in the "relief" group were narcotic dependent. Prior pancreatic surgery was present in 9 of the 12 patients without relief and in 1 of 4 patients with relief. It is postulated that refractory chronic pancreatitis pain may be an extreme form of what has been termed "abnormal illness behavior." Furthermore, these results underscore the poor results experienced using neural blockade for the relief of chronic pain when narcotic dependence is present.
...
PMID:Steroid celiac plexus block for chronic pancreatitis: results in 16 cases. 262 51

We report the case of a 60 year old lady suffering from celiac disease and autoimmune cirrhosis who developed exocrine pancreatic insufficiency with canalicular lesions consistent with chronic pancreatitis. Celiac disease is known to be associated with either pancreatic insufficiency or liver disease, but association of all three diseases has not yet been described. We suggest that chronic pancreatitis be added to the list of idiopathic inflammatory pancreatitis of possible autoimmune origin, enabling to explain the pathophysiology of all three disorders with one hypothesis.
...
PMID:[Celiac disease, autoimmune cirrhosis, chronic pancreatitis: apropos of a triple association]. 262 89

In a retrospective study, jejunal mucosal disaccharidase and alkaline phosphatase activities have been investigated in 40 controls and patients with proven celiac sprue (n = 26), lactase deficiency (n = 26), osteoporosis or osteomalacia (n = 16), chronic pancreatitis (n = 12), giardiasis (n = 7), or Crohn's disease (n = 7). Apart from a nonselective reduction of mucosal enzyme activities in the sprue syndrome and a selective reduction of lactase activity in the patients with primary lactase deficiency, assays of mucosal disaccharidases revealed only inconstant or slight deviations from the control group and were not of diagnostic significance for any of the above-mentioned disorders. Isolated forms of enzyme deficiencies other than lactase deficiency, such as sucrase-isomaltase or trehalase deficiency were not present among 168 investigations carried out from 1972-1982. It is concluded that assay of small intestinal disaccharidase or alkaline phosphatase activities does not expand the diagnostic impact of morphological examination of small bowel biopsy specimens and modern noninvasive methods for the detection of carbohydrate malabsorption. Thus, the method does not appear a necessary or relevant investigation in routine clinical practice.
...
PMID:Is the assay of disaccharidase activity in small bowel mucosal biopsy relevant for clinical gastroenterologists? 274 34

We report a case of subacute pancreatitis in a 26-year-old woman, who underwent partial pancreatectomy after a two-week history of abdominal pain. The patient had a long history of allergy. She did not show any well recognized cause of acute or chronic pancreatitis. This patient was thought to have eosinophilic pancreatitis because of the presence of a prominent eosinophilic infiltrate in the resected pancreas. Eosinophilic infiltration of the pancreas has been reported very rarely in the literature, and is usually associated with more generalized disease. In our case there was no extrapancreatic involvement, as shown by repeatedly normal blood eosinophil counts, and by histologically normal spleen, celiac lymph nodes, and gastroduodenal biopsies. We suggest that an allergic mechanism might be responsible for this patient's disease, based on past history of allergic manifestations and the important increase in her serum IgE.
...
PMID:[Eosinophilic pancreatitis: a rare manifestation of digestive allergy?]. 280 7

A patient with intractable abdominal pain due to chronic pancreatitis was successfully treated by direct electrical stimulation of the celiac plexus. The details of the procedure are presented. This simple innocuous technique could be of value in treating patients with pain due to chronic pancreatitis who would otherwise have a near normal life expectancy. Also, it can be used in patients suffering from cancer of the pancreas and upper abdominal viscera.
...
PMID:Electrical stimulation of the celiac plexus for pain relief in chronic pancreatitis. A clinical note. 287 14

Many approaches have been proposed to differentiate between steatorrhea due to pancreatic insufficiency and intestinal disease. Bo-Linn and Fordtran recently suggested that fecal fat concentration (FFC) is a useful screening test for this distinction. Our aim was to validate their result in a large group of patients. Fecal fat concentrations were calculated for 613 fecal fat tests in 538 patients. Included were 88 patients with pancreatic steatorrhea (13 pancreatic carcinoma, 6 cystic fibrosis, and 69 chronic pancreatitis) and 525 with nonpancreatic steatorrhea. The mean FFC of patients with pancreatic disease (15.0 +/- 1.9 g%, mean +/- SEM) was significantly higher than that of patients with other diseases causing malabsorption (8.9 +/- 0.3 g%, p less than 0.001). Forty-two percent of patients with pancreatic steatorrhea had an FFC below 10 g%. The overlapping of the FFC of steatorrhea due to pancreatic disease and that produced by celiac disease, gastric resection, and other conditions suggests that this approach does not differentiate between pancreatic and intestinal steatorrhea.
...
PMID:Fecal fat concentration in the differential diagnosis of steatorrhea. 291 27

The pain of chronic pancreatitis can be tremendously disabling. The pathogenesis of this pain is still poorly understood, but there is good evidence demonstrating an inverse relationship with the degree of pancreatic insufficiency. Pancreatic enzyme therapy of pain and celiac plexus blocks carry promise, but larger studies with these modalities are needed. Surgery for pain relief is the last resort and should be based on pancreatic duct anatomy.
...
PMID:Pain of chronic pancreatitis: etiology, natural history, therapy. 329 34

Nonucler dyspepsia lacks a clear definition, and probably conceals several entities under this heading. It seems appropriate to deal separately with symptoms likely to be elicited from the upper digestive tract. Therefore, we propose "epigastric distress syndrome" (EDS) as a designation for chronic or recurrent epigastric pain without any anatomical antecedents and without concomitant symptoms consistent with established criteria of the irritable bowel syndrome. In this study 185 dyspeptic patients with a tentative diagnosis of EDS, based on symptoms and negative upper endoscopy, underwent laboratory screening, peroral cholecystograms, ultrasound scanning of the liver, biliary tract, and pancreas, biopsies from the distal part of the duodenum, and acid secretory tests. There were very few pathological findings. Five patients had gallstones. No single case of chronic pancreatitis or celiac disease was disclosed. Thus, EDS seems to be a "safe" diagnosis, and it is not unreasonable to assume that it could represent a disease entity. Although many patients had symptoms closely similar to those in duodenal ulcer, the mean basal and maximal acid output in this patient category did not differ from that observed among healthy subjects.
...
PMID:The "epigastric distress syndrome". A possible disease entity identified by history and endoscopy in patients with nonulcer dyspepsia. 361 84

Splenic vein obstruction was found in three patients with chronic pancreatitis. All had suffered epigastric pain, but no specific findings which suggested obstruction of the splenic vein were evident on physical or laboratory examinations. Enlarged pancreatic contour with calculi and pseudocyst formation were observed by CAT scan in all three cases. Gastric varices were found in two patients who had episodes of gastric bleeding. The splenic vein was shown to be occluded in two patients in the venous phase of celiac angiography and was entirely nonvisualized by percutaneous portography in the third case. The first patient underwent elective surgery, while the second patient had emergency surgery due to intraabdominal abscess formation with gastric bleeding. The surgical procedure in both patients was splenectomy coupled with distal pancreatectomy. Thrombus formation was confirmed by venous dissection at surgery.
...
PMID:Splenic vein thrombosis as a consequence of chronic pancreatitis: a study of three cases. 378 30


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