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Query: UMLS:C0007570 (
celiac disease
)
13,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Gamma-topography of the abdominal region and radiometry of duodenal aspirates were used for examination of 707 patients with different gastroenterological pathology using various modes of the administration of 75Se-methionine (intravenously, per os, into the duodenal and cecal lumens, intra-arterially in the
celiac
trunk and superior mesenteric artery). The RP administered intravenously was accumulated in health in the liver and pancreas. The drug fixation by the proximal part of the jejunum was also typical of
chronic pancreatitis
, the degree of fixation being well correlated with a period of disease. A jejunum image on gamma-topograms proved to be determined not by radioactivity of the jejunum in passage of labeled pancreatic juice but by extraction of the radionuclide from the blood by its wall. In transduodenal administration of the radionuclide its major part was rapidly absorbed and accumulated in the liver. At the same time a considerable part of the drug remained at the site of administration and retained there for several days. There was almost no absorption of the drug in the cecum and ascending colon. Like in the duodenum, the drug retained at the site of administration for a long time. Intestinal extravasal trophicity was assumed.
...
PMID:[Results of the clinical use of 75Se-methionine in gastroenterology with different modes of administration]. 395 13
Trypsin and chymotrypsin concentrations were determined in 180 spot stool specimens from 110 control patients in hospital. The lower limit of normality for each enzyme was placed at the 5% level: 95% of this population excreted feces containing more than 100 mug. of chymotrypsin and 30 mug. of trypsin per g. of feces. Chymotrypsin concentrations appeared to be a more reliable guide to pancreatic function than trypsin concentrations.Fecal chymotrypsin concentrations were subnormal in five patients with
chronic pancreatitis
, borderline in one patient with relapsing pancreatitis, subnormal in one patient after pancreatectomy, and subnormal in five of nine with carcinoma of the pancreas. Subnormal concentrations of fecal chymotrypsin were found in seven of 21 patients with chronic liver disease related to alcoholism, eight of 32 with a partial gastrectomy, three of 10 with adult
celiac disease
and five of 16 with psoriasis.It appears that the determination of fecal chymotrypsin concentrations provides a valuable screening test for pancreatic exocrine deficiency. However, normal results may be found in some patients with pancreatic disease and subnormal values may occur in some patients with other conditions.
...
PMID:Fecal chymotrypsin and trypsin determinations. 555 Mar 76
The gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP) is the main hormone of the incretin type acting on the entero-insular axis. It is released after fat, glucose or meal ingestion. The variations of this secretion are described in obesity and in some pancreatic and gastrointestinal diseases: it is increased in maturity onset diabetes mellitus, obesity or duodenal ulcer, variable according to the food taken and the severity of the pancreatic lesion in
chronic pancreatitis
and cystic fibrosis, normal in insulinoma and decreased in
celiac disease
. The impaired absorption of the food-stuffs and the defective feed-back regulation of GIP secretion by insulin are the major causes of these variations. To a lesser degree, gastric acid secretion, gastric emptying and vagal control may also influence GIP secretion.
...
PMID:Clinical aspects of GIP secretion. 628 Apr 23
A study was conducted to examine the contribution that occult malabsorption makes to malnutrition among elderly patients admitted to an acute geriatric ward. Malnutrition was defined by anthropometric, haematological, and biochemical measurements. Out of 490 patients, 55--many of whom had presented with non-gastrointestinal symptoms--were found to be malnourished. In 31 poor diet alone was probably the cause, but in the remaining 24 patients previously unrecognised malabsorption was detected. Of these patients, 17 were found to have bacterial contamination of the small bowel (nine with duodenojejunal diverticula, four after gastric surgery, and four diagnosed as contamination with "no sump"). In 10 patients contamination was confirmed by culture of intestinal juice: Escherichia coli was predominant in nine cases, and anaerobic organisms in one. Small bowel bacterial overgrowth without a "blind loop" or obvious underlying cause has not previously been fully proved in the elderly.
Coeliac disease
was detected in two patients, and
chronic pancreatitis
in two. Occult malabsorption is an important cause of malnutrition in the elderly. Such malnutrition not infrequently occurs in geriatric patients presenting to hospital with non-specific symptoms of physical deterioration.
...
PMID:Bacterial contamination of the small intestine is an important cause of occult malabsorption in the elderly. 641 29
Gastrointestinal hemorrhage secondary to hemosuccus pancreaticus is a rare condition that poses a significant diagnostic and therapeutic challenge. It is reported to occur most commonly in the setting of acute or
chronic pancreatitis
with rupture of pseudoaneurysms of the spleen or hepatic artery into the pancreatic duct. In this report three such cases have been reported. Abdominal ultrasound and CT scanning can noninvasively define pancreatic pseudocysts with a high degree of accuracy. Real-time ultrasonography may document a pulsatile pseudoaneurysm. Radionuclide arterial scanning, by demonstrating pooling of blood in the area of a pseudocyst, can point to the source of bleeding in patients with pancreatitis and gastrointestinal hemorrhage. Selective
celiac
angiography, however, is the only diagnostic test that can definitively outline a pseudoaneurysm and demonstrate its rupture into a pseudocyst or into the pancreatic duct. Pancreatic resection including excision of the pseudoaneurysm and pseudocyst (when present) is the treatment of choice. In cases where resection is not possible, ligation of the artery proximal and distal to the pseudoaneurysm and drainage of the pseudocyst into the gastrointestinal tract is an acceptable alternative procedure. Although intraarterial catheter embolization of the bleeding vessel can be a lifesaving procedure in these very sick patients, subsequent resection of the lesion is warranted as the definitive treatment.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal hemorrhage from pseudoaneurysms in pancreatic pseudocysts. 660 64
A comparative study using the oral test with chymotrypsin substrates p-(N-acetyl-L-tyrosyl)- and p-(N-benzoyl-L-tyrosyl) aminobenzoic acid (Ac-Tyr-PAB and Bz-Tyr-PAB) was carried out in 43 adults divided into four groups comprising controls (n = 18),
chronic pancreatitis
(n = 13), after acute pancreatitis (n = 7), and
celiac sprue
(n = 4), after separate administration of both derivatives and determination of PABA urinary output in 6 and 8 hours. Both derivatives were diagnostically comparable. The specificity of both derivatives in the investigated group in 6 and 8 hours was 100%, and test sensitivity in patients with
chronic pancreatitis
, was in 6 hours 90.9% for Ac-Tyr-PAB and 72.7% for Bz-Tyr-PAB, and 8 hours 81.8% for both compounds. Differentiation between the controls and the
chronic pancreatitis
group was better in Ac-Tyr-PAB, as adjudged by the sensitivity and significance of the Student t-test criterion.
...
PMID:Comparative study of the estimation of exocrine pancreatic function using p-(N-acetyl-L-tyrosyl)- and p-(N-benzoyl-L-tyrosyl)aminobenzoic acid. 660 11
A new test of intraluminal fat digestive activity is proposed for which a mixed triglyceride, 1,3-dioleyl-2-14C-decanoyl glycerol, was used. 29 normal subjects, 14 patients with proven
chronic pancreatitis
, 10 pancreatectomy, 12 villus atrophy and 8 bile acid-deficient patients were studied. The mean 14CO2 excretion in breath, expressed as the 10th-hour cumulative percentage of the administered dose, was 68.3% in the normal subjects, and only 32.9% in patients with pancreatic disease. There was almost no overlap between the normal subjects and the patients with proven organic disease. The test also allowed the detection of functional pancreatic insufficiency, due to impaired pancreatic stimulation in case of
gluten enteropathy
and severe malabsorption.
...
PMID:A mixed-triglyceride breath test for intraluminal fat digestive activity. 679 47
A number of human diseases with intestinal adaptation have been investigated, including acute infective diarrhoea, intestinal resection, jejuno-ileal bypass,
coeliac disease
, tropical sprue,
chronic pancreatitis
and cystic fibrosis. In all, the newly isolated hormone enteroglucagon appeared to be elevated in proportion to the degree of adaptation. In rats after gut resection and cold adaptation, enteroglucagon was also elevated and the degree of elevation correlated closely with the crypt cell production rate (CCPR). Chronic administration of somatostatin suppressed both enteroglucagon and CCPR, while bombesin stimulated both. A crude preparation of enteroglucagon was found to directly stimulate DNA synthesis in enterocyte cultures. It is thus concluded that, at present, the most likely candidate for the humoral component of intestinal adaptation is the hormonal peptide enteroglucagon.
...
PMID:The hormonal pattern of intestinal adaptation. A major role for enteroglucagon. 695 45
The coexistence of
nontropical sprue
and advanced pancreatic insufficiency is uncommon. The purposes of this report are to: (a) describe 3 patients with non-tropical spruc and severe pancreatic insufficiency, (b) determine the frequency, magnitude, and clinical importance of diminished pancreatic secretion in
nontropical sprue
, and (c) assess whether patients with pancreatic insufficency secondary to
chronic pancreatitis
or pancreatic cancer have jejunal mucosal histologic abnormalities. In each of 3 patients with
nontropical sprue
and associated severe exocrine pancreatic insufficiency, an optimal clinical response required the appropriate treatment of both causes of malabsorption. Of 31 subjects with proved
nontropical sprue
, cholecystokinin-stimulated duodenal tryptic activity or lipolytic activity (or both) was reduced in 13 (42%) but severely reduced in only the three case reports (10%). The morphologic structure of the small bowel was normal in 21 patients with primary pancreatic insufficiency secondary to
chronic pancreatitis
or pancreatic cancer. Mild-to-moderate exocrine pancreatic insufficiency is a frequent finding in untreated
nontropical sprue
, is presumably reversible, and rarely contributes to the development of steatorrhea. However, if patients with
nontropical sprue
fail to respond to a gluten-free diet, coexistent severe pancreatic insufficiency is a possible cause for treatment failure.
...
PMID:Exocrine pancreatic insufficiency in celiac sprue: a cause of treatment failure. 735 Dec 87
The
celiac
plexus block has been "rediscovered" by the modern multidisciplinary pain clinic. Local anesthetic blocks aid in diagnosing unusual syndromes of abdominal pain. Neurolytic blocks are important in the management of intractable pain from abdominal cancer. Therapeutic use of
celiac
plexus block in managing the pain of
chronic pancreatitis
has been expanded by the use of intraplexus steroids. This treatment carries less morbidity than surgical interventions and affords long-term pain relief.
...
PMID:Celiac plexus block: diagnostic and therapeutic applications in abdominal pain. 743 43
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