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Query: UMLS:C0007570 (
celiac disease
)
13,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two hundred and ninety four duodenal and jejunal mucosal biopsy specimens from patients with
coeliac disease
, treated and untreated, and other conditions were examined histologically and by histochemical staining for five peptidase and three disaccharidase enzymes to determine profiles of activity. Suppression of activity paralleled the histology with the following enzymes:
lactase
, trehalase, brush border endopeptidase, dipeptidyl peptidase II and isomaltase.
Lactase
, trehalase, and brush border endopeptidase were specifically suppressed in untreated
coeliac disease
and were diagnostically useful. Examination of a combination of enzymes is recommended.
...
PMID:Brush border enzymes in coeliac disease: histochemical evaluation. 218 3
110 children suffering from malabsorption underwent several biopsies of the gut to confirm
coeliac disease
(CD) following the ESPGAN criteria. We studied the values for alkaline phosphatase (AP) in the intestinal mucosa after gluten challenge. In 42 patients the after challenge biopsy was normal, thus excluding
coeliac disease
. In 68 children the mucosa was severely damaged confirming CD. In all biopsy specimens
lactase
, invertase, maltase and alkaline phosphatase were measured. We found a good correlation between PA values and severity of mucosal damage, showing that measurement of PA in the mucosa is helpful in assessing the degree of mucosal atrophy in children suffering from malabsorption.
...
PMID:[Alkaline phosphatase in the intestinal mucosa of children with the malabsorption syndrome]. 250 30
We have estimated lactose absorption indirectly by the breath H test to see if disaccharide exclusion is necessary for untreated
celiac
children. Lactose at 2 g/kg body weight (maximum 50 g) was administered to 42 infants and children (ranging in age from 9 months to 12 years) with flat small intestinal mucosa. Later, different amounts of lactose were given to determine the quantities tolerated and absorbed. One hundred percent of patients expired hydrogen more than 20 ppm over the baseline after an oral lactose load of 2 g/kg (maximum 50 g). Thirty-eight percent of them did not tolerate this quantity. Thirty-seven subjects aged 0-6 years absorbed and tolerated 0.5-1.5 g/kg (5-12.5 g total), and five patients aged 6-12 years absorbed and tolerated 0.5-0.6 g/kg (12-16.2 g total). We conclude that in many subjects with untreated
celiac disease
,
lactase
activity is sufficient for absorption and tolerance of the amount of lactose present in 250-300 ml cow's milk. Because of lactose's nutritional value, it should not be excluded unless necessary.
...
PMID:Extent of lactose absorption in children with active celiac disease. 261 14
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
The relationship between lactose hydrolysis and absorption of released glucose was investigated by determining the kinetics of lactose digestion by jejunal biopsies incubated in vitro.
Lactase
activity in intact biopsies correlated with conventional assay of tissue homogenates (r = 0.85, p less than 0.001), and glucose uptake from 28 mM lactose was directly proportional to
lactase
activity (r = 0.95, p less than 0.001) in 21 subjects with normal
lactase
levels, six with hypolactasia (primary or secondary to
coeliac disease
) and two with lactose intolerance but normal
lactase
activity. Kinetic analysis at 0.56-56 mM lactose in five normal subjects showed saturable kinetics for hydrolysis (app Km = 33.9 +/- 2.2 mM; app Vmax = 26.5 +/- 1.1 nmol/min/mg dry weight) but glucose uptake could be fitted to a model either of saturable uptake (app Kt = 47.2 +/- 0.3 mM; app Jmax = 14.1 +/- 0.2 nmol/min/mg) or saturable uptake plus a linear component (app Kt = 21.3 +/- 1.15; app Jmax = 4.59 +/- 0.12; app Kd = 0.093 +/- 0.010 nmol/min/mg/mM). The proportion of glucose taken into the tissue did not significantly exceed 50% of the total released at any lactose concentration suggesting the lack of an efficient capture mechanism for the released glucose. The results suggest that lactose hydrolysis is the rate limiting step in the overall absorption of glucose from lactose in vitro, and that the relationship between hydrolysis and absorption is the same in normal subjects and in hypolactasic subjects.
...
PMID:Lactose digestion by human jejunal biopsies: the relationship between hydrolysis and absorption. 308 46
Changes in intestinal permeability and lactose hydrolysis have been investigated in three adults and fifteen infants with acute rotaviral gastroenteritis by differential sugar absorption. The method involves chromatographic measurement of urinary lactose, lactulose and L-rhamnose excretion following combined ingestion in an iso-osmolar test solution. All patients had abnormal intestinal permeability indicated by raised urine lactulose/L-rhamnose excretion, ratio of percentages recovered in 5 h, of 0.462 (0.100-1.227) mean and range, compared with 0.027 (0.008-0.052) for healthy controls (P less than 0.001). Ten patients also had urinary lactose/lactulose excretion ratios raised above the normal range (0.014-0.41, mean 0.258) during their acute illness, indicating impaired intestinal lactose hydrolysis. Both indices had become normal 4 weeks after the acute illness, serial investigation of five patients showing that improvement was complete much earlier. Except for the short duration these changes are similar to those associated with villous atrophy in
coeliac disease
. The test procedure was verified with respect to intestinal lactose hydrolysis by demonstrating a linear relationship between lactose/lactulose excretion and log jejunal mucosal
lactase
activity by in vitro assay (R2 = 0.95) in a further group of subjects. Differential lactose/lactulose/L-rhamnose absorption provides a non-invasive and sensitive index of small intestinal integrity of value for the interpretation of prolonged or otherwise complicated enteritis and the distinction of primary secondary intestinal
lactase
deficiency.
...
PMID:Intestinal permeability and lactose hydrolysis in human rotaviral gastroenteritis assessed simultaneously by non-invasive differential sugar permeation. 308 18
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
Fifty-one adult patients with
coeliac disease
, verified by a proximal small-intestinal biopsy, were investigated. Before treatment with a gluten-free and low-lactose diet 52% showed a slight rise in blood glucose during the lactose tolerance test. Seventy-nine per cent of these patients had watery stools, and 88% had three or more bowel movements a day--statistically significantly different from the coeliac patients with a normal lactose tolerance test. After treatment 12% had a flat lactose tolerance curve. Half of them (6%) had specific
lactase
deficiency. This is approximately the incidence of lactose malabsorption in the general Danish population. The small-intestinal disaccharidases and alkaline phosphatase levels were severely depressed before treatment. After treatment the activities increased, but not to normal. We conclude that lactose malabsorption is a clinically important condition in many patients with untreated
coeliac disease
, giving rise to more frequent and more watery stools. In well-treated
coeliac disease
lactose malabsorption is not commoner than in the general population. The lactose activity in a proximal intestinal biopsy specimen was found to be an unreliable indicator of lactose malabsorption in
coeliac disease
.
...
PMID:Incidence and clinical significance of lactose malabsorption in adult coeliac disease. 313 38
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
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
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