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Query: UMLS:C0007570 (
celiac disease
)
13,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Gastric acid secretion in nineteen children with
celiac disease
remained almost unchanged and the level of fasting serum gastrin was comparable with that of a control group of the same age. The absorption of vitamin
B12
was significantly decreased, most clearly in the infants with
celiac disease
as compared with their controls. The serum
B12
level, however, was decreased only in the oldest children. The results suggest that the mucosal lesion in the small intestine is most extensive in the youngest children, but the absorption defect of vitamin
B12
becomes clinically significant only after a long duration of the disease and not in childhood.
...
PMID:Gastric function and absorption of vitamin B12 in children with celiac disease. 49 61
The diagnoses which may be arrived at by examination of peroral small bowel mucosal biopsy specimens are presented.
Celiac sprue
, unclassified sprue (refractory sprue), infectious gastroenterititis, stasis syndrome and kwashiorkor have a severe mucosal lesion. Other clinical conditions are required to establish the diagnosis in these diseases. A number of diseases have specific diagnostic features. Included are Whipple's disease, abetalipoproteinemia, collagenous sprue, primary intestinal lymphoma, eosinophilic gastroenteritis, giardiasis, coccidiosis, strongyloidiasis, lymphangiectasis and the intestinal immunodeficiency diseases. Mucosal abnormalities may be present in other diseases but the diagnoses are usually made on other criteria than small bowel biopsy. These include vitamin
B12
or folic acid deficiency, Crohn's disease, gastrinoma, acrodermatitis enteropathica, amyloidosis, chronic granulomatous disease, lipid storage diseases, histoplasmosis, capillariasis, cytomegalovirus infection, schistosomiasis and macroglobulinemia.
...
PMID:Histologic diagnosis of diseases of malabsorption. 51 56
Resection of the proximal small bowel is known to cause mucosal hyperplasia and enhanced absorption in the ileum of experimental animals, but similar adaptive changes had not previously been studied in man. Since intrinsic-factor-bound vitamin
B12
(IF-B12) absorption is confined to the ileum, as an index of ileal adaptation, we measured whole-body IF-58 Co
B12
absorption in 24 control subjects, in 4 patients after proximal small-bowel resection, and in 9 patients with adult
celiac disease
(where mucosal damage is often limited to the proximal intestine and spares the ileum). Control subjects absorbed 20.4% (+/- 1 SD 6.2%) of the administered 5-mug dose of vitamin
B12
, while the corresponding 7-day retention values in patients with proximal resection (mean 42.3%; range 32-61%) and in 2 of the 9
celiac
patients (44.1% and 54%, respectively), were above the normal range. The increased vitamin
B12
absorption in these patients suggest that functional adaptation also occurs in the ileum in man. The results also illustrate the application of a newly developed whole-body counting technique to study vitamin
B12
absorption in man.
...
PMID:Adaptive changes in vitamin B12 absorption in celiac disease and after proximal small-bowel resection in man. 109 99
In 57% of the patients (12 of 25) seen with
celiac sprue
, as shown by clinical course and small bowel biopsy, peripheral blood thrombocytosis was present (range: 350,000 to 815,000 platelets per mm(3); mean: 546,000 +/- 44,060 SE). After clinical and histological remission, the platelet counts in these patients fell significantly (range: 188,000 to 300,0000 platelets per mm(3); mean 252,750 +/- 13,211 SE). There was no correlation between thrombocytosis and serum iron, folate, or vitamin
B12
levels.
Celiac sprue
joins inflammatory bowel disease among gastrointestinal disorders as a consideration in the differential diagnosis of thrombocytosis. In these patients, thrombocytosis reflected active disease and was not present during remission. Evaluation of peripheral blood platelets may be useful in the assessment of patients with
celiac sprue
.
...
PMID:Thrombocytosis in patients with celiac sprue. 126 62
The fractional absorption of vitamin
B12
(FAB12) was measured by a double-isotope technique specially adapted for children. In six
celiac
children on a strict gluten-free diet and with a normal small intestinal biopsy, the FAB12 performed in the fasting patient averaged 30% (23-40%). After gluten challenge for a mean of 2 months (range 1-4), when mucosal damage was demonstrated by biopsy, the average fasting FAB12 in these patients decreased to 10% (0-17%) (p less than 0.05). However, when the FAB12 test was repeated by means of stimulation by a
B12
-free meal 1-3 weeks later, while the patients were still on a diet containing gluten, a significant increase was observed (mean 21%, range 14-27%) (p less than 0.05). In four of the six patients the
B12
absorption was further evaluated by repeating the FAB12 test by means of intravenous cholecystokinin (CCK) stimulation (n = 3) or by administration of exocrine pancreas enzyme supplementation (EPES) (n = 2) or cobinamide (n = 1). These tests all showed FAB12 values within the range of the meal-stimulated FAB12. Moreover, in eight gluten-free
celiac
children with normal biopsies, no difference was found between fasting and meal-stimulated FAB12 values. Therefore, it is likely that the early-onset
B12
malabsorption observed in the gluten-challenged
celiac
child with upper-small-intestinal mucosal damage is in part due to an insufficient stimulation of the exocrine pancreas when using the standard fasting
B12
absorption test.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The role of the exocrine pancreas in early-onset vitamin B12 malabsorption in gluten-challenged celiac children. 191 49
The mucosal surface pH of jejunal biopsy samples incubated in vitro in Krebs-phosphate buffer was measured. Biopsies from 7 healthy individuals or tropical sprue subjects in complete remission had a mean surface pH of 5.8 +/- 0.09, similar to values for normal Caucasian subjects living in the UK. The mean surface pH of biopsies from 20 sprue patients, 6.0 +/- 0.08, was significantly higher (P less than 0.05) than that of the control subjects.
Sprue
patients could be sub-divided into those with 2 or more abnormal results in 3 intestinal function tests, and those with one or no abnormal test. The 9 low scorers showed a mean surface pH of 5.75 +/- 0.06 resembling the control mean, whereas the 11 high scorers had a higher (P less than 0.01) mean surface pH of 6.17 +/- 0.08. Mucosal surface pH correlated directly with 3 d mean faecal fat excretion and inversely with xylose and vitamin
B12
absorption values but not with the nutritional indicators serum albumen, folate or blood haemoglobin levels. As in
coeliac disease
, mucosal surface pH in the jejunum is elevated above normal in tropical sprue and may reflect the extent to which normal ion transport processes are affected.
...
PMID:Jejunal surface pH measurements in tropical sprue. 260 96
The pathogenesis of malabsorption has been studied in 70 patients who presented over the age of 65 years and who were referred to a special investigative unit. Often more than one cause was apparent. Fourteen patients had pancreatic insufficiency, most of whom had no history of pain, alcoholism or gallstones. Twenty-three patients had the postgastrectomy syndrome or small-bowel diverticulosis or both. There were eight coeliacs aged 65-72 years at diagnosis. Fifteen patients had an anatomically normal small bowel; eight of these were over 80 years old, and 10 had vitamin B12 deficiency of whom five had confirmed pernicious anaemia. Enterobacterial overgrowth was a feature of all diagnostic groups except pancreatic and
coeliac disease
. Vitamin B12 deficiency may be an effect of malabsorption, but can also be a cause through impairment of enterocyte function. The association of pernicious anaemia and
B12
deficiency with otherwise unexplained malabsorption and bacterial overgrowth suggests that gastric atrophy is a major causal factor in this syndrome, combined in some cases with a 'vicious circle' of
B12
malabsorption and deficiency.
...
PMID:Causes of malabsorption in the elderly. 309 95
A diverse number of hematologic abnormalities may occur in association with gastrointestinal disease. For example, deficiencies of iron, folate, and vitamin
B12
often accompany and may be the first clue to diseases such as colon cancer,
celiac sprue
, and chronic gastritis, respectively. A compilation of the hematologic disorders associated with diseases of the gastrointestinal tract, liver, and pancreas is provided.
...
PMID:Hematologic manifestations of gastrointestinal disease. 330 21
A 24-year-old man with addisonian pernicious anemia, adult
celiac disease
and selective IgA deficiency is presented to emphasize the differential diagnosis of vitamin
B12
deficient megaloblastic anemia in association with small intestinal mucosal abnormalities and the relationships between immunoglobulin deficiency, pernicious anemia, and adult
celiac disease
.
...
PMID:Adult celiac disease (celiac sprue), pernicious anemia and IgA deficiency. Case report and review of the relationships between vitamin B12 deficiency, small intestinal mucosal disease and immunoglobulin deficiency. 373 60
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
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