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Query: UMLS:C0009319 (
colitis
)
19,384
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The course of 86 children with Crohn's disease was examined during a 10-year period between 1966 and 1976. Patients were classified according to the initial site of disease. Ileocolitis was the most (52%) and
colitis
the least (9%) common form of disease with diffuse small bowel or ileal disease each comprising nearly 20% of the study group. These figures show a reversal from those of a previous decade when 42% of the patients had only terminal ileal disease and 17% had ileocolitis. Children with ileocolitis had the highest number of extracolonic manifestations and operations and required steroid therapy the longest. Those with only small
bowel disease
(with the exception of duodenal involvement) had fewer extraintestinal symptoms and operations and showed a consistently good response to medical treatment.
...
PMID:Prognosis in children with Crohn's disease. 2 21
A 5-year-old cat with clinical
colitis
had histiocytic inflammation of colonic mucosa. Light and electron microscopy demonstrated bacilli, 0.7 x 3.0 micrometers, in various stages of degradation within macrophage cytoplasm. The disease is similar to histiocytic granulomatous
bowel disease
of other species. The cat responded to long-term treatment with antibiotics.
...
PMID:Feline histiocytic colitis. A case report with electron microscopy. 44 51
The spectrum and incidence of liver disease is described among a large series of patients with inflammatory bowel disease. The incidence of significant liver disease identified by the presence of serial biochemical abnormalities of liver function was 8.2 per cent. Transient peri-operative changes in liver function tests are common and usually relate to underlying intra-abdominal sepsis. Percholangitis, sometimes termed portal triaditis, is one of the commoner lesions, and is usually associated with extensive
colitis
and improves with resection of the underlying
bowel disease
. Cirrhosis of the liver is an important but uncommon complication and is usually associated with extensive long-standing disease. Stenosing cholangitis and biliary tract carcinoma are both important though rare associations. They are both associated with extensive disease of long-standing, but resection of the underlying inflammatory bowel disease does not necessarily protect the individual from these complications. Although stenosing cholangitis is a diffuse lesion of the biliary tree it is important to exclude strictures of the extra-hepatic biliary tree which may be amenable to surgical correction. Hepatic dysfunction is rarely the sole indication for advising surgery for the underlying
bowel disease
but the identification of the nature of the hepati- dysfunction provides a rational basis for such a decision and opportunities for the surgical correction of the hepatic lesion itself.
...
PMID:The spectrum of hepatic dysfunction in inflammatory bowel disease. 48 86
A case report of subacute, reversible ischemic colitis associated with use of oral contraceptives (OCs) is reported. A 19-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital with chief complaints of abdominal cramps, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and rectal bleeding of 2 days' duration. Past medical history and family history were noncontributory. The patient was receiving no medication other than Norinyl 2 (2 mg of norethindrone and .1 mg of mestranol), which she had been taking for 6 months. 2 days before admission the patient had taken 100 mg of dimenhydrinate and 2 ExLax tablets (90 mg of phenolphthalein) for constipation. Colonic roentgenograms revealed impaired mesenteric circulation and bowel ischemia; OC-induced ischemic
bowel disease
was diagnosed. Patient symptoms subsided within 96 hours of discontinuing the OC and initiating supportive therapy (including intravenous fluid infusion, nasogastric suction, analgesics, and antiemetics). When a repeat barium enema was performed, it showed resolution of the ischemia. In a short review following the case report, these drugs were indicted in causation of
colitis
-like syndrome: amoxicillin, ampicillin, cephazolin, chloramphenicol, chlorpropamide, clindamycin, cloxacillin, cotrimoxasole, cyclophosphamide, digitalis, ergotamine tartrate, flucytosine, fluorouracil, gold salts, laxative and cathartic abuse, mercurous chloride, methyldopa, penicillin V, and tetracycline. Ischemic bowel disease secondary to OC use is a rare but important complication because of its significant morbidity and potential mortality, and because of the widespread use of the drugs. The case report emphasizes the need to consider the differential diagnosis of acute vascular insult with bowel ischemia when acute abdominal pain progressing to bloody diarrhea occurs in young women taking OCs.
...
PMID:Oral contraceptive-induced ischemic bowel disease. 48 72
Small intestinal obstruction without colonic dilation can be the mode of presentation in a variety of colonic diseases, including carcinoma, diverticulitis, and
colitis
. Plain abdominal roentgenograms may lead the unwary physician into errors of diagnosis and treatment by suggesting primary small
bowel disease
. Barium enema examination of the colon will keep the wary physician out of such traps. We describe five patients with small bowel obstruction who had a variety of colonic diseases diagnosed by barium contrast studies. If the reason for intestinal obstruction is not apparent and the need for emergency surgery is not compelling, we recommend an immediate contrast study of the colon to aid in evaluating possible colonic pathology.
...
PMID:Isolated small bowel obstruction as the presenting feature of colonic disease. 88 24
The records of a series of 700 patients with inflammatory bowel disease, 498 with Crohn's disease and 202 with ulcerative colitis, have been analyzed to determine the relative incidence and characteristic features of their extra-intestinal manifestations. The group with Crohn's disease included 62 with
colitis
, 223 with ileocolitis, and 213 with regional enteritis. A consideration of the clinical patterns and an understanding of their pathophysiology suggested a subdivision into two main groups: one "colitis related" and one related to the pathophysiology of the small nonspecific third group. Group A,
colitis
related, comprises joint, skin, mouth, and eye disease. The complications might be immunologically determined, were closely associated with active inflammation, and often responded to medical or surgical treatment of the underlying
bowel disease
. They occurred in 36% of the entire series of patients: joints were involved in 23%, skin in 15%, and mouth and eye each in 4%. Pyoderma gangrenosum was observed most often in ulcerative colitis and erythema nodosum most often in granulomatous
colitis
. The incidence of Group A complications was higher in disease involving the colon (42%) than in disease restricted exclusively to the small bowel (23%). There were interrelationships among the various members of Group A, with multiple manifestations occurring in a third of affected patients. Group B, related to small bowel pathophysiology, includes malabsorption, gallstones, kidney stones, and non-calculous hydronephrosis and hydroureter. Disorders in this group were generally related to the severity of the disease in the small bowel and tended to persist even in the absence of active inflammation. In contrast to Group A, this group occurred most frequently in small
bowel disease
, and least in colonic disease. Malabsorption was virtually confined to the patients with small
bowel disease
(10% incidence), while gallstones and renal stones were also both more frequent in Crohn's disease (11% and 9% respectively), the latter usually in association with small bowel resection or ileostomy. Group C, found in a small percentage of patients, consists of nonspecific complications, including osteoporosis (3%), liver disease (5%), peptic ulcer (10%), and amyloidosis (1%).
...
PMID:The extra-intestinal complications of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis: a study of 700 patients. 95 99
In 160 cases with granulomatous
colitis
or ileocolitis, blood was found in the stool in 72 or 45%. Massive bleeding occurred in four patients (25%); overt bleeding in 51 (32%) and occult bleeding, repeated guaiac positive stools, in 17 (11%). Thus, clinically obvious bleeding occurred in about one patient in three. Of the four patients with massive hemorrhage one required subtotal colectomy, one right hemicolectomy and the other two were controlled by medical measures including blood transfusion. In each of the surgical cases, the massive bleeding originated in the region of the cecum. An additional patient, not in the series, required proctectomy as a life-saving measure following subtotal colectomy. Clinically obvious rectal bleeding in Crohn's colitis is approximately ten times as frequent as in regional enteritis but only one-third as frequent as in ulcerative colitis. There was no correlation between rectal bleeding and rectal involvement determined radiologically or by signoidoscopy, in the whole series but there was a strong association in the small group of Crohn's colitis with rectal involvement (86% with bleeding) and a significantly greater proportion of patients with
colitis
with rectal involvement and hemorrhage (P smaller than 0.02). Anemia is common in both groups but in Crohn's colitis it is almost always, 75%, associated with rectal blood loss, whereas in ileocolitis this association is much less marked, 40%, indicating other important causes of anemia when there is small
bowel disease
. The bleeding patient with Crohn's colitis should be managed medically initially. Uncontrollable, continuous, or massive hemorrhage may require angiography and early surgical intervention.
...
PMID:Crohn's disease of the colon. II. Controversial aspects of hemorrhage, anemia and rectal involvement in granulomatous disease involving the colon. 107 35
A patient with selective immunoglobulin A deficiency, severe ulcerative colitis, and malabsorption had a flat jejunal mucosa demonstrated by peroral biopsy. Treatment at different times with a gluten-free diet for the jejunal lesion and corticosteroids for the ulcerative colitis, led to improvement of the malabsorption. A repeat jejunal biopsy demonstrated histological improvement of the jejunal mucosa, even though the
colitis
remained active. The occurrence of immunoglobulin A deficiency in a patient with ulcerative colitis and gluten-sensitive
enteropathy
is uncommon.
...
PMID:Selective immunoglobulin a deficiency, ulcerative colitis, and gluten-sensitive enteropathy--a unique association. 115 53
Retrospective clinical study of 30 cases of cow's milk protein intolerance with a long term follow-up (3-141/2 years) in 22 cases. The onset of the disease is usually in the first 6 months, following a short exposure to cow's milk proteins. A later onset is also possible, particularly following an intestinal infection which seems to favor the sensibilisation. Usually the digestive disturbances predominate and are often associated with respiratory, cutaneous and other general problems (especially unexplained prolonged fever). In about half the cases, laboratory studies reveal signs of exsudative
enteropathy
or generalized malabsorption with lesions of varying severity of the jejunal mucosa. Clinical observation and investigation allows us to divide the patients into three groups according to different manifestations: 1. acute anaphylactic, 2. chronic and benign (
colitis
), 3. chronic and severe, with accompanying malnutrition and intestinal malabsorption. This last category leads occasionally to diagnostic difficulties in distinguishing it from coeliac disease. Whatever manifestations encountered, the disease is usually transitory, and disappears between the age of 2 and 21/2 years, but can also persist for a much longer time. The long-term follow-up study showed complete catch-up growth, absence of further gastro-intestinal problems, and a low incidence of other allergic diseases (18%).
...
PMID:[Cow's milk protein intolerance in childhood. Review of 30 cases]. 115 Apr 78
This review addresses the clinical picture of rheumatic diseases seen in Whipple's disease, gluten-sensitive
enteropathy
, pseudomembranous colitis, collagenous
colitis
and that developing after enteric infections and intestinal bypass operations for morbid obesity. These disorders exemplify the interplay between antigen entrance through the gastrointestinal canal, specific bacterial properties and genetic host factors such as HLA B27. In most cases such as interplay results in formation of circulating immune complexes causing the development of peripheral joint disease.
...
PMID:Joint manifestations in gastrointestinal diseases. 2. Whipple's disease, enteric infections, intestinal bypass operations, gluten-sensitive enteropathy, pseudomembranous colitis and collagenous colitis. 138 25
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