Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0009319 (colitis)
19,384 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Large bowel disease detected clinically by rectal prolapse was studied in 64 immunodeficient mice (37 athymic NCr-nu/nu, 12 BALB/c AnNCr-nu/nu, 9 C57BL/6NCr-nu/nu, and 6 C.B17/Icr-scid/NCr) naturally infected with Helicobacter hepaticus. Rectal prolapse was found in approximately 5% of immunodeficient mice maintained in a research facility over a period of 3.5 years. All mice had various degrees of chronic proliferative typhlitis, colitis, and proctitis, usually without concomitant hepatitis. Some mice had severe proliferative proctitis with cystic hyperplasia. Histologic study of the large bowel of 48 athymic NCr-nu/nu mice without H. hepaticus infection and housed in another clean facility revealed only 12% of the mice with minimal-to-mild large bowel inflammation. Helicobacter hepaticus infection is associated with large bowel disease in immunodeficient mice but is not seen in H. hepaticus-infected immunocompetent mice. This new pathogenic bacterial infection should be considered as another potential cause or co-factor for rectal prolapse and large bowel disease in mice.
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PMID:Inflammatory large bowel disease in immunodeficient mice naturally infected with Helicobacter hepaticus. 869 13

Nutrition and intestinal function are intimately interrelated. The chief purpose of the gut is to digest and absorb nutrients in order to maintain life. Consequently, chronic gastrointestinal (GI) disease commonly results in malnutrition and increased morbidity and mortality. For example, studies have shown that 50-70% of adult patients with Crohn's disease were weight-depleted and 75% of adolescents growth-retarded. On the other hand, chronic malnutrition impairs digestive and absorptive function because food and nutrients are not only the major trophic factors to the gut but also provide the building blocks for digestive enzymes and absorptive cells. For example, recent studies of ours have shown that a weight loss of greater than 30% accompanying a variety of diseases was associated with a reduction in pancreatic enzyme secretion of over 80%, villus atrophy and impaired carbohydrate and fat absorption. Finally, specific nutrients can induce disease, for example, gluten-sensitive enteropathy, whilst dietary factors such as fibre, resistant starch, short-chain fatty acids, glutamine and fish-oils may prevent gastrointestinal diseases such as diverticulitis, diversion colitis, ulcerative colitis, colonic adenomatosis and colonic carcinoma. The role of dietary antigens in the aetiology of Crohn's disease is controversial, but controlled studies have suggested that elemental diets may be as effective as corticosteroids in inducing a remission in patients with acute Crohn's disease. In conclusion, nutrition has both a supportive and therapeutic role in the management of chronic gastrointestinal diseases. With the development of modern techniques of nutritional support, the morbidity and mortality associated with chronic GI disease can be reduced. On the other hand, dietary manipulation may be used to treat to prevent specific GI disorders such as coeliac disease, functional bowel disease, Crohn's disease and colonic neoplasia. The future development of nutria-pharmaceuticals is particularly attractive in view of their low cost and wide safety margins.
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PMID:Nutrition and gastrointestinal disease. 889 36

A 24-year-old male with Crohn's disease who developed three independent episodes of cholestatic liver disease over an eight-year period is described. The first episode was related to an idiosyncratic drug reaction while on sulfasalazine. The second episode, at the time of an exacerbation of his colitis, was characterized by moderate portal inflammation on liver biopsy and resolved quickly while he was on corticosteroid therapy. The most recent episode, occurring when the bowel disease was quiescent, was due to granulomatous hepatitis and resolved clinically with no specific therapy. Because numerous potentially serious hepatobiliary complications have been associated with inflammatory bowel disease, prompt and aggressive investigation in these instances is recommended.
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PMID:Cholestasis in Crohn's disease: a diagnostic challenge. 911 96

We report two cases of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) associated with Crohn's disease (CD). The first case was a 60-year-old man with longstanding CD who next developed a seropositive, nodular RA. This patient also had bilateral sacroiliitis, but without positive HLA B27. The second was a 65-year-old female with a 15-year history of seropositive RA who presented secondarily a CD. No sacroiliitis or nodules were found in this patient. Both patients were DR1 (DRB1* 0101). Gold salts were only given in the second case and were stopped many years before the gastrointestinal symptoms. A similar case report has been previously described consisting in an ulcerative colitis complicating a seronegative HLA-B27 RA with sacroiliitis. The gastrointestinal involvement in RA may be broad and includes many causes: drug-induced colitis (including gold enterocolitis) vasculitis and amyloidosis located in the gut, associated bowel disease such as collagenous colitis, and also infectious agents. In addition, erosive polyarthritis associated with gastrointestinal manifestations can present a problem in the differential diagnosis between RA and an enteropathic arthritis. Finally, the coexistence by chance of inflammatory bowel disease and RA is suggested by the low occurrence of these two conditions in the same patient.
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PMID:Crohn's disease associated with seropositive rheumatoid arthritis. 917 28

The place of colonoscopy in the management of ulcerative colitis is restricted to clinical situations where the information provided will change clinical management. The information provided will be answers to the questions?inflammatory bowel disease, o r, in the patient with known colitis: inflammatory bowel disease?type?activity extent?dysplasia. Biopsy is pivotal to the diagnosis and provides the certainty of tissue diagnosis, assessment of activity and detection of dysplasia. Sigmoidoscopy is sufficient for providing information for clinical management in most circumstances, but colonoscopy is important where clinical features are disproportionate to sigmoidoscopic findings and systemic parameters of inflammatory activity; to determine type and extent of inflammatory bowel disease and when surveillance needs to start; and for biopsy to detect dysplasia. Ileoscopy is an important aspect of colonoscopy for differential diagnosis, and is the unique definer of total colonoscopy.
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PMID:Colonoscopy and biopsy. 919 61

There is now clear evidence supporting the role of cytokines in the clinical and immunopathological manifestations of human inflammotory bowel disease. The purpose of the present study was to determine the possible role of a cytokine network in a rat model of trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid-induced colitis and to examine its relation to intestinal permeability. After a rapid increase in the intestinal permeability of Evans blue in the colon, tumor necrosis factor-alpha increased transiently, and interleukin-1 and interleukin-6 followed thereafter. The majority of tumor necrosis factor-alpha- and interleukin-1-producing cells observed by immunofluorescent staining was revealed to be macrophages. Repeated injections of interleukin-1 receptor antagonist led to a modest decrease in myeloperoxidase activity and colon weight. These findings suggest that enhanced pro-inflammatory cytokine production from intestinal macrophages accompanied by increased intestinal permeability may contribute to intestinal and systemic features of trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid-induced colitis. Pharmacologic blockade of pro-inflammatory cytokines may help reduce intestinal inflammation.
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PMID:Role of cytokines in experimental colitis: relation to intestinal permeability. 924 23

Extraintestinal complications affect 25-30% of patients with ulcerative colitis. These extraintestinal disorders significantly contribute to morbidity and mortality of ulcerative colitis patients. While some disorders parallel the activity of the colitis, other abnormalities run a clinical course independent of the bowel disease. The pathogenesis of these disorders is unknown, but the variable relationships to the severity of colitis and the variable responses to a proctocolectomy suggest considerable heterogeneity. The present therapy for the various manifestations is reviewed in depth. In this respect it is important to note that colectomy should never be mandated by the extraintestinal complications of ulcerative colitis.
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PMID:Treatment of extraintestinal complications of ulcerative colitis. 935 81

Investigations into the possible causes of colitis and typhlocolitis were carried out on 85 pig units in the United Kingdom between 1992 and 1996. Serpulina pilosicoli was identified most commonly, occurring as the suggested primary agent on 21 (25 per cent) of the units but forming part of mixed infections on another 23 (27 per cent) of the units, the main co-infections being Yersinia pseudotuberculosis (eight units), proliferative enteropathy (six units), Salmonella species (four units) or Serpulina hyodysenteriae (two units). 'Atypical' Serpulina species, S hyodysenteriae, Salmonella typhimurium, Y pseudotuberculosis and Lawsonia intracellularis (proliferative enteropathy) were the suggested primary agents on seven, six, four, four and three units, respectively. Various combinations of mixed infections involving the latter organisms and other possibly incidental agents were recorded on another 10 units. Investigations on a further six units failed to detect any recognised pathogens. On units where S pilosicoli was the suggested primary agent, pigs ranging between 20 to 40 kg (eight to 16 weeks of age), but occasionally up to 50 kg, had diarrhoea and grew poorly over a period of two to three weeks. The prevalence was estimated to be between 5 and 15 per cent in affected batches, with a mortality of approximately 1 per cent. The clinical signs usually developed seven to 14 days after the moving and mixing of pigs. At postmortem examination, affected pigs had liquid contents in their colon, which contained accumulations of mucus in some chronic cases. Gross and histological lesions of colitis were prominent in the mid-spiral region of the colon. In mixed infections with Y pseudotuberculosis, Salmonella typhimurium or S hyodysenteriae, lesions were more extensive and affected the caecum as well as the colon. In the colon, lesions of proliferative enteropathy were usually confined to the proximal half of the ascending spiral but mixed infection with S pilosicoli caused more extensive colitis. Mixed infections were reported to prolong the time taken for pigs to recover naturally and to have a more detrimental effect on growth rates than S pilosicoli infection alone. Despite the successful treatment of batches of pigs with tiamulin or lincomycin, S pilosicoli infection persisted as a chronic problem on many units, with diarrhoea and colitis in successive batches of pigs unless prophylactic medication was used.
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PMID:Investigations into field cases of porcine colitis with particular reference to infection with Serpulina pilosicoli. 954 64

Proliferative and ulcerative typhlitis, colitis, and proctitis were found incidentally in a breeding colony of male athymic nude (Cr:NIH-rnu) rats. Within the crypts of the large intestine, modified Steiner's silver stain revealed spiral organisms that were identified by culture, polymerase chain reaction, and sequencing to be Helicobacter bilis. The large bowel disease was reproduced in H. bilis-free male athymic nude rats that were injected intraperitoneally with a culture of H. bilis from the affected colony. The organism was isolated from the feces and cecum of the experimentally infected rats. H. bilis should be considered a potential pathogen in immunocompromised rats. The infection in immunocompromised rats may serve as an animal model for inflammatory large bowel disease.
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PMID:Inflammatory large bowel disease in immunodeficient rats naturally and experimentally infected with Helicobacter bilis. 959 83

A 17 year old male suffered from iron deficiency of undetermined cause for 2 years. Iron substitution was able to correct it for short periods. With the exception of fatigue and recurring abdominal pain attributed to oral iron therapy no further symptoms were present. The physical status on admission was unremarkable. The laboratory detected intestinal disorders, an anemia of the chronic type without evidence for malignancy or renal failure suggested an inflammatory gastro-intestinal disorder. In spite of a twice negative noninvasive test for gluten-intolerance the clinician favored in his differential diagnosis non tropical sprue over inflammatory bowel disease (IBD, Crohn's disease, Whipple's disease). Histopathology of small bowel specimens did not indicate sprue. An ileo-colonoscopy revealed severe ulcerating ileitis and mild chronic colitis. The histologic specimen revealed a severe ileal inflammation with cosinophilia and the colon specimens epitheloid microgranuloma. These findings are highly compatible with the diagnosis of Crohn's disease. Iron deficiency anemia is common in Crohn's disease. In the current case it is due to disturbed iron uptake. Iron deficiency anemia as sole symptom of Crohn's disease is extremely rare.
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PMID:[Severe chronic iron deficiency in a 17-year-old student]. 962 33


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