Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0009324 (ulcerative colitis)
17,300 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors have looked out the obstetric history of 13 young women who were suffering from ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease between the years 1978 and 1982 and who had 25 pregnancies. This study made it possible to analyse the influence of these pathological conditions on the evolution of pregnancy as well as the effect of pregnancy on the evolution of the disease. The different therapeutic treatments that have to be given for these diseases, such as medical treatment using Sulphasalazine, enemata, corticosteroids and Azathioprin, or surgical treatments have been examined in their relationship with pregnancy. The results that have been obtained confirm those to be found in the literature in the sense that the two conditions are independent of one another and therapy for the pregnancy as well as for the bowel disease can be continued without too much consideration for the effect of the one condition on the other.
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PMID:[Chronic inflammatory bowel disease and pregnancy]. 665 21

The course of pregnancy in 97 women with ulcerative colitis was studied over a 12-year period. During this period they had 173 pregnancies and delivered 136 children. There were two gemellary deliveries. Nine women had a spontaneous and 16 an induced abortion, of which 4 were performed on therapeutic indication. For a woman with ulcerative colitis the risk of an exacerbation of the bowel disease was 32% per year in her fertile years, whereas it was 34% per year during pregnancy. This difference is not statistically significant. As compared with women with an inactive bowel disease, women in whom the disease was active at the start of pregnancy had a small but significantly greater risk of spontaneous abortion and premature delivery. The frequency of malformations, prematurity, and neonatal hyperbilirubinaemia was not higher in the children of ulcerative colitis mothers than in those of healthy mothers. Treatment with sulphasalazine, salazosulphadimidine, and corticosteroids had no influence on the course and outcome of pregnancy. Birth length and weight of the children of mothers with ulcerative colitis equalled those for children of healthy mothers. In conclusion, pregnancy does not necessitate any change in the usual medical treatment of ulcerative colitis. Women with ulcerative colitis should be advised preferably to conceive at a time when their bowel disease is inactive. Generally, ulcerative colitis constitutes no indication for induced abortion.
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PMID:Pregnancy in ulcerative colitis. 666 37

Uveitis is an extraintestinal complication of ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. In most cases, its course parallels that of the underlying bowel disease and improves with its therapy. Occasionally, the two processes are not synchronous. In either case, the uveitis has usually been considered to be dependent on the presence of the colon. This report describes a patient who developed uveitis shortly after colectomy and ileal-rectal sleeve anastomosis for ulcerative colitis, indicating that the continuing presence of the colonic mucosa is not necessary for development of the associated ocular inflammation.
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PMID:Uveitis occurring after colectomy and ileal-rectal sleeve anastomosis for ulcerative colitis. 672 86

Polymorphism of the third component of complement (C3), occupying a key position in cascade reactions, was investigated in 125 consecutive outpatients, 53 with Crohn's disease and 72 with ulcerative colitis. A sample of 1378 randomly selected healthy volunteers of Danish origin served as controls. Occurrence of the F and FS phenotype of C3 (C3F and C3FS ) was increased in the group of Crohn's disease patients (chi 2 = 2.80, p less than 0.05, one-tailed test) and in a subgroup of Crohn patients with the gastrointestinal disease process confined to ileum (chi 2 = 6.91, p less than 0.01). C3 phenotype distribution was unaffected in ulcerative colitis. Only S and F alleles of C3 ( C3S and C3F) were recognized and C3F frequencies were 0.33 in Crohn patients with small bowel disease, 0.23 in all Crohn patients, 0.18 in ulcerative colitis patients and 0.17 in healthy volunteers. The results are compatible with a positive association of the C3F gene and Crohn's disease located in the small bowel.
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PMID:Polymorphism of complement C3 in chronic inflammatory bowel disease. Predominance of the C3F gene in Crohn's disease. 673 Oct 47

In disease states of the small intestine--for example, gluten-sensitive enteropathy--there is an increased permeability to large molecules. This increased permeability extends to polar molecules of intermediate size such as disaccharides, whereas small polar molecules are malabsorbed. A recently-developed oral test, based on the simultaneous administration of two test substances, cellobiose (a disaccharide) and mannitol (a small polar molecule) has been used to investigate permeability in a variety of gastrointestinal diseases, the result of the test being expressed as the ratio (cellobiose/mannitol) of the five hour urinary recoveries of the two probe molecules. Results for patients with pancreatic insufficiency, intestinal bacterial overgrowth, primary hypolactasia, ileocolic or colonic Crohn's disease, and ulcerative colitis were comparable with those in normal controls, whereas in 23 out of 24 untreated coeliacs, and five out of eight patients with Crohn's disease involving the more proximal small bowel, the cellobiose/mannitol ratio was clearly abnormal. A study of its application as a screening procedure for coeliac disease showed that the test was both sensitive and accurate, with fewer false-positive and false-negative results than other recognised screening tests--namely, the xylose test, reticulin antibodies, and blood folate estimations.
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PMID:Intestinal permeability and screening tests for coeliac disease. 677 13

The complications of ulcerative colitis generally develop during the first two years of disease. The mortality is higher than expected and the highest likelihood of colectomy also occurs early in the disease. Mortality in Crohn's disease is greater than expected, especially in males. For both conditions, the overall mortality has decreased steadily, and currently is less than 5%. Ulcerative colitis is curable with proctocolectomy and ileostomy. In Crohn's disease, intestinal resection and reanastomosis is followed by recurrence in the majority of patients. The recurrence rate after proctocolectomy and ileostomy for Crohn's disease of the colon also is considerable, ranging from 20% to 35%. In ulcerative colitis, the more colon involved, the more frequent and more serious are the complications. In Crohn's disease, the anatomic pattern of disease tends to predict the type and extent of complications. Both ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease appear to follow a more severe course in children and adolescents with "inflammatory bowel disease." Patients with either ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease are at increased risk for the later development of cancer. In ulcerative colitis, the excess risk is limited to colorectal cancer. Patients with Crohn's disease have increased cancer rates for both the small and large bowel. Finally, most patients with these diseases are able to maintain normal occupations and enjoy reasonably stable social and economic situations. The successful adaptation of patients with inflammatory bowel disease is influenced by a hopeful, optimistic personality and by an encouraging, supportive physician.
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PMID:The prognosis of inflammatory bowel disease. 682 95

Patients with ulcerative colitis and coeliac disease who had been shown by impaired clearance of heat damaged red cells to have diminished splenic phagocytosis, were examined for evidence of more generalised reticuloendothelial malfunction by measuring their circulatory clearance of micro-aggregated albumin. Although in animals micro-aggregated albumin is largely removed by Kupffer cells, we found impaired clearance in otherwise normal subjects who had previously had surgical splenectomy. In patients with hyposplenism because of bowel disease there was no additional impairment of micro-aggregated albumin clearance, indicating that their hyposplenism is an isolated phenomenon and not part of a generalised reticuloendothelial atrophy. Patients with coeliac disease and normal splenic function had increased reticuloendothelial catabolic activity; this was not present in patients with coeliac disease and abnormal splenic function.
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PMID:Reticuloendothelial function in coeliac disease and ulcerative colitis. 684 Jun 10

A retrospective study of nine patients with active pyoderma gangrenosum at the time of operation for inflammatory bowel disease showed two patterns of postoperative skin healing: 1) prompt healing within 2 months, occurred in five patients with moderate to severe inflammatory bowel disease. 2) skin disease persisted in four others, healing only after a year. Three of these patients had mild ulcerative colitis, and in them, the operation was carried out in the hope of curing crippling pyoderma gangrenosum. The fourth patient had only an intestinal bypass for ileitis. Our observations suggest that prompt skin healing may occur after surgery in patients with severe inflammatory bowel disease, but not necessarily in those with milder bowel disease or in those in whom some bowel disease persists.
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PMID:Does intestinal resection heal the pyoderma gangrenosum of inflammatory bowel disease? 686 78

The clinical presentation, operative findings and outcome in 40 patients who required surgery for bowel disease after radiotherapy are presented. The type of presentation varied according to the time after radiotherapy. In the first month, many patients had a proctitis but none required surgery. Five patients were operated on within one month, 2 for radiation-induced acute ileitis and 3 for exacerbations of pre-existing disease (diverticular disease 2, ulcerative colitis 1). The commonest time of presentation was between 3 and 18 months after radiotherapy, when 20 patients needed surgery for bowel disease caused by radiation-induced local ischaemia. Twelve of these patients had chronic perforation, 6 had severe rectal bleeding and 2 had painful anorectal ulceration. Fifteen patients presented between 2 and 24 years after radiotherapy, usually with incomplete intestinal obstruction due to a fibrous stricture, but 2 patients had rectal carcinoma. Wide resection of the involved bowel was the principal method of treatment but any anastomosis was protected by a proximal defunctioning stoma. There was no operative mortality but 10 patients have died subsequently. The danger of dismissing these patients as having incurable malignancy is stressed because, although the condition is infrequent, it is usually amenable to adequate surgery.
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PMID:Bowel disease after radiotherapy. 686 19

Lactose breath hydrogen tests were given to 70 children and adolescents with chronic ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease in order to determine the prevalence of lactose malabsorption in childhood inflammatory bowel disease. Twenty-nine percent of these patients demonstrated lactose malabsorption; the majority of these children (70%) experienced gastro-intestinal symptoms during the test. The prevalence was not significantly different whether the diagnosis was ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease. With the exception of those with diffuse small bowel disease, the location of intestinal involvement with Crohn's disease and the severity of clinical symptoms did not affect lactose malabsorption. Lactose malabsorption was not more frequent in patients with inflammatory bowel disease than in a group of children with recurrent abdominal pain and normal gastrointestinal x-rays, although significant differences in the prevalence of lactose malabsorption were observed in relation to ethnic background. Milk incubated with commercially available yeast lactase (lactAid, Surgarlo Co., Atlantic City, N.J.) for greater than 24 h prevented an increase in breath hydrogen when administered to 6 patients previously shown to have lactose malabsorption.
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PMID:Lactose malabsorption in children and adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease. 689 2


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