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Query: UMLS:C0009324 (
ulcerative colitis
)
17,300
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The absorption of 14C triolein in a standard fat meal was measured in 60 controls and 66 patients with gastrointestinal disorders by 14CO2 breath sampling. A reference range based upon cumulative eight hour values of the controls was independent of height, weight, and sex. The range was of log normal distribution and declined with age (p less than 0.05). Acceptable 'within-day' and 'between-day' reproducibility was found. All patients tested with untreated coeliac disease, pancreatic insufficiency and most with symptomatic small intestinal Crohn's disease had subnormal values. Twenty per cent of those with
irritable bowel syndrome
had subnormal values. Patients with
ulcerative colitis
were all normal. The reagents used and the breath samples after collection were stable. In our experience the 14C triolein test is simple, inexpensive, and helpful in the detection of diseases associated with fat malabsorption. It is of value in monitoring the response to treatment of individual patients with coeliac disease.
...
PMID:14C triolein breath test: a routine test in the gastroenterology clinic? 379 16
Breath methane was studied in 394 subjects. Among 152 controls, 50.0% produced methane--42.1% of males and 57.9% of females. One hundred sixteen patients with gastrointestinal diseases were studied. Among 32 with Crohn's disease, only 2 (6.1%) produced methane, as well as 16 of 51
ulcerative colitis
patients (31.4%) and 11 of 32 patients with the
irritable bowel syndrome
(34.4%). Breath methane is thus unusual in Crohn's disease. After bowel cleansing for colonoscopy or surgery, 15 of 18 methane producers became nonproducers, whereas after antibiotic treatment, 24 of 30 producers sustained their methane-producing status. After gentamycin and cephazolin therapy, methane production was abolished in three of eight patients. Slight spontaneous variations in methane production were also noticed with two of 23 control subjects, becoming nonproducers on restudy after 10-25 months. Thus gastrointestinal diseases, bowel cleansing and, to a much lesser degree, antibiotic therapy, affect methane production.
...
PMID:Factors affecting methane production in humans. Gastrointestinal diseases and alterations of colonic flora. 381 80
The prevalence of alexithymia was studied in a psychosomatic group consisting of 34 patients with duodenal ulcer, 35 patients with
ulcerative colitis
and 38 patients with
irritable colon
syndrome, and in a control group consisting of 29 patients with gallstone disease, 13 patients with inguinal hernia and 44 patients with varicose veins. The methods used were the Beth Israel Hospital Questionnaire, the Thematic Apperception Test, the Rorschach Test and the score of emotionality derived from Lazare's Test. The results showed that alexithymia can be detected in an unselected sample of psychosomatic patients. The social class was of no significance, but a high score of alexithymia was registered for the male psychosomatic patients.
...
PMID:Concept of alexithymia. I. The prevalence of alexithymia in psychosomatic patients. 383 45
It is obvious from the above discussion that, whereas no really clear-cut animal model of
IBD
has been established, a number of specific insights into the nature of the human illness can be derived from the study of naturally occurring and induced gastrointestinal inflammations occurring in animals. One of the most important emerges from the finding that both immune complex deposition in the gastrointestinal tract as well as stimulation of the mucosal T-cell system results in an
ulcerative colitis
-like gastrointestinal inflammation. The simplest explanation of the fact that vastly different methods of inducing immune-mediated injury in the gastrointestinal tract can lead to a similar kind of gastrointestinal inflammation is that the inflammatory response in the gastrointestinal tract is rather restricted in its overall pathologic appearance and that the histologic lesions characteristic of
ulcerative colitis
and Crohn's disease can arise from primary disturbance of the B-cell system, the T-cell system, or both. Another explanation of this fact, however, is that no matter what the initial immunological disorder may be, the mechanism underlying the gastrointestinal inflammation ultimately comes to involve a response to materials in the mucosal environment so that pathologic events are inevitably channeled into an inflammatory pathway that is either
ulcerative colitis
-like or Crohn's disease-like in its final configuration. This second explanation is buttressed by other findings derived from the study of animal models which, in general, suggest that no matter what the initial result, an immunologic interaction against a constituent of the bowel flora determines the ultimate course of the gastrointestinal inflammation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Animal models of inflammatory bowel disease--an overview. 390 9
Patients with Crohn's disease (n = 22),
ulcerative colitis
(n = 5), inactive Whipple's disease (n = 1),
irritable bowel syndrome
(n = 2), arthritis (n = 1) and Yersinia infections (n = 2) were examined with 111In-oxine labelled "mixed" leukocyte preparations (n = 12) or with 111In-oxine labelled "pure" granulocyte preparations (n = 21). Compared with barium enemas of the gut and colonoscopy, performed within of one week in 31 patients there was a correct location of infiltrated bowel segments in 24 patients (78%). The scan diagnosed more infiltrated segments in 4 patients (13%). In 3 patients it failed to diagnose one inflamed segment. In 24 patients the faecal 111In-excretion was expressed as percentage of the reinjected 111In-activity. All patients with non inflammatory bowel diseases and patients with inactive inflammatory bowel diseases excreted less than 2% of the reinjected 111In-activity. All but one female patient with active bowel disease excreted more than 2%. In 24 patients the correlation of ESR, CDAI and A.I. was available. There was a good correlation between ESR (r = 0.77, P less than 0.001), A.I. (r = 0.61, p less than 0.001) and the %-faecal faecal excretion. The 111In-labelling of white blood cells, especially of granulocytes, seems to be a reliable alternative method to localize infiltrated bowel segments and to assess disease activity in patients with inflammatory bowel diseases, compared to usually performed radiological, endoscopical and clinical methods.
...
PMID:[111In-oxine marked leukocytes: a method for diagnosing the location and evaluating the activity of Crohn disease and ulcerative colitis]. 393 91
The smoking habits of 145 patients with
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) were compared with those of 63 patients with
ulcerative colitis
and 25 patients with Crohn's disease. Patients with
IBS
and
ulcerative colitis
smoked significantly less than those with Crohn's disease. There was no significant difference in the smoking prevalence between
ulcerative colitis
and
IBS
patients. There were significantly more ex-smokers in the
ulcerative colitis
group and two-thirds of these patients developed their colitis within a year of stopping smoking. It is suggested that any protective role postulated for smoking in the pathogenesis of
ulcerative colitis
should also be considered for
IBS
.
...
PMID:Smoking in inflammatory bowel disease and the irritable bowel syndrome. 395 88
Dietary intakes of two groups of gastrointestinal patients, one group with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)--Crohn's disease or chronic
ulcerative colitis
--and the other with functional disorders (FD)--
irritable bowel syndrome
, nonulcer dyspepsia, or gastroesophageal reflux disease, were assessed by means of 48-hour recalls. The relationships between dietary intake and anthropometric and biochemical measurements were examined. The IBD group had lower mean serum albumin and hemoglobin levels (p less than .05); however, FD patients had less adequate diets. The mean energy intake of women with FD was significantly lower than that of women with IBD (p less than .05) and was associated with inadequate or marginal intakes of many nutrients. Comparison of nutrient intakes between the IBD and FD groups revealed a significantly lower mean intake of folate, ascorbic acid, and vitamin A for women with FD than for women with IBD (p less than .05). In general, women had poorer diets and a higher prevalence of abnormal biochemical parameters than men. One notable feature of the dietary pattern of the women was that they consumed less meat than the general population consumed. Increasing meat consumption would improve the intake of many nutrients, including protein and iron. The results of this study suggest that more attention should be given to the adequacy of dietary intakes of gastrointestinal patients in general and of women in particular.
...
PMID:Nutritional status of gastroenterology outpatients: comparison of inflammatory bowel disease with functional disorders. 406 54
Using a simple and rapid method, electrical potential differences across rectal and colonic mucosa have been measured at routine sigmoidoscopy in patients with
irritable bowel syndrome
and
ulcerative colitis
. In patients with
irritable bowel syndrome
, all of whom had diarrhoea, the mucosa was charged negatively on the luminal side and potential differences were not significantly different from those of normal subjects. In acute exacerbations of
ulcerative colitis
, the potential difference was reversed, the luminal side being positive. This characteristic change was seen even in mild attacks. The potential difference was usually restored to normal within a few weeks of commencing treatment. In some cases, however, it was persistently abnormal for months and failed to show the normal response to stimulation by the mineralocorticoid, fludrocortisone. The way in which measurements of potential difference can be useful in diagnosis, prognosis, and as a guide to treatment is discussed.
...
PMID:Electrical potentials of the sigmoid colon and rectum in irritable bowel syndrome and ulcerative colitis. 439 4
Reaginic hypersensitivity in
ulcerative colitis
has been investigated in respect of a hypersensitivity to the cow's milk proteins and the frequency of atopic asthma, hay fever, and eczema. Intradermal tests were frequently positive, especially to casein, but the results did not differ from those found in healthy individuals and in groups of patients with Crohn's disease, hypolactasia, and the
irritable colon
syndrome. No circulating IgE-specific antibodies to the milk proteins were found. An increased frequency of atopic diseases was found in patients suffering from
ulcerative colitis
(15.7%) and Crohn's disease (13.3%) compared with the findings in a control group (1.2%). It is concluded that, if an allergy to milk proteins is a factor in the pathogenesis of
ulcerative colitis
, it is not mediated by reaginic antibodies. It is possible, however, that the frequent occurrence of atopy indicates a susceptibility to develop reaginic responses even though this mechanism does not apply to the milk proteins.
...
PMID:Reaginic hypersensitivity in ulcerative colitis. 464 93
Sera from patients with
ulcerative colitis
(51), Crohn's disease (30), hypolactasia (13), untreated adult coeliac disease (11),
irritable colon
syndrome (24), and sera from 38 healthy control subjects were tested for antibodies to the principal cow's milk proteins-casein, alpha-lactalbumin, and beta-lactoglobulin. The red-cell-linked antigen-antiglobulin reaction was used to determine the titres of direct agglutinating antibodies and IgA and IgG incomplete antibodies. Apart from patients with coeliac disease, direct agglutinating antibodies were found infrequently and then in low titres. Approximately 50% of subjects had low titres of IgA and IgG antibodies. However, the titres found in sera from patients with
ulcerative colitis
did not differ from those found in the control subjects or in patients with Crohn's disease, hypolactasia, or
irritable colon
syndrome. Patients with untreated coeliac disease frequently had high antibody titres to the milk proteins. In all subjects tested, incomplete antibodies of IgA or IgG immunoglobulin class occurred with equal frequency. The frequent occurrence in adults of low titres of antibodies to the milk proteins may be due to continued absorption of minute amounts of protein. Absorption of allergens may be facilitated by mucosal damage, such as that of coeliac disease, with stimulation of antibody production. At the present time, however, there is little evidence to suggest that milk allergy is a factor in the aetiology of
ulcerative colitis
.
...
PMID:Circulating antibodies to cow's milk proteins in ulcerative colitis. 508 69
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