Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0010346 (Crohn's disease)
21,615 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

It has been established that considerable blast-transformation and mitotic activity occurs among epithelial lymphocytes of untreated coeliac mucosa. This paper is concerned solely with the proliferative activity of epithelial lymphocytes (expressed as percentage "mitotic index") in the prospective diagnosis of coeliac disease, in comparison with other conditions such as lymphoma. Crohn's disease and immunodeficiency which are often associated with malabsorption and flattening of jejunal mucosa. The results demonstrate that a high mitotic index (greater than 0.2%) clearly distinguishes, and hence predicts, gluten-associated enteropathies (including dermatitis herpetiformis and malignant histiocytosis) from others in which gluten plays no aetiological role and where the mitotic index differs insignificantly from normal control mucosae (much less than 0.2%). Furthermore, it has been demonstrated that the mitotic index is raised in so-called "non-responsive coeliacs," thus suggesting that such patients may also be gluten-sensitive despite their subsequent failure to respond morphologically to dietary gluten restriction.
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PMID:Studies of intestinal lymphoid tissue. IV--The predictive value of raised mitotic indices among jejunal epithelial lymphocytes in the diagnosis of gluten-sensitive enteropathy. 708 95

A patient with common variable immunodeficiency disease is described with severe colitis confined to the rectosigmoid region. Inflammation was extensive in the regions involved and exhibited a character that we believe is most unusual. Inflammation was transmural in the regions involved. Macrophages were the major inflammatory cells, and no granulomas or giant cells were seen. Although the disorder seemed distinct from either ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease, the colitis responded favorably to oral azulfidine, prednisone, and to steroid enemas.
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PMID:Rectosigmoidal colitis in common variable immunodeficiency disease. 742 88

We report six cases of toxic megacolon in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). One case, at an early stage of HIV infection, mimicked a severe attack of Crohn's disease, with a negative search for infectious agents. Subtotal colectomy was successfully performed with an uneventful postoperative course. The five other cases concerned patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome at a late stage of immunodeficiency. They were related to Clostridium difficile or cytomegalovirus (CMV) intestinal infection in two and three patients, respectively. One case of CMV colitis presented macroscopically and histologically as pseudomembranous colitis. Emergency subtotal colectomy, performed in the first four patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome was followed by a fatal postoperative outcome. The last patient treated conservatively by colonoscopic decompression, in association with anti-CMV therapy, had a favorable short-term outcome. From the experience of our series and data from the literature, we discuss the best diagnostic and therapeutic approach to toxic megacolon in patients with HIV.
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PMID:Etiology and management of toxic megacolon in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 807 73

We report the case of a patient suffering from acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and hepatitis B and D virus-related cirrhosis of the liver who was diagnosed as subclinical Crohn's disease. We attribute this clinical course to abnormality of intestinal immune system induced by the human immunodeficiency virus. Concomitant hepatitis B and D virus infection may have contributed. This observation supports the hypothesis of helper-inducer T cells (CD4 T cells) having a critical role in the immunopathogenesis of Crohn's disease and its clinical expression.
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PMID:[Subclinical Crohn disease in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome]. 812 96

For 20 years, clinical reports and laboratory observations have suggested that allogeneic blood transfusion effects important changes in the recipient's immune response. The seminal clinical studies involved dose-dependent improvement in renal allograft survival in patients transfused with allogeneic whole blood, red blood cells, and buffy coat preparations. Subsequently, a burgeoning, but unclear literature proposed that allogeneic blood transfusion decreases survival or tumor-free survival of patients who undergo operations for a variety of different malignancies. Similar studies suggest that the risk of postoperative infection increases when patients receive allogeneic blood. Transfusion reportedly improves some patients with Crohn's disease. In summary, these findings have been interpreted as evidence for an immunosuppressive effect of allogeneic blood transfusion. A small prospective study showed that paternal buffy coat infusion decreases the rate of fetal loss in a subset of women with recurrent abortion. These data suggest induction of "tolerance." Laboratory studies confirm changes in lymphocyte subsets, lymphocyte activation, natural killer cell activity, antigen-presenting function, and phagocytic cell function in patients and animals that receive allogeneic blood. The clinical relevance of these observations remains controversial. Allogeneic leukocytes induce expression of latent cell-associated viruses (human immunodeficiency virus, cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus), suggesting further immune-mediated adverse effects of transfusion. The mechanisms and clinical importance of these observations have become areas of intense interest and investigation for transfusion medicine.
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PMID:Immunologic aspects of blood transfusion. 820 21

Nodular lymphoid hyperplasia (NLH) is a reaction of the intestinal lymphatic tissue to specific inflammatory stimuli. Radiologically, it presents with multiple nodular filling defects of various sizes (2-4 mm) and with segmental, focal or diffuse distribution. The condition may be benign but, under particular circumstances (chronic stimuli), it may evolve to neoplastic forms. Seven hundred and sixty-eight patients underwent small bowel X-rays from January 1990 to April 1992. Twenty-two patients with NLH with or without associated mucosal or wall lesions were selected. The radiologic and histologic features of the lesions, together with the clinical data, were helpful to make the diagnosis. In 8 patients the hyperplastic nodules were benign, while 10 patients were affected with Crohn's disease and 4 with Herman's syndrome or common variable immunodeficiency. This work was aimed at defining NLH from a diagnostic point of view relative to both morphology and extent of lesions and at stressing the role of radiology of the small bowel in the follow-up of the cases at risk of evolving to cancer.
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PMID:[Radiologic evaluation and prognosis of lymphoid nodular hyperplasia of the mesenteric intestine]. 827 48

Six patients suffering from an unusual form of colitis produced by Strongyloides stercoralis hyperinfection are described. In contrast to the usual Strongyloides hyperinfection syndrome, in which small intestinal and pulmonary manifestations are seen in patients with some forms of immunodeficiency, the patients described here presented with only a characteristic transmural eosinophilic granulomatous inflammation affecting mostly the colonic wall and clinically mimicking ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease. This Strongyloides eosinophilic granulomatous enterocolitis apparently results from a florid inflammatory response by eosinophils, histiocytes, and giant cells with formation of granulomas that destroy the larvae entering the colon. This morphologic picture differs from that of the well-described hyperinfection syndrome, in which the bulk of the larvae pass through the colonic wall to complete the life cycle, with only a few larvae destroyed in the colon. The probable pathophysiologic mechanism of this unusual manifestation of hyperinfection is discussed based on the anatomic and clinical observations of patients who presented at different stages in the evolution of their condition and whose length of follow-up varied.
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PMID:Strongyloides stercoralis eosinophilic granulomatous enterocolitis. 861 25

Cancer of the small intestine is rare compared with other sites in the gastrointestinal tract. Of the four major primary small-bowel tumors (adenocarcinomas, lymphomas, carcinoid, and leiomyosarcomas), adenocarcinomas and lymphomas are associated with diseases that seem to increase the risk of developing these malignancies. In the case of immunoproliferative small intestinal disease and celiac disease, both of which are thought to predispose patients to the development of primary lymphoma, treatment of the predisposing conditions seems to decrease the risk of developing subsequent malignancy. Recognition of the increased risk associated with other conditions, such as immunodeficiency syndromes, nodular lymphoid hyperplasia, Crohn's disease, the gastrointestinal polyposis syndromes, hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer, neurofibromatosis, long-standing ileostomy, and urinary diversion procedures, may lead to early diagnosis and improved survival.
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PMID:Premalignant conditions of the small intestine. 870 62

Herpes simplex virus (HSV) is a well-recognized cause of gastrointestinal infection, most commonly in patients with underlying immunodeficiency. The esophagus, perianum, and rectum are the most common sites of involvement; however, extensive colitis is rare. We describe a woman with Crohn's disease who developed pathologically proven HSV colitis. We review the literature and present the possible implications of the diagnosis.
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PMID:Fulminant herpes colitis in a patient with Crohn's disease. 872 63

Symptomatic human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is accompanied by depressed CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts. These cells seem to play a role in the inflammatory processes in Crohn's disease. It has even been speculated that depression of CD4+ T-lymphocytes in HIV infection may cure Crohn's disease. Here we describe a 41-year-old drug-addicted man with a 9-year history of Crohn's disease. HIV infection was diagnosed 8 years ago. At present he has stage-C3 HIV infection. He was admitted because of weight loss and chronic diarrhea with rectal blood and mucus discharge. Crohn's disease was confirmed endoscopically and histologically. Infectious diarrhea known to mimic Crohn's disease in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) was excluded. In summary, we describe a patient with AIDS (CD4 count, 84/microliter) and active Crohn's disease, showing that both illnesses can occur simultaneously.
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PMID:Concomitant active Crohn's disease and the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 881 26


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