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Query: UMLS:C0010346 (
Crohn's disease
)
21,615
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To determine if specific anticolon antibodies bound to colonic mucosa occur in ulcerative colitis, we obtained surgical specimens of colon from five patients with ulcerative colitis, one patient with diverticulitis, and three control subjects with carcinoma. Two specimens of ileum and cecum were also obtained from patients with
Crohn
ileocolitis. Tissue was homogenized and washed and bound Ig was eluted by citrate buffer, pH 3.2. Concentrated eluates of all specimens from patients with ulcerative colitis reacted with antisera to kappa and gamma and not with antisera to alpha and mu chains. Corresponding eluates from all other specimens did not react with these antisera, but did react with antialbumin. The presence of IgG in ulcerative colitis eluates was also determined by immunoelectrophoresis, immunocoprecipitation, and affinity chromatography with antisera against human IgG. Indirect immunofluorescence and uptake of radiolabeled antibody demonstrated antigenic sites in diseased colonic epithelium of biopsy specimens obtained from six additional patients with ulcerative colitis and three patients with idiopathic
proctitis
, but not in patients with
Crohn
disease, nonspecific diarrhea, and bacillary dysentery and control subjects. Although the role of colitis colon-bound antibody in the pathogenesis of ulcerative colitis is unclear, local antibody-antigen complexes may initiate colonic epithelial cytolysis by various immunologically mediated mechanisms.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of colonic tissue-bound antibodies from patients with idiopathic ulcerative colitis. 36 Feb 23
Anal and perianal lesions in
Crohn's disease
such as fistulae, fissures, abscesses and proliferative ulcerous
proctitis
are often misinterpreted and consequently unsatisfactorily treated. They always indicate a florid intestinal attack or a relapse after previous intestinal resection. Out of 153 patients with
Crohn's disease
in the last 11 years we have had 59 cases (= 38.6%) with a history of anal changes or such changes were demonstrable on admission to hospital. Only after subtle diagnosis in which the nature and extent of these complications and the location of the intestinal disease focus are determined, the most promising therapy, after all possibilities of conservative treatment have been exhausted, is intestinal resection. Local surgical measures which would often endanger continence, are reserved for the individual case.
...
PMID:[Anal and perianal complications of Crohn's disease (author's transl)]. 40 40
Finger clubbing, measured objectively by using the hyponychial angle, was present in 75 out of 200 (38%) patients with
Crohn's disease
, 15 out of 103 (15%) with ulcerative colitis, and two out of 24 (8%) with
proctitis
. In
Crohn's disease
and ulcerative colitis the hyponychial angle was significantly correlated with both disease activity and the extent of fibrosis in the resected specimens from 47 surgically treated patients. The prevalence of finger clubbing in patients with macroscopic disease within the area of the gut innervated by the vagus nerve was significantly higher than that in patients in whom the disease was confined to the distal colon and rectum. Finger clubbing in patients with
Crohn's disease
tended to regress after resection of macroscopic disease. It is concluded that finger clubbing is significantly commoner in
Crohn's disease
than ulcerative colitis. The focal stimuli for finger clubbing include mucosal inflammatory change and fibrosis mediated by the vagus and possibly other autonomic pathways acting as the afferent arc of a finger-clubbing reflex.
...
PMID:Finger clubbing in inflammatory bowel disease: its prevalence and pathogenesis. 50 14
The term inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is viewed as all-inclusive, covering the full panoply of intestinal disorders in which inflammatory changes are a prominent feature, including those of infectious, toxic, and intrinsic origin as well as the idiopathic entities ulcerative colitis and
Crohn's disease
. This chapter describes and discusses those aspects of colo-rectal biopsy in IBD which can help pathologists make optimal interpretations. The areas covered are: 1) methods used to prepare biopsy specimens for study, 2) normal histologic findings and common artefacts, 3) basic pathologic changes occurring in IBD, 4) a general approach to differential diagnosis in IBD, and 5) discussion of the various individual forms of IBD. The importance of full and reliable information exchange between the endoscopist and pathologist is stressed. Special attention is given to features in biopsy specimens which help in differentiating between ulcerative colitis and
Crohn's disease
. Other entities discussed are bacterial dysenteries; gonococcal
proctitis
; tuberculosis; Whipple's disease; amebiasis; balantidiasis; schistosomiasis; cryptosporidiosis; lymphopathia venereum; cytomegalovirus infection; histoplasmosis; antibiotic colitis; IBD due to cytotoxic drugs (5-FU), heavy metals, and foodstuffs; irradiation colitis; ischemic colitis; solitary ulcer syndrome; diverticulitis; and colitis secondary to obstruction. The term pseudomembranous enterocolitis is also considered.
...
PMID:Colo-rectal biopsy in inflammatory bowel disease. 61 15
The serum levels of lysozyme, serum electrophoresis, and serum immunoglobulins were determined prospectively in 101 patients with ulcerative colitis, ulcerative
proctitis
,
Crohn's disease
, or nonclassifiable nonspecific inflammatory bowel disease. Although the mean serum lysozyme concentration of patients with
Crohn's disease
(10.5 +/- 6.8 microgram/ml) and ulcerative colitis (9.6 +/- 4.1 microgram/ml) performed by a standardized lysoplate method was significantly greater than normal controls (6.0 +/- 1.5 microgram/ml), the results did not correlate with the diagnosis nor with the degree of disease activity. Individually separated protein fractions and serum immunoglobulins also did not correlate with the serum lysozyme levels. This study indicates that measurement of the level of serum lysozyme in individual patients is not helpful in determining the cause or degree of activity of nonspecific inflammatory bowel disease.
...
PMID:Serum lysozyme, serum proteins, and immunoglobulin determinations in nonspecific inflammatory bowel disease. 66 22
Rectal biopsies were examined from 22 patients with Salmonella infection of food-poisoning type and from seven patients with inflammatory bowel disease and coincidental Salmonella infection. In the former group the changes observed were mucosal oedema with acute inflammation of varying severity but with preservation of the crypt architecture. Crypt abscesses were present in a few cases but were usually localized in the crypt and mucus depletion only occurred with severe inflammation. These features are not specific and are similar to those seen in other types of infective colitis such as Shigella dysentery, gonococcal
proctitis
and amoebic colitis. In the majority of cases of infective colitis the appearances are usually sufficiently distinctive, however, to distinguish them from those seen in ulcerative colitis and
Crohn's disease
. The changes in the biopsies from the seven patients with coincidental Salmonella infection were in general those of the underlying idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease.
...
PMID:The rectal biopsy appearances in Salmonella colitis. 66 91
Of 52 student patients with chronic inflammatory bowel disease who were observed at Stanford University over a three-year period, 16 had
Crohn
disease, 17 had ulcerative colitis and 19 had ulcerative
proctitis
. Patients with ulcerative colitis had relatively few complications. During the study period, only two students from the entire group of 52 were obliged to interrupt college attendance because of bowel disease or complications. Of the patients, 33 were first observed on remission or attained remission during the three-year observation period. Incidence and prevalence rates for
Crohn
disease and ulcerative colitis were comparable with age-specific rates from other published studies. At Stanford, the high reported frequency of
proctitis
, which exceeded that of proximal ulcerative colitis, was possibly a reflection of the diagnostic zeal with which patients with rectal bleeding were evaluated at the student health service.
...
PMID:Inflammatory bowel disease among college students. 72 19
The concentration of lysozyme in plasma (P) and in neutrophil leucocytes (N) was determined by a turbidimetric method in 32 patients with ulcerative colitis (U.C.), 11 patients with
Crohn's disease
(C.D.), 9 patients with haemorrhagic
proctitis
, and 39 healthy volunteers. In active U.C., P was significantly elevated (p less than 0.05), whereas C.D. showed normal values. Corresponding N was significantly reduced in active U.C. (p less than 0.05) but normal in C.D. In calculating the ratio N/P, highly significant lower values were found in active U.C. (p less than 0.001) compared to normal levels in C.D. The high P in active U.C. is presumed to reflect an accelerated destruction of neutrophil leucocytes as well as an intensified turnover rate. The reduced N is probably attributable to an inhibited synthesis. The findings suggest that lysozyme determinations are valuable in be differential diagnosis of active U.C. and C.D.
...
PMID:Lysozyme in plasma and neutrophilic granulocytes in ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. 84 81
Serum lysozyme (muramidase) concentrations were measured in three groups of patients: control, ulcerative colitis and
proctitis
, and
Crohn's disease
. The mean +/-SD for each group was: control, 7 +/- 2; ulcerative colitis and
proctitis
, 7 +/- 2; and
Crohn's disease
, 10 +/- 4. Although a significant difference was seen between values in patients with
Crohn's disease
and values observed in those with ulcerative colitis or control patients, an important overlap was found between these groups. Further studies are necessary to explain the disparate results between this study and previous reports.
...
PMID:Serum lysozyme in inflammatory bowel disease. 126 61
Oral razoxane 125 mg daily brought active
Crohn's disease
into remission when used alone and mainly on an out-patient basis in all nine patients studied. Remissions took several months to achieve, but no relapses have occurred on treatment and no surgery has been necessary in any of the patients. In the two patients with active non-specific
proctitis
, oral razoxane 125 mg daily rapidly controlled the condition. Apart from mild bone marrow toxicity in one patient, no other acute toxicity has occurred and no long-term side-effects have been observed.
...
PMID:Razoxane for Crohn's colitis and non-specific proctitis. 129 Jul 34
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