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Query: UMLS:C0010346 (Crohn's disease)
21,615 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Of the series of 21 patients with Crohn's disease who were treated with TPN as primary therapy, there were only four (19 per cent) who did not eventually need surgical intervention. The mean follow-up period for this group of patients was 27.25 months. The remaining 14 patients were operated on an average of 9.9 months after their course of TPN. Of the five patients with mucosal ulcerative colitis who were treated with primary TPN, three are now doing well in response to medical therapy after a mean follow-up period of 27.3 months.
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PMID:Total parenteral nutrition as primary therapy for inflammatory disease of the bowel. 10 49

We analyzed the course of 186 patients with external gastrointestinal fistulas treated at the University of California Medical Center, San Francisco from 1968 to 1977. There were 82 patients in the earlier group (1968-1971) and 104 patients in the later group (1972-1977). The groups differed in that 35% of patients in the earlier group received TPN, but 71% of patients in the later group received TPN. Of the patients who did not receive TPN, 93% had been adequately nourished using tube feeding methods. The two groups were otherwise similar. The fistula-related mortality (11%) and the spontaneous closure rate of the fistulas (32%) was unchanged over the ten year period. Thus, the principal impact of TPN was to simplify the nutritional management rather than to alter the outcome. When malignancy, previous abdominal irradiation, Crohn's disease, or a short (<2 cm) fistula tract were present, spontaneous closure was less likely than when none of these factors were present (20% versus 47%). Sixty-eight per cent of the deaths occurred in patients with uncontrolled sepsis. Fifty per cent of the deaths were due to the primary disease and were unrelated to the fistula. Spontaneous closure could not be expected to start until sepsis was controlled. Because over 90% of patients whose fistulas closed spontaneously did so within one month after infection was eradicated, we recommend operative closure for most fistulas that persist beyond that time. The most reliable operation is excision of the bowel from which the fistula arises with end-to-end anastomosis. Fistulas not amenable to excision should be managed by bypass.
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PMID:Management of external gastrointestinal fistulas. 69 30

The clinical appearance of Crohn's disease (CD) is especially marked by nutritional deficits and insufficiencies. For a long time the goal of nutritional care was reduced to the readjustment of the nutritional status. The development and clinical use of controlled parenteral nutrition (TPN) and enteral nutritive solutions (EN) did not only emphasize this therapeutical issue, but furthermore showed positive effects on the conservative as well as on the surgical treatment concepts. Therefore today artificial nutritional support is a firm part of therapy in acute, active phases or in the contact of surgical management of CD. This is especially valid in children, where complications in general and growth failure in particular can be reduced. EN is the preferred feeding method in most of the cases, due to a lower complication rate and reduced cost when compared to TPN. The question regarding the importance of nutritional support as primary therapy has also been investigated. The results differ extensively, but point towards the conclusion that patients with solitary small bowel disease do profit from this therapeutical concept. Nevertheless it is unclear, how TPN or EN interfere in the pathophysiology or -biochemistry in this process. A question about reduction e.g. of allergic components of daily diet did stimulate new theories regarding the hypothesis of a possible causal relationship between diet and the pathogenesis of CD. Investigations on dietary habits and daily dietary therapy did not reveal an overall accepted dietary guideline. Nevertheless it seems obvious that dietary counselling has a positive effect on the disease process. It does appear, that today in the acute, active phase as well as in the long term management of Crohn's disease nutritional-care is an important therapeutical method.
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PMID:[What is the role of nutrition in Crohn disease? A contribution to the importance of dietary therapy in regional enteritis]. 194 12

Diet therapy is an important factor in overall care of most GI patients. Historically, diets have been used unscientifically in many of these patients without positive results. Nutritional care and diet therapy are critical for two reasons. First, malnutrition is an expected sequelae to most, if not all, GI diseases or disorders. Failure to eat, digest, or assimilate nutrients can provoke malnutrition in just a few weeks, although careful assessment of anthropometric, clinical, biochemical, and nutritional history by a trained professional can protect against this. Diet therapy through the elimination of offending foods such as wheat gluten or lactose, or inclusion of specialized products such as medium chain triglycerides or elemental formulas, can sustain nutritional status. Dietary components such as insoluble fiber appear to have physiologic effects, while soluble fibers may have metabolic effects important to diabetes and cardiovascular disease. There is a high potential for malnutrition in Crohn's disease during active and remittent phases. Elemental enteral formulas or TPN are used during the active phase to ensure optimal nutritional status and bowel rest. Hyperalimentation using the GI tract during remittent stage maintains this. Avoiding offending foods by Crohn's patients is an acceptable practice as long as entire categories of foods are not deleted. Avoiding all foods containing gluten from wheat, rye, barley, and oats, however, is a crucial prerequisite to recovery from celiac disease. Gluten is commonly used as a stabilizer, emulsifier, and extender in the food industry and is not always shown on food labels. Careful consultation with a registered dietitian can identify hidden sources of gluten in the diet.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Dietary therapy in gastrointestinal disease. 264 90

Problems related to the appearance of non perianal fistulas and abscesses are examined in a series of 204 patients operated on for Crohn's disease. Incidence of these complications was 34.3% (70 cases); one or more fistulas were present in 54 patients, associated with abscesses in 13, while abscesses alone were present in 3. The highest incidence was observed in the male sex, in patients over 50 years, and in the presence of stenosing Crohn's lesions (P less than 0.001). On the contrary, the primary site of Crohn's disease does not seem to affect significantly their appearance. The clinical suspect of fistulas or abscesses should be supported with radiographic, endoscopic, echographic and scintiscan findings, even though about 7.2% of fistulas are diagnosed only intraoperatively. Surgical treatment is the most suitable therapeutic management; however enteroenteric and mesenteric fistulas are only relative indications for surgery. TPN is suitable for postoperative enteric fistulas (5 cases). Postoperative morbidity is not different in patients with or without such complications at surgery. Long-term prognosis of non perianal fistulas and abscesses is related only to recurrences of Crohn's disease and their anatomopathologic evolution.
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PMID:Diagnostic and therapeutic problems of non perianal fistulas and abscesses in Crohn's disease. 322 66

The role of parenteral nutrition with complete bowel rest in the management of active Crohn's disease was evaluated retrospectively in 100 patients who were otherwise refractory to conventional medical management. Ninety patients received complete nutrient replacement and 10 received protein-sparing therapy. In 77 patients, a clinical remission was achieved. Analysis of subgroups revealed that the remission rate was equivalent in patients with subacute bowel obstruction (76%), inflammatory mass (82%), and otherwise uncomplicated severe active disease (89%). However, those patients with fistulae responded less well (63%). The location of the intestinal involvement with the disease did not influence the remission rate (73% in those with small bowel disease only and 78% in those with combined small and large bowel disease). All six patients with only large bowel involvement achieved a remission. In 81% of those patients with a remission, no corticosteroids were given, or the dose prior to TPN was maintained. The serum albumin improved significantly (p less than 0.001) from 3.2 +/- 0.1 to 3.6 +/- 0.1 g/dl with total parenteral nutrition, but there was no significant effect on the hematocrit (p greater than 0.5). The percentage of patients still in remission after 3 months and 1 yr of follow-up was 75 to 79 and 58 to 61%, respectively, in the three nonfistulous groups, and 46 and 36%, respectively, in those with fistulous disease. Thus total parenteral nutrition with complete bowel rest appears to be an effective therapeutic modality in the primary management of complicated Crohn's disease.
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PMID:Total parenteral nutrition and complete bowel rest in the management of Crohn's disease. 392 72

Urinary excretion of trace elements (Cr, Co, Cu, Fe, Mn, Se, Zn, Sb, Cs, Rb), electrolytes (Na, K, Ca, Mg, phosphate), and nitrogen were determined during days 1-5 and 54-79 of total parenteral nutrition (TPN, nil per os) given to six patients with Crohn's disease. Whole-blood concentrations of Cr, Fe, Zn, Cs, and Rb and serum concentrations of electrolytes were determined before the TPN and on days 54-79 of TPN. The 24-hr urinary excretion of zinc was lower on days 54-79 than on days 1-5, but the rates of excretion of the other essential trace elements during TPN displayed no significant change. The urinary excretion of Cu, Fe, and Mn was numerically lower than the intravenous administration of these elements during days 1-5 and 54-79 of TPN, whereas the urinary excretion of zinc was lower than the supply only during days 54-79. The whole-blood concentration of zinc was low but constant during TPN, whereas the initially low levels of Cr and Fe were normalized on days 54-79. The results suggest that the supply of the essential trace elements Cr, Co, Cu, Fe, Mn, and Zn was largely adequate during two to three months of TPN and that the human body may adapt to a somewhat low supply of zinc, 20-30 mumol/24 hr.
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PMID:Urinary excretion and blood concentrations of trace elements and electrolytes during total parenteral nutrition in Crohn's disease. 642 39

Activity of the enzyme 11 beta-hydroxysteroid:NADP oxidoreductase (EC 1.1.1.146) in human intestinal mucosa was determined by incubating scraped mucosa with 3H-cortisone and 14C-cortisol; these steroids were then extracted, separated chromatographically, and the radioactivity assayed to determine simultaneously both reductase and dehydrogenase activities. This was the only significant metabolic alteration which the substrate underwent. Only two cases had slight (5 and 13%) reductase activity. In 35 patients, 16 male and 19 female, including seven cases of Crohn's disease, three ulcerative colitis, five diverticulitis, two undergoing surgery for repair of injuries and 18 for carcinoma of colon or rectum, cortisol was converted to cortisone in 15 min with a wide range of values distributed uniformly up to 85% dehydrogenation, with a mean of 42%. When tissue homogenates were fortified with coenzymes, excess NADPH lowered dehydrogenase activity 81%; excess NADP increased dehydrogenase activity 2-fold in three cases. It is possible that a value is characteristic of an individual but perhaps more likely enzyme activity varies with metabolic events involving changes in the coenzyme levels in mucosa, and a random sampling might be expected to yield such a distribution of values. In any event, where activity is high most of the cortisol is inactivated within minutes. It is suggested that synthetic corticoids which escape such metabolic alteration might, except during pregnancy, prove superior in the treatment of conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease.
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PMID:Inactivation of corticosteroids in intestinal mucosa by 11 beta-hydroxysteroid: NADP oxidoreductase (EC 1.1.1.146). 657 77

Measurements of the acute phase proteins, C-reactive protein (CRP) and orosomucoid are widely used to monitor the activity of Crohn's disease. The effect of TPN upon the levels of acute phase proteins is unknown. Serum levels of CRP and orosomucoid were measured simultaneously over a four year period in 13 patients receiving TPN for Crohn's disease, nine patients with noninflammatory causes of intestinal failure, and 16 patients with Crohn's disease treated without TPN. An acute phase response was found with a similar frequency in both groups of patients with Crohn's disease (73.6% and 83.9% for Crohn's with and without TPN respectively), but was less prevalent in patients receiving TPN for non-inflammatory causes of intestinal failure (56.1%, P < 0.01). In this latter group, the acute phase response consisted primarily of an isolated elevation of orosomucoid (78.4%), compared with patients with Crohn's disease alone (21.1%, P < 0.001) and with Crohn's disease and TPN (46.6%, P < 0.05). Liver function abnormalities were seen on 68.8% of occasions in patients with noninflammatory causes of intestinal failure who had elevated levels of orosomucoid, compared with 34.9% of occasions on which orosomucoid levels were normal (P < 0.001). TPN may lead to isolated elevation of serum levels of orosomucoid, reducing the value of this acute phase protein in monitoring the activity of Crohn's disease in patients receiving TPN.
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PMID:Total parenteral nutrition modifies the acute phase response to Crohn's disease. 753 15

The zinc deficiency syndrome, also called enteropathic acrodermatitis, has been mostly observed in those pathologies of the gastroenteric system characterized by grave food shortages during long term TPN in association with inflammatory intestinal pathologies. The authors believe this to be caused of such syndrome, that in the case in question is demonstrated before the normal period described in the literature to be caused by both increased request related to TPN and a greater loss or less absorption due to intestinal phlogosis. The case described has been noted in a general surgery division in a young patient suffering from Crohn's disease for many years in treatment with medical therapy and now complicated by perianal abscess following burrowing on the outside subjected and therefore in treatment with artificial parenteral nutrition pre and post operative. Such pathology to be due when to begin a symptomatology characterized by consciousness alteration, diarrhoea, vesicular squamous cutaneous lesions around orifices, often infected by bacteria and mycosis in patients in treatment nutritional artificial continued for digestive apparatus diseases. The knowledge of this syndrome and its diagnosis lead, through integrative therapy, to its resolution in a short time. The authors describe the course of a clinical case occurred to then and ended with the patient's recovery. They underline the risks of ignoring this pathology.
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PMID:[Zinc deficiency syndrome during TPN]. 784 50


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