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)

Cyclosporin kinetics were estimated after single-dose intravenous and oral administration in 12 patients with Crohn's disease in accordance with a three-compartment model with zero-order inputs. Cyclosporin was measured in whole blood with a specific monoclonal radioimmunoassay. The median bioavailability (f) was 23.7% (range, 0-49.1%); the distribution volume at steady state, 2.3 l/kg (range, 1.0-3.5 l/kg); clearance (CL), 7.6 ml/min/kg (range, 4.8-10.8 ml/min/kg); and t1/2(z) 7.9 h (range, 3.2-13.9 h). Both the extent and rate of bioavailability were significantly lower in six of the patients, who had low or undetectable cyclosporin levels during a preceding therapeutic trial. After repeated oral administration significant correlations were found between the single-dose f/CL ratios and the steady-state blood concentrations, indicating that the kinetics did not change markedly with time. We conclude that the disposition kinetics of cyclosporin in patients with Crohn's disease are comparable to those of other groups, whereas the bioavailability may be decreased. It is suggested that cyclosporin levels should be monitored closely, and intravenous treatment should be considered in patients with a rapid gut transit time, because cyclosporin absorption seems to follow zero-order kinetics.
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PMID:Cyclosporin pharmacokinetics after intravenous and oral administration in patients with Crohn's disease. 145 95

Bacterial translocation is the passage of viable endogenous bacteria from the gastrointestinal tract to mesenteric lymph nodes and other internal organs. The aim of this work was to study bacterial translocation in patients operated on for Crohn's disease. Twenty-eight patients, mean age 29 years, not having received any antibiotics since at least 8 days, presenting with ileal (n = 12), ileo-colonic (n = 14) or colonic (n = 2) Crohn's disease were studied. In 25 out of 28 cases (89%) indication for surgery was strictures inducing an upper small bowel distension in 9 out of 25 patients. Mesenteric lymph nodes and liver biopsies, portal blood samples and peritoneum swabs were harvested after laparotomy and before gut opening. Bacterial translocation, defined as the presence of intestinal bacteria in at least one of the specimens, was present in 8 out of 28 patients. This was found in lymph nodes draining surgical territories in 7 out of 8 cases. Bacterial strains involved in translocation included E. coli (n = 5), Enterococcus (n = 3), Clostridium perfringens (n = 2), Proteus (n = 2), and Bacteroides fragilis (n = 1). The rate of translocation differed neither according to Crohn's disease site nor with perforating or non perforating type of the disease. Five out of 9 patients operated on for strictures with proximal distension had a translocation. In conclusion, bacterial translocation was identified in 29% of patients operated on for Crohn's disease in this series. Distension of the intestine proximal to a digestive stricture could favor the occurrence of bacterial translocation in Crohn's disease.
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PMID:[Bacterial translocation in Crohn disease]. 147 5

In 62% of patients with spondylarthropathy (SpA) we found clinically unsuspected gut inflammation to feature acute or chronic enterocolitis on ileocolonoscopy. A proportion of patients of the latter group had subclinical Crohn's disease as demonstrated clinically, endoscopically, genetically, histologically and immunopathologically. There is a relation between the activity of the gut inflammation and clinical rheumatic symptoms. A pathogenetic mechanism is increased handling of luminal (bacterial or nutritional) antigen, hence inducing T-cell activation and intestinal inflammation. In ileal mucosal biopsies we showed two different cellular events: increased enterocytic expression of class II molecules in active inflammation and an increase of membranous (M) cells overlying lymphocytes in inflamed mucosa. Although the number of intraepithelial lymphocytes was not increased in inflammation, intraepithelial T lymphocytes had protruding processes in close apposition to the tips of epithelial plasma membranes. Lymphocytes crossing the basement membrane were a frequent finding. These features indicate that the intestinal immune response caused by increased antigen processing in the terminal ileum induces an inflammatory immunocascade responsible for the clinical picture of SpA.
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PMID:Spondylarthropathy and gut inflammation: immunopathogenetic mechanisms. 147 98

In clinically active Crohn's disease the bone mineralization is impaired due to calcium malabsorption by the inflamed intestinal wall which is potentiated by diarrhoea and the thus accelerated transit time. To this we must add the shortening of the gut after operations, the inadequate dietary calcium supply or possibly calcium elimination in case of concurrent lactose intolerance. Corticoid treatment leads also to deterioration of bone mineralization. This is the reason why the authors assessed in 98 patients with Crohn's disease the bone mineralization, using the method of clavicular bone index (NIBA). Then treatment was started: a high protein diet, calcium forte, Ossin (sodium fluoride), vitamin D forte, anabolics and regular physical exercise. Check-up examinations after one year revealed that the index was restored in the majority of patients (60.84%) to normal. The above treatment is thus effective. It must be, however, regular and of a long-term character, in some patients it must extend over many years. We had, however, also patients who although subjected to an extensive resection of the gut and treated for prolonged periods with corticoids, had permanently an index between 100 and 120% without treatment.
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PMID:[Prevalence of bone decalcification in the treatment of Crohn's disease]. 148 71

Whole gut lavage fluid is a useful source of material for the study of intestinal immunity and inflammation in humans. Systemic and mucosal antibodies to Klebsiella pneumoniae were measured by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in serum samples and whole gut lavage fluid from 14 patients with ankylosing spondylitis, 14 with Crohn's disease, and 16 immunologically normal controls. As the concentration of IgG in whole gut lavage fluid reflects disease activity in Crohn's disease, this approach was used to detect intestinal inflammation in patients with ankylosing spondylitis who also had disease activity and use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) recorded. Small intestinal permeability to cellobiose and mannitol was also studied. In serum samples, levels of IgA antibody to klebsiella were high in patients with Crohn's disease and in patients with active ankylosing spondylitis, and were significantly correlated with the erythrocyte sedimentation rate in patients with ankylosing spondylitis. Levels of IgG antibody to klebsiella were also high in patients with Crohn's disease. Studies of whole gut lavage fluid showed similar levels of IgA antibody to klebsiella in the three study groups, but levels of whole gut lavage fluid IgM and IgG antibodies to klebsiella were high in patients with Crohn's disease. Levels of IgG in whole gut lavage fluid were high in patients with Crohn's disease but in only one patient with ankylosing spondylitis, though the cellobiose/mannitol permeability ratio was abnormal in eight of 13 patients with ankylosing spondylitis. It is concluded that high levels of serum IgA antibody to klebsiella are not specific to ankylosing spondylitis, and that there is no evidence of an abnormal intestinal IgA antibody response to klebsiella in patients with ankylosing spondylitis.
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PMID:Systemic and mucosal antibodies to Klebsiella in patients with ankylosing spondylitis and Crohn's disease. 148 10

There is a link between gut and spondyloarthropathies, which extends from the acute ReA triggered by enteritis due to gram-negative bacteria to ankylosing spondylitis and peripheral arthritis in association with Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. In addition, in studies using ileocolonoscopy, an unexpectedly high proportion of patients with prolonged or chronic seronegative oligoarthritis or sacroiliitis have inflammatory changes in the terminal ileum or colon or both. These changes have either features of acute gut inflammation or infection, but about one quarter of the patients have chronic lesions, probably early Crohn's disease. The conventional treatment of spondyloarthropathies consists of liberal use of NSAIDs, local corticosteroid injections if indicated, and physiotherapy. In patients with acute ReA, the conventional antimicrobial therapy to eradicate the triggering infection is necessary if there is evidence of chlamydial or gonococcal etiology. This therapy does not, however, influence the course of the subsequent arthritis. Patients with chlamydia arthritis probably host living bacteria for prolonged periods, and they seem to benefit from a prolonged antimicrobial therapy with tetracyclines. In the face of frequent gut involvement in patients with prolonged or chronic spondyloarthropathies, the use of sulfasalazine is the logical alternative, as short-term studies on patients with ankylosing spondylitis indicate.
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PMID:Gut and spondyloarthropathies. 156 4

Crohn's disease is a panintestinal disease of unknown aetiology and a tendency to recrudescence throughout the patient's life. It is therefore impossible to cure Crohn's disease by medical therapy or surgical excision. In spite of this, the majority of patients can be managed through their disease and maintained in a good state of health by a combination of medical and surgical treatment. Early attempts at surgical management of Crohn's disease in the 1930's and 1940's involved bypass procedures which were marred with serious complications of sepsis, development of cancer and increased rate of recurrence. By the 1950's resection became the preferred operation but there soon arose a controversy about the amount of bowel that should be removed. There were some who advocated radical excision; removing all diseased bowel with a large margin of apparently normal tissue on each side of the resection. Others found less radical resection safer as it preserved gut and also had no apparent effect on the rate of recurrence of the disease. Although this argument continued, the balance gradually shifted towards less radical surgery. Furthermore, the wave of conservatism led to the evolution of the concept of minimal surgery.
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PMID:The role of strictureplasty in Crohn's disease. 157 74

The fistulas encountered in Crohn's disease are a frequent complication and may be internal or external. The first type are gut-to-gut, the second gut-to-skin. Of the 47 Crohn's disease patients operated in this series, 13 presented at least one fistula. The series included 4 cases (8.51%) of external and 9 (19.14%) of internal fistula. A complete cure was obtained in 92.3%, the one failure relating to the still incomplete closure of an enterocutaneous fistula treated conservatively. Surgical mortality was nil and morbidity 15.38% (one energy reoperation and one delayed closure of a perineal wound following proctectomy). The present review examines the various types of fistula encountered and their possible treatment.
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PMID:Fistulous complications of Crohn's disease. 157 75

Altered permeability of the gut is a well-described feature in Crohn's disease. Because of pathologic similarities between Crohn's disease and sarcoidosis, we initiated this study to evaluate the permeability of the gut mucosal lining in patients with pulmonary sarcoidosis. A group of 18 patients with biopsy-proven pulmonary sarcoidosis (active n = 8, inactive n = 10) were included in the study. Control groups included 22 patients with Crohn's disease (active n = 12, inactive n = 10), nine untreated patients with recent pulmonary tuberculosis, six patients with coal worker's pneumoconiosis (CWP), eight patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), and 16 healthy subjects. All were nonsmokers. The 24-h urinary excretion of 100 microCi 51Cr-ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (51Cr-EDTA) was used to test the intestinal permeability (IP). As previously demonstrated, patients with active Crohn's disease demonstrated a dramatic increase in IP (7.7 +/- 1.4%) that was clearly reduced in inactive CD (2.34 +/- 0.54%). Patients with active pulmonary sarcoidosis exhibited a marked increased IP to 51Cr-EDTA (4 +/- 0.54%), which was not found in patients with inactive sarcoidosis (1.6 +/- 0.17%). IP was normal in patients with pulmonary tuberculosis (1.03 +/- 0.25%), CWP (2.1 +/- 0.54%), and IPF (1.9 +/- 0.33%) and did not differ from the control group (1.76 +/- 0.23%). In addition, in 6 patients with active pulmonary sarcoidosis, the concentrations of albumin and hyaluronan were measured in jejunal perfusion fluid and compared with those obtained from 10 patients with active Crohn's disease and 16 control subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Increased intestinal permeability in active pulmonary sarcoidosis. 159 16

To assess the association between symptomatic relapse of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and superinfection with enteropathogenic microorganisms, we determined prospectively the incidence of infections with enteropathogenic bacteria, protozoa, and helminths in patients with confirmed longstanding IBD. Sixty-four patients with IBD (49 with Crohn's disease [CD] and 15 with ulcerative colitis [UC]) were consecutively enrolled in the study when relapse occurred. Multiple biopsies for histological and microbiological investigations were taken from all patients who were evaluated by colonoscopy. Parallel stool specimens were investigated for the presence of enteropathogenic bacteria, protozoa, and helminths. In six patients, we detected Clostridium difficile or toxin B (five CD, one UC), in one patient Campylobacter jejuni (CD), and in another patient Salmonella typhimurium (UC). Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli were isolated from three patients. Investigation of biopsies for Mycobacteria, microscopic examination of stool samples for helminths, and immunofluorescence for chlamydia were negative in all patients. In summary, as we found enteropathogenic microorganisms so infrequently in patients with relapse of IBD, despite intensive microbiological screening by tissue sampling for detection of gut adherent bacteria, we believe that microorganisms play only a minor role in the exacerbation of IBD.
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PMID:Microbic superinfection in relapse of inflammatory bowel disease. 160 6


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