Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0011991 (diarrhea)
57,543 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The sodium pump, (Na+ + K+)-ATPase, which is involved in the transport of cations and water movement by the colonic mucosa, may be decreased in various diarrhoeal states. In this study, we have measured 3H-ouabain binding and (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity in human colonic biopsy homogenates and the influence of various inflammatory and antiinflammatory compounds on these parameters. 3H-ouabain binds to one site of high affinity (KD 1.9 +/- 0.2 X 10(-9) mol/l) with a maximal binding capacity of 7.5 +/- 0.8 X 10(14) binding sites/g protein. Both arachidonic and linoleic acid inhibited (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity (IC50 arachidonic acid: 7.5 X 10(-5) mol/l, linoleic acid: 6.5 X 10(-5) mol/l) and Mg2+-ATPase activity (IC50 arachidonic acid: 9 X 10(-5) mol/l, linoleic acid: 4 X 10(-5) mol/l). Arachidonic acid inhibited 3H-ouabain binding, (IC50 3.2 X 10(-5) mol/l). The following antiinflammatory compounds, at concentrations up to 1 X 10(-3) mol/l, did not influence ATPase activity directly nor reverse the arachidonic acid-induced inhibition: indomethacin (cyclooxygenase inhibitor), nordihydroguaiaretic acid (lipoxygenase inhibitor), sulphasalazine and its metabolites: 5-aminosalicylic acid, N-acetylaminosalicylic acid and sulphapyridine. These results indicate that human colonic (Na+ + K+)-ATPase is inhibited by the prostanoid precursors, arachidonic and linoleic acid. From a therapeutic point of view (effect on colonic (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and perhaps diarrhoea), the suppression of the production of these prostanoid precursors by drugs may, therefore, be beneficial in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease.
...
PMID:Inhibition of human colonic (Na+ + K+)-ATPase by arachidonic and linoleic acid. 301 58

The clinical features of ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease are similar to those of infections of the bowel, although their cause is uncertain. Many bacteria that cause intestinal diseases adhere to the gut mucosa, and adhesion of pathogenic Escherichia coli is resistant to D-mannose. The adhesive properties of isolates of E coli were assessed by assay of adhesion to buccal epithelial cells with mannose added. The isolates were obtained from patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (50 with a relapse of ulcerative colitis, nine with ulcerative colitis in remission, 13 with Crohn's disease, and 11 with infectious diarrhoea not due to E coli) and 22 controls. The median index of adhesion to buccal epithelial cells (the proportion of cells with more than 50 adherent bacteria) for E coli from patients with ulcerative colitis in relapse was significantly higher (43%) than that for controls (5%) and patients with infectious diarrhoea (14%). The index was not significantly different among isolates from patients with ulcerative colitis in relapse, Crohn's disease (53%), and ulcerative colitis in remission (30%). If an index of adhesion of greater than 25% is taken as indicating an adhesive strain 86% of isolates of E coli from patients with inflammatory bowel disease were adhesive compared with 27% from patients with infective diarrhoea and none from controls. The adhesive properties of the isolates from patients with inflammatory bowel disease were similar to those of pathogenic intestinal E coli, raising the possibility that they may have a role in the pathogenesis of the condition; the smaller proportion of adhesive isolates in patients with infective diarrhoea due to other bacteria suggests that the organism may be of primary importance rather than arising secondarily.
...
PMID:Adhesive Escherichia coli in inflammatory bowel disease and infective diarrhoea. 304 96

We report for the first time a case of Crohn's enteritis associated with a chronic tubulo-interstitial nephritis in an adolescent. The illness started insidiously in an 11 year-old boy who had suffered from failure to thrive and protracted watery diarrhea. At presentation the patient had an inflammatory bowel disease located to the left colon but no renal dysfunction. Until the age of 15, the intestinal symptoms were stable but a progressive renal insufficiency developed. A percutaneous renal biopsy was then performed which showed a widespread chronic tubulo-interstitial nephritis. Following a 6 months corticosteroid treatment, renal dysfunction seemed to be stabilized. However, delayed growth and corticosteroid dependency led to total colectomy. Pathologic examination showed granulomatosis involvement of the entire colon and severe interstitial nephritis with neither linear nor granulous deposits along tubular basement membranes. After a 2 year-delay following the colectomy, renal function was stabilized and a catch up growth was achieved.
...
PMID:[Crohn's enteritis and chronic tubulo-interstitial nephropathy in an adolescent]. 306 71

Clinical differences between the two human intestinal mucosal folate conjugases were assessed by measurement of their activities in normal individuals and in patients with chronic diarrhea of differing causes. Intracellular folate conjugase (ICFC) was 15-fold more active than brush border folate conjugase (BBFC) in jejunal mucosa from seven obese patients undergoing elective gastric bypass surgery. The activity of ICFC was similar among normal volunteers and patients with diarrhea of unknown origin (DUO), gluten-sensitive enteropathy (GSE), inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and the short bowel syndrome (IBD-SBS). By contrast, BBFC, sucrase, and lactase were decreased significantly in GSE, and BBFC was increased in IBD-SBS. The activity of BBFC correlated with lactase and with sucrase in the normal subjects and in patients with DUO, whereas no correlations were found with the activity of ICFC in any group. Our clinical studies confirm that ICFC and BBFC are different enzymes. ICFC is not affected by intestinal disease, whereas the activity of jejunal BBFC, like that of other brush border enzymes, is decreased by mucosal injury and is also capable of adapting to distal small intestinal disease or surgical resection.
...
PMID:Clinical studies of intestinal folate conjugases. 308 71

A case of gold associated enterocolitis is described. A review of all 27 previously reported cases revealed that the syndrome induced has common characteristics. The reaction occurs within three months of instituting gold therapy, is characterised by profuse diarrhoea and vomiting with abdominal pain, fever, and sometimes eosinophilia. Petechial changes are prominent on endoscopy and the endoscopic and histological features of the gut lesion do not resemble inflammatory bowel disease. The overall mortality is 26% but has decreased in recent years. There is no specific therapy but in severe cases diversional surgery may be justified.
...
PMID:Gold induced enterocolitis. 308 25

The goal of this study, which describes a personal technique of continuous enteral nutrition (CEN) in hospitalized adults on an ambulatory basis, was: to prospectively evaluate, over a 2-year period, its efficacy and tolerance in 98 patients requiring CEN for at least 15 days; to compare its efficacy and tolerance with those of conventional non-ambulatory CEN on a prospectively randomized basis in 16 patients. Ambulatory CEN was given at the rate of 35-45 kcal/kg/d (lipids: 35 p. 100; carbohydrates: 45 p. 100); during day-time, a portable system, including pump, tubes and low-viscosity nutrient solutions, allowed ambulation. Ninety-eight consecutive patients with a minimal level of physical autonomy were treated for intestinal (n = 47), pancreatic (n = 20), esophagogastric (n = 17) diseases, or for malnutrition of other causes for an average of 38 days (15 to 141). The average weight gain (m +/- SD) was 1.2 +/- 5.5 p. 100 of ideal body weight (IBW) and the average nitrogen gain was 0.7 +/- 3.8 g/24 h; weight gain proved significantly lower in patients with inflammatory bowel disease receiving steroids. The clinical tolerance proved excellent, except for 5 cases of transient diarrhea and 9 cases of reposition of the nasogastric tube. A decrease in cholesterolemia below 3.9 mmol/l was noted in 25 p. 100 of patients during CEN. No significant difference between ambulatory and non-ambulatory CEN was observed in terms of evolution of body weight and other anthropometric variables, nitrogen balance, albuminemia, and oxygen consumption; conversely, the CEN experience, evaluated by patients on analogical visual scales, was significantly better endured in the ambulatory group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Continuous ambulatory enteral feeding in hospitalized adults: prospective experience in 98 patients]. 308 32

One hundred two pediatric patients received all or part of their nutritional needs parenterally at home during the past decade. All received total parenteral nutrition (TPN) at night during an 8- to 12-h infusion. Patients with short bowel syndrome (33%), inflammatory bowel disease (23%), chronic intractable diarrhea (15%), chronic idiopathic intestinal pseudo-obstruction syndrome (10%), and malignancy (10%) made up the largest groups. The mean duration of parenteral support was 735 days (range, 90-3650 days); the mean number of catheters per patient was 2.1 (range, 1-8). Twenty-one patients continue to receive full or partial home TPN: four for more than 10 years and seven for more than 5 years. Fifty-one no longer require it and have had healing of mucosa or bowel adaptation. Complications related to administration of fluid and electrolytes were quite rare. Biotin deficiency was recognized once. Thirty-one have died, but only 13 deaths were related to TPN. Sepsis in nine and liver failure in two were the most common causes of death in the TPN-related group. Three of 21 still on home TPN have graduated either from high school or college. All but one of the school age children attend regular school; one attends a school for the medically disabled, another attends a school for the mentally gifted.
...
PMID:Long-term home parenteral nutrition in pediatrics: ten years of experience in 102 patients. 309 47

To determine if organic anions contribute to the diarrhea of inflammatory bowel disease, we measured osmolality, electrolytes, short-chain fatty acids, lactic acid, and some Krebs cycle anions in 24-hr fecal collections from 18 patients with chronic ulcerative colitis, 20 with Crohn's disease of the colon, and 16 normals. Mean lactic acid concentration was significantly elevated in ulcerative and Crohn's colitis, but values correlated with fecal weight only in the former syndrome. In ulcerative colitis, concentrations of each short-chain fatty acid, especially butyrate, were decreased compared with those from normals or Crohn's disease. Lactate and short-chain fatty acids accounted for nearly half the variability in fecal weight in ulcerative colitis. Crohn's patients had elevated mean fecal water osmolality and osmotic gap not observed in ulcerative colitis. Increased lactic acid and/or deficient short-chain fatty acids may modulate the diarrhea of ulcerative colitis. This mechanism seems less important in Crohn's colitis where an additional osmotic component may be significant.
...
PMID:Organic anions and the diarrhea of inflammatory bowel disease. 318 Sep 70

The literature on the vocational effects of inflammatory bowel disease is scanty. This paper describes the effects in a sample of 170 patients, supplemented with data obtained from the Ileostomy Association. Work capacity is affected by diarrhoea, urgency (including the problem of access to toilets), fatigue, and hospitalization. Rare complications, such as arthritis, represent special difficulties. The fashioning of an ileostomy has, as a general rule, a positive effect on the ability of the patient to work and, overall, inflammatory bowel disease should not prevent the vast majority of patients from successfully following a chosen career.
...
PMID:Capacity for work and employment record of patients with inflammatory bowel disease. 323 91

Presently there are no specific laboratory tests to diagnose inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Nonspecific tests to differentiate diarrhea due to mucosal injury from that occurring in patients with normal bowel mucosa (eg, fecal occult blood, leukocytes, etc) are not helpful. Tests to exclude infections agents are very important, since the clinical and radiological appearance of these may mimic IBD, and patients with IBD may suffer from superinfection. There are no laboratory tests which can differentiate Crohn's colitis from ulcerative colitis (UC). The tests used in the assessment and management of severely ill patients (Hgb, WBC, electrolytes, etc) are important, since abnormalities need to be corrected on an ongoing basis. The tests used to assess nutritional status are of little clinical value, since "clinical assessment" is as good as the laboratory assessment. Estimation of disease activity by tests is rarely better than the judgment of the clinician. Workup for malabsorption in Crohn's disease and the assessment of absorptive capacity of the terminal ileum are important for proper planning of management. Laboratory tests are also useful in clarifying the nature of some complications (eg, anemias and joint diseases).
...
PMID:Laboratory assessment of inflammatory bowel disease. 331 56


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>