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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Gliadin antibodies of the IgG and IgA isotypes and IgG subclasses were measured in 200 adults who were randomly selected from the Icelandic National Register. Those with the highest gliadin antibody concentrations were invited with negative controls to participate in a clinical evaluation. Neither the study subjects nor the physicians who recorded and evaluated the clinical findings were aware of the antibody levels. Significantly higher proportion of the gliadin antibody positive individuals reported unexplained attacks of diarrhoea (p = 0.03), and IgA gliadin antibodies were associated with increased prevalence of chronic
fatigue
(p = 0.0037). The gliadin antibody positive group also showed significantly decreased transferrin saturation, mean corpuscular volume and mean corpuscular haemoglobin compared with the gliadin antibody negative controls. Serum folic acid concentrations were significantly lower in the IgA gliadin antibody positive individuals. On blind global assessment 15 of the 48 participants were thought to have clinical and laboratory features that are compatible with gluten sensitive
enteropathy
, and 14 of these were in the gliadin antibody positive group (p = 0.013). Complaints that have not been associated with gluten intolerance had similar prevalence in both groups with the exception of persistent or recurrent headaches that were more common in the gliadin antibody positive group. These findings raise the possibility that a subclinical form of gluten intolerance may be relatively common.
...
PMID:Do adults with high gliadin antibody concentrations have subclinical gluten intolerance? 154 15
Because coeliac disease often presents atypically it is underdiagnosed. It is suggested that the detection rate may be increased by 12% if serology is used to identify cases of occult
enteropathy
. All adults noted incidentally to be R1 anti-reticulin antibody (ARA) positive in the course of routine autoantibody testing of 6532 sera over one year were followed. None of the eight patients with seropositive serum was suspected of having coeliac disease. All eight had high titres of IgA anti-gliadin and IgA anti-endomysial antibodies, neither of which is detected in a routine autoantibody test, in addition to IgA R1-ARA. On clinical review coeliac disease was considered probable in only one patient, but because of the strong serological evidence of gluten sensitivity, jejunal biopsy was advised in all eight. Seven agreed and all had villous atrophy and crypt hyperplasia in keeping with coeliac disease. Six of the seven presented initially with vague symptoms such as
tiredness
or arthralgia. These symptoms disappeared after several weeks of gluten withdrawal. Forty two sera showing reticulin staining patterns other than R1 were used as controls. Low titre IgA anti-gliadin was noted in two of 42 but none had IgA anti-endomysial antibody. These 42 cases were not recommended for biopsy. During our study 58 other new adult cases of coeliac disease were diagnosed, primarily on clinical rather than serological grounds, at the four hospitals that request autoantibody studies. Occult coeliac disease detected serologically thus increased the overall incidence of coeliac disease by 12% from 58 to 65 cases. R1-ARA, even in the absence of the expected symptoms and signs of coeliac disease, is an indication for jejunal biopsy and is a reliable indicator of occult coeliac disease.
...
PMID:Serological screening suggests that adult coeliac disease is underdiagnosed in the UK and increases the incidence by up to 12%. 830 51
A 17 year old male suffered from iron deficiency of undetermined cause for 2 years. Iron substitution was able to correct it for short periods. With the exception of
fatigue
and recurring abdominal pain attributed to oral iron therapy no further symptoms were present. The physical status on admission was unremarkable. The laboratory detected intestinal disorders, an anemia of the chronic type without evidence for malignancy or renal failure suggested an inflammatory gastro-
intestinal disorder
. In spite of a twice negative noninvasive test for gluten-intolerance the clinician favored in his differential diagnosis non tropical sprue over inflammatory bowel disease (IBD, Crohn's disease, Whipple's disease). Histopathology of small bowel specimens did not indicate sprue. An ileo-colonoscopy revealed severe ulcerating ileitis and mild chronic colitis. The histologic specimen revealed a severe ileal inflammation with cosinophilia and the colon specimens epitheloid microgranuloma. These findings are highly compatible with the diagnosis of Crohn's disease. Iron deficiency anemia is common in Crohn's disease. In the current case it is due to disturbed iron uptake. Iron deficiency anemia as sole symptom of Crohn's disease is extremely rare.
...
PMID:[Severe chronic iron deficiency in a 17-year-old student]. 962 33
The present study is an evaluation of the quality of life of 32 patients following successful pancreatic transplantation. These patients were studied at from 6 months to 5 years post-transplantation. Over one-half of them were beyond the 21/2-yr mark. A questionnaire was developed that focused on symptoms of neuropathy,
enteropathy
, and retinopathy. All of the patients evaluated had completely normal carbohydrate metabolism, as evidenced by normal fasting blood sugars and hemoglobin A1C levels. Twenty-one of the 32 patients had symptomatic neuropathy pre-operatively, and 11 of these reported substantial subjective improvement. Eight remained unchanged and 2 became worse. Twenty-four patients had symptoms of
enteropathy
and 23 noted improvement post-transplantation. Retinopathy symptoms were not improved, but there was a suggestion that after 3 or 31/2 yr progression did not occur as rapidly as earlier. Virtually all of the patients had mood improvements and considerably less
fatigue
. We have determined that the risk of the procedure when receiving simultaneous renal and pancreas grafts is not significantly greater than that associated with a kidney transplant alone. Patients who are not uremic, either those with a successful kidney graft or those preuremic patients, are better candidates if symptoms are present. The risk of immunosuppression is insignificant in those patients who already have a successful renal transplant and are already on immunosuppressant drugs. Pancreatic transplantation can substantially improve the quality of life in diabetic patients, and should be considered as a therapeutic measure.
...
PMID:Quality of life in diabetic recipients of kidney transplants is better with the addition of the pancreas. 1014 30
Fibromyalgia (FM) syndrome and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) are functional disorders in which altered somatic and or visceral perception thresholds have been found. The aim of this study was to evaluate the prevalence of FM in a group of patients with IBS and the possible association of FM with patterns and severity of the
intestinal disorder
. One hundred thirty consecutive IBS patients were studied. The IBS was divided into four different patterns according to the predominant bowel symptom and into three levels of severity using a functional severity index. All patients underwent rheumatological evaluation for number of positive tender points, number of tender and swollen joints, markers of inflammation, and presence of headache and weakness. Moreover, patients' assessments of diffuse pain, mood and sleep disturbance, anxiety, and
fatigue
were also measured on a visual analogue scale. The diagnosis of FM was made based on American College of Rheumatology classification criteria. Nonparametric tests were used for statistical analysis. Fibromyalgia was found in 20% of IBS patients. No statistical association was found between the presence of FM and the type of IBS but a significant association was found between the presence of FM and severity of the
intestinal disorder
. The presence of FM in IBS patients seems to be associated only with the severity of IBS. This result confirms previous studies on the association between the two syndromes.
...
PMID:Fibromyalgia in patients with irritable bowel syndrome. An association with the severity of the intestinal disorder. 1151 79
Gluten-sensitive enteropathy or, as it is more commonly called, celiac disease, is an autoimmune inflammatory disease of the small intestine that is precipitated by the ingestion of gluten, a component of wheat protein, in genetically susceptible persons. Exclusion of dietary gluten results in healing of the mucosa, resolution of the malabsorptive state, and reversal of most, if not all, effects of celiac disease. Recent studies in the United States suggest that the prevalence of celiac disease is approximately one case per 250 persons. Gluten-sensitive enteropathy commonly manifests as "silent" celiac disease (i.e., minimal or no symptoms). Serologic tests for antibodies against endomysium, transglutaminase, and gliadin identify most patients with the disease. Serologic testing should be considered in patients who are at increased genetic risk for gluten-sensitive
enteropathy
(i.e., family history of celiac disease or personal history of type I diabetes) and in patients who have chronic diarrhea, unexplained anemia, chronic
fatigue
, or unexplained weight loss. Early diagnosis and management are important to forestall serious consequences of malabsorption, such as osteoporosis and anemia.
...
PMID:Gluten-sensitive enteropathy (celiac disease): more common than you think. 1250 63
Intolerance of gluten, resposible for Coeliac disease, is essentially shown by an auto-immune
enteropathy
, even if the cutaneous manifestation (herpetiform dermatitis) and perhaps certain neurological signs (cerebral syndrome, peripheral neuropathy) may be independent as well as associated with the intestinal illness. This affection is of immunological nature, occuring in a genetic field that predisposes to the illness (familial form: concordance of 70% in homozygote twins; 90% of patients show an HLA molecule of type DQ2, DQ8 in almost all the other cases. The exogenous factor is the gluten content contained in wheat, rye and barley, more precisely by the intermediary "the prolamines" which are the "reactive" element that induces a the same time an inflammatory reaction of type TH11 locally (expressed by the histological aspect of a duodenal biopsy evolving as villous atrophy) and a humoral response with production of anti-gliadine and anti-transglutaminase antibodies (the role of the latter enzyme is intervention in the local transformation of antigens to make them antigenic). It is an illness of adults as well as children and this point must now be emphasized. Recent epidemiological studies insist on a high prevalence (1/300 in Europe). Clinical expression, at the start very polymorphic and so misleading, before the appearance of the more classical signs of malabsorption and development, always feared, towards a lymphoma. These signs are haematological (anemia of various types, hyper platelets by hyposplenism, haemorrhagic signs) cutaneous (herpetiform dermatitis, cutaneous vasculitis) mucosal (aphtose), hepatic (cytolysis), neurophysical (
fatigue
, troubles of behaviour, cerebral syndrome, neuropathy) and osteo-articulitis (osteopenia, arthralgias, diffuse pains). The association of certain auto-immune illnesses must be emphasized (diabetes, Hashimoto thyroiditis, Gougerot disease, primitive biliary cirrhosis). To think early of the possibility of intolerance to gluten, is to give the means of a very easy diagnosis (measurement of anti-gliadin, anti-endomysium and anti-transglutaminase, and secondarily duodenal biopsy if necessary), and it is early elimination of gluten food which will make the various clinical manifestations disappear and so prevent the risk of evolution to a tumoral pathology.
...
PMID:[A great imitator for the allergologist: intolerance to gluten]. 1513 80
A 29-year-old woman presented to the emergency department with exhaustion,
fatigue
, and abdominal pain. She reported having received a diagnosis of bulimia nervosa 10 years before. On examination, she had a marked pallor and was severely malnourished. Laboratory analysis revealed a dramatically low hemoglobin level of 1.7 g/dL (ref: 11.5-15.8 g/dL). Serum iron was quantified as 1.4 micromol/L (ref: 7-26 micromol/L), ferritin as 5 ng/mL (ref: 10-120 ng/mL), and the level of serum transferrin as 212 mg/dL (ref: 200-360 mg/dL). A duodenal biopsy revealed villous atrophy in the mucosal layer indicative for celiac disease. This diagnosis was confirmed by serum levels of endomysial antibodies, tissue transglutaminase antibody, and antigliadin antibodies. The newly diagnosed gluten-sensitive
enteropathy
is likely to be in part responsible for the severe symptoms reported. The extent of hemoglobin decline in combination with an astonishing lack of critical symptoms seen in this patient is a rarity. We conclude that anorectic patients with severe anemia and malnutrition should be evaluated for the presence of additional somatic conditions.
...
PMID:Very severe iron-deficiency anemia in a patient with celiac disease and bulimia nervosa: a case report. 1629 20
Coeliac disease is an immune-mediated disorder resulting in nutrient malabsorption now thought to have a prevalence of between 1:100 and 1:200 in the UK population. Symptoms can include diarrhoea, steatorrhoea, abdominal bloating, cramps, flatulence, weight loss, weakness and
fatigue
. In addition to the morbidity associated with presenting symptoms, patients are also at increased risk of metabolic bone disease,
enteropathy
-associated T-cell lymphoma and other malignancies (gastric, oesophageal, bladder, breast, brain). There appears to be a strong genetic component to this disease. This article provides a short review of the historical, clinical and genetic aspects of this disease and highlights several findings from recent structural and molecular immunology studies. A model of the pathogenesis is proposed where the contributions of innate and adaptive immune systems are delineated and the essential dual roles of gliadin (from ingested gluten) in the initiation and maintenance of this disease are summarised. Finally, potential future therapeutic options based on this new understanding are discussed.
...
PMID:The molecular basis of coeliac disease. 1682 Sep 91
Cavitating mesenteric lymph node syndrome (CMLNS) is a complication of celiac disease (chronic
enteropathy
characterized by intolerance to gluten ingestion) that is documented but poorly understood. Patients with CMLNS often present with weight loss that is refractory to treatment,
fatigue
, and diarrhea associated to clinical signs and laboratory findings of hyposplenism. Computed tomography shows multiple cystic mesenteric masses with a central low attenuation area caused by the presence of fluid and/or adipose material in the central cavity of the mesenteric lymph node.
...
PMID:[Cavitating mesenteric lymph node syndrome]. 1705 52
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