Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (gastroenteritis)
11,398 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In this study we looked for the occurrence of immunoglobulin E (IgE) in feces from healthy individuals and determined the total daily excretion and day-to-day variation in IgE in feces from patients with allergy, as well as the correlation between concentrations of IgE in small samples of feces and the total amounts of IgE in feces collected over a longer period. Concentrations of IgE in extracts of small samples of dry feces correlated well with the total daily amounts of IgE in feces collected over a 3-day period. Thus, single small samples of feces can be used to measure the excretion of IgE with feces at that time. In 3 children, studied over a 5-week period, the IgE excretion varied somewhat from one day to another, but was largely within a certain range of concentrations. Addition of trypsin inhibitor to fresh feces had no influence on the IgE concentrations of the resulting fecal extracts. Less than 10% of 88 presumably healthy infants, children, and adults had detectable IgE in their feces, while 21 of 40 children with various kinds of allergy had measurable fecal IgE. Only 3 of 13 individuals who were suffering from infectious acute gastroenteritis had IgE-positive fecal extracts. This was also the case for 6 of 25 adult patients in clinical remission of ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease. Seven of 14 adult patients with chronic pancreatitis had measurable IgE in feces, and the concentrations were up to ten times the upper limit of IgE found in healthy individuals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The excretion of IgE with feces from healthy individuals and from others with allergy and diseases affecting the intestinal tract. 394 13

The name juvenile tropical pancreatitis syndrome (JTPS) is proposed for a disease which affects young people of both sexes in certain parts of the tropics and which is characterised by abdominal pain, diabetes, steatorrhoea, and pancreatic calcification. The condition seems to start with blockage of the pancreatic ducts by laminated secretions or inspissated mucus plugs which later calcify. Chronic pancreatitis follows. The hypothesis is that plugs are the result of pancreatic stasis due to prolonged lack of food in the stomach and/or gastroenteritis and dehydration. Most plugs are probably dislodged during convalescence when protein-containing foods are eaten and stimulate vigorous flow of pancreatic juice. The sluggish pancreatic flow produced by very-low-protein diets may not dislodge plugs. Repeated infection and anorexia can enlarge the plugs which ultimately calcify. JTPS therefore occurs in Third-World areas with a high rate of childhood infections, and where low-protein staples are taken. Cereal staples seem to reduce the incidence of JTPS in endemic areas because of their protein content.
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PMID:Pathogenesis of juvenile tropical pancreatitis syndrome. 610 87