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Query: UMLS:C0017536 (
giardiasis
)
1,714
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Mongolian gerbils were infected with a human pathogenic Giardia lamblia strain and compared with sham-treated control animals 6 days after inoculation. Infection resulted in crypt hyperplasia associated with an increased enterocyte migration rate. Villus height was decreased in the duodenum, unchanged in the jejunum, and increased in the ileum of infected animals. Epithelial microvilli were markedly shortened, and brush border surface area decreased in the jejunum and ileum of infected animals. Thymidine kinase activity was increased in isolated duodenal villus enterocytes but did not differ in the jejunum and ileum. In vitro and in vivo experiments showed that the infection resulted in decreased jejunal glucose-stimulated electrolyte, water, and 3-O-methyl-D-glucose absorption, whereas in the ileum in vitro electrolyte and 3-O-methyl-D-glucose absorption was similar in infected and control animals. Thus, in the jejunum infection causes electrolyte, solute, and fluid
malabsorption
associated with decreased brush border surface area. The results indicate that the diarrhea associated with
giardiasis
is caused by
malabsorption
rather than active secretion.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology of small intestinal malabsorption in gerbils infected with Giardia lamblia. 851 55
Decline in the specific activities of intestinal cytosolic glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) and isocitrate dehydrogenase (ICDH); brush border glucoamylase, and isomaltase; and basolateral (Na+, K+)-ATPase activities were observed during the establishment, acute phase and decline phase of infection in Giardia lamblia-infected mice. The degree of decline in the activities of various enzymes correlated well with the number of trophozoites counted in the jejunum. There appeared to be a gradual recovery of enzymatic activities during the decline phase of infection, when the number of trophozoites also declined. The decline in activities of these enzymes may contribute to
malabsorption
of nutrients during
giardiasis
.
...
PMID:Alterations in enzymatic activities of the intestinal mucosa during the course of Giardia lamblia infection in mice. 1667 Jul 64
Therapeutic strategies for the treatment of diarrhea of neonatal calves should be logical and should be targeted at correction of physiologic dysfunction. Appropriate, specific antimicrobial or antiprotozoal therapy should be instituted when colibacillosis, salmonellosis, or
giardiasis
is confirmed or suspected. All calves with diarrhea should be rehydrated if necessary, and proper nutritional support should be provided. Antisecretory agents such as flunixin meglumine and bismuth subsalicylate may be beneficial for treatment of calves with colibacillosis and salmonellosis. Adsorbants, such as attapulgite and bismuth subsalicylate, also may reduce loss of fluids. Perhaps loperamide or a similar drug will be proven effective in calves in the future. Potentially harmful drugs include several antimicrobial agents when they are administered orally, because they result in
malabsorption
; kaolin and pectin, which increase loss of ions during diarrhea; and motility modifiers that cause a decrease in all types of intestinal motor function. Finally, success should be measured by indicators of production such as survivability, days treated, weight gained, and net profit. Our goal should be to restore and maintain the health of the calf, not simply to alter the volume and consistency of the feces.
...
PMID:Treatment of diarrhea of neonatal calves. 176 Jul 58
Seventy five cases (50 males, 25 females; mean age 20.2 +/- 5.8 years), whose stools were positive for cysts and/or trophozoites of Giardia lamblia, were studied for their clinical profile and therapeutic response to metronidazole and tinidazole. Maximum frequency of cases (41.2%) was noted upto 20 years of age, and it declined with advancing age. A majority of them (41.3%) presented with non-specific symptoms while 38.6% were asymptomatic parasite carriers. Features of
malabsorption
were observed in 12% of cases and 8% presented with acute illness, having explosive, watery, foul smelling diarrhoea along with crampy upper abdominal discomfort. Most of them (62.5%) had blood group A. Tinidazole (97.5%) was more efficacious (P less than 0.01) than metronidazole (54%) in a single dose of 50 mg/Kg, with good tolerance. Tinidazole can be recommended for the treatment of
giardiasis
in individual cases as well as in families and close communities.
...
PMID:Clinical profile of giardiasis and comparison of its therapeutic response to metronidazole and tinidazole. 181 77
In 53 patients with chronic diarrhea ileoscopy was done following colonoscopy. Beside the microscopic examination, terminal ileum biopsies and mucosal smears were also performed. Endoscopy of the terminal ileum was abnormal in eight patients (15.1%); biopsy itself was diagnostic in 22 patients (41.5%): primary bile acid
malabsorption
with mucosal atrophy and reduced retention of 75ScHCAT (10), mucosal atrophy after cholecystectomy (4), Crohn's disease (6), backwash ileitis in ulcerative colitis (1), and postirradiation ileitis (1). Biopsies were normal but mucosal smear indicated the cause of diarrhea in a further 10 patients:
giardiasis
was found in 7, and candidiasis in 3 patients. All in all, endoscopy, biopsy and mucosal smear of terminal ileum showed a sensitivity of 58.5%. In 38 patients in whom laboratory, roentgenologic and endoscopic investigation failed to establish the etiology of diarrhea, the sensitivity of ileoscopy itself was 0%, of ileoscopy with biopsy 36.8% and ileoscopy with biopsy and mucosal smear 47.4%. We conclude that endoscopy, biopsy and mucosal smear of the terminal ileum are indicated in the investigation of patients with chronic diarrhea.
...
PMID:[The terminal ileum and chronic diarrhea: endoscopy, histology and parasitology]. 192 64
Infection with Giardia lamblia often causes only minor mucosal changes to the small intestine yet frank fat
malabsorption
may still occur. Some evidence suggests abnormal pancreatic exocrine function in subjects with
giardiasis
although the mechanism and significance of this is unclear. Studies were conducted in vitro to determine the effect of G. lamblia trophozoites or culture filtrates from the organism on lipolysis of triglyceride by porcine pancreatic lipase. Live trophozoites significantly inhibited lipolysis. The degree of inhibition increased with longer duration of lipase exposure to trophozoites. Total amounts of enzyme inhibited were proportional to enzyme concentration, while the percentage inhibition was greatest at lowest concentration. At a lipase concentration of 1.7 i.u./ml, enzyme activity was reduced by 89.7% compared to controls after incubation for 4 h with trophozoites. The effect was abolished using killed, intact trophozoites. Culture filtrates of G. lamblia did not inhibit lipolysis. Specificity of the effect was suggested by the failure of another flagellate protozoan, Trichomonas vaginalis, to inhibit lipase. In this assay system the inhibition of lipolysis was not dependent on the bile salt concentration present. The impact of this effect in vivo remains to be determined but it may contribute to fat
malabsorption
in
giardiasis
.
...
PMID:The effect of Giardia lamblia trophozoites on lipolysis in vitro. 194 23
The oral inoculation of Giardia lamblia trophozoites (Portland 1 strain) resulted in the establishment of infection by day 3-5 in NMRI mice. By 9-11 days postinfection, the trophozoites load reached maximum (acute phase) and later declined by day 17-21. The tissue sections from infected animals during the establishment phase of infection indicated limited changes in surface epithelium with normal villous length. Although trophozoites of G. lamblia were seen in all sections lying free in the lumen as discrete parasite, the active invasion by the parasite could not be demonstrated. During the acute phase of infection, fuzzy appearance of brush border, marked reduction in villous height and infiltration of intraepithelial lymphocytes were commonly seen in all tissues. Electron microscopic observation demonstrated large numbers of trophozoites of G. lamblia preferentially aggregated at the base of the villi. At some sites, adhesive marks indicating attachment of Giardia trophozoites were also seen by scanning electron microscopy. In addition, severe flattening and blunting of microvilli and occasional loss of basic morphology of intracellular organelles of columnar cells were noticed at the site of parasite colonization under electron microscopy. The brush border microvilli were noted to be damaged in areas where parasites were attached to surface epithelium with the help of suction discs. The morphological changes associated with Giardia infection tended to reverse as the parasite load declined by day 17-21. Thus we feel that
malabsorption
in
giardiasis
with total or varying degrees of morphological alterations of surface mucosa can be explained on the basis of reduced absorptive surface area.
...
PMID:An ultrastructural analysis of changes in surface architecture of intestinal mucosa following Giardia lamblia infection in mice. 222 57
A 10-year-old mentally retarded girl was sent to our hospital due to generalized edema, vomiting and poor appetite for several days. Serum albumin level was low, but no proteinuria was detected. Her stool was bulky and foul. Stool examination for parasite with formalin-ether concentration method revealed negative result. Trypsin activity test of stool revealed low trypsin activity as compared with normal specimen. Daily fecal fat exceeded upper normal limit. The diagnosis of
giardiasis
was confirmed by duodenal juice examination. Intestinal histology revealed mild shortening of the villi with increased mononuclear cell infiltration in the lamina propria. The daily stool amount decreased markedly after treatment with metronidazole 250 mg three times a day for 7 days. The edema subsided during the treatment. Serum albumin bevel returned to normal after the treatment.
Giardiasis
with
malabsorption syndrome
has often been overlooked in Taiwan. It is advised that in case of
malabsorption syndrome
giardiasis
should be included in the list of differential diagnosis.
...
PMID:[Giardiasis with malabsorption syndrome: report of one case]. 227 67
Breath test was performed in 664 school-aged children in order to measure lactose
malabsorption
. The first screening showed that 23.4% of the children evidenced
malabsorption
of milk sugar. In these children further stool examination for
Giardia lamblia infection
, and saccharose breath test was performed to identify more complex absorption problems. The remaining 146 children were tested again after a period of 3-9 month and 45.8% of this population showed lactose
malabsorption
. In conclusion the authors determined that 10.1% of school aged children were permanently hypo- or alactasic. During the examination, they measured the approximate consumption of milk considering the quantity of milk intake showed that the consumption of milk and lactose
malabsorption
were not closely related normal and abnormal absorption among children who would not normally consume milk.
...
PMID:[Incidence of lactose malabsorption in the population 6-18 years of age]. 234 45
Seventy-seven Meriones unguiculatus were inoculated intra-esophageal with Giardia lamblia cysts isolated from the stool of a Giardia infected child. Correlation between oral dosage, course of infection, trophozoite distribution and the pathological changes in the small intestine of the infected jirds were studied. One (12.5%) of eight animals became infected with only 5 cysts. 10(4) cysts/jird or more was infective to nearly all the animals. Most of the infected animals (83%) excreted cysts and/or trophozoites intermittently. The extent of trophozoite colonization and their distribution in the small intestine varied with the time of infection, but not with the number of Giardia found in the feces. There was no direct correlation between the size of inoculum and the course of infection, the fecal output of cysts and/or trophozoites, or the intensity of pathological changes in the small intestine. The histopathological lesions induced by G. lamblia included cellular infiltration of the mucosa of the small bowel, nodular lymphoid hyperplasia, edema of the lamina propria and increase in mucous secretion. Necrobiosis and shedding of the epithelium was evident, and the mitotic figures of intestinal crypt increased significantly. The reduction of the villi to crypts ratio may indicate that the villi of small intestine were covered by relatively immature enterocytes, which may, partially, account for the
malabsorption
in
giardiasis
(Figs. 1-3).
...
PMID:[Further studies on the mongolian jird model of Giardia lamblia]. 259 Oct 34
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