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Query: UMLS:C0017536 (giardiasis)
1,714 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Involvement of the gastrointestinal tract in macroglobulinemia is exceedingly rare. We describe a patient with IgM biclonal immunoglobulin disorder associated with diffuse lymphoplasmacytic infiltration of the small intestine. This chronic illness was characterized by diarrhea, steatorrhea, and intestinal pseudo-obstruction. Full-thickness biopsy specimens of the jejunum showed stunted and fused villi, giardiasis, and a widespread cellular infiltrate in the lamina propria extending through the muscularis mucosae into the submucosa and muscular layers. The infiltrate had a cytologically benign appearance that was shown to be polyclonal by immunochemical stains. Intestinal vacuolated plasma cells were occasionally observed in electron microscopic study. The patient has not developed the features of Waldenstrom's disease on a clinical follow-up of 14 years.
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PMID:Macroglobulinemia and small intestinal disease. A case report with review of the literature. 314 96

Giardia lamblia predominantly colonizes the proximal small intestine where bile is plentiful. We have investigated interactions between bile and this parasite by (i) examining the specificity of the stimulatory effect of bile on parasite growth in vitro, (ii) studying the possible association between giardiasis and bile salt deconjugation in vivo, and (iii) quantifying bile salt uptake by Giardia and relating this to uptake by other microorganisms. Our findings indicate that the growth promoting effects of ox bile and pure bile salt (sodium glycocholate) are, as far as is known, specific for Giardia, since the growth of a related protozoon, Trichomonas vaginalis, and a variety of enteric bacteria was either unchanged or inhibited. We were unable to detect deconjugated ('free') bile salt in duodenal fluid from UK patients with giardiasis and found no evidence to suggest that Giardia deconjugated bile salts in vitro. However, Giardia avidly took up conjugated bile salt, apparently in a concentration-dependent manner and to a much greater degree than Trichomonas and enteric bacteria. Thus, bile specifically stimulates growth of Giardia, and bile salt is avidly consumed by the parasite. The mechanism by which bile stimulates parasite growth is unknown, but uptake of conjugated bile salt by Giardia could reduce intraluminal bile salt concentrations and possibly interfere with micellar solubilization of fat. This may contribute to the steatorrhoea which is well recognized in symptomatic patients with giardiasis.
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PMID:Giardia-bile salt interactions in vitro and in vivo. 323 81

Three children with cystic fibrosis developed steatorrhoea unresponsive to changes in pancreatic supplements. The final diagnoses were chronic giardiasis, stagnant loop syndrome, and Crohn's disease. Refractory intestinal symptoms in cystic fibrosis merit further investigation.
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PMID:Intestinal disease in cystic fibrosis. 323

Ten pediatric patients investigated for chronic diarrhea, chronic weight loss, or failure to thrive were found on intestinal biopsy and/or in a duodenal aspirate to have Giardia lamblia. Serum immunoglobulin levels were normal or elevated in all patients. Three children had increased excretion of fecal fat and three other children had low D-xylose absorption. Jejunal biopsy specimens showed two severe, three moderate, and two mild morphological abnormalities, and three were normal. Except for lactase deficiency, disaccharidase activities correlated poorly with the severity of mucosal damage on biopsy. Steatorrhea was seen only with the more normal biopsies. Immunofluorescent staining of the biopsies for IgG, IgM, IgA, and secretory piece revealed no immune defects. Thus, there was no single malabsorption defect associated with giardiasis, and the specific defects did not necessarily correlate with morphological changes.
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PMID:Giardiasis in childhood: poor clinical and histological correlations. 635 23

The debate about the pathogenicity of Giardia lamblia in man has ended, and th issues regarding the prevalence of clinical and subclinical infections and their nutritonal impact have become the foremost considerations. Giardiasis can produce steatorrhea, maldigestion, and malabsorption of carbohydrates and of vitamins A and B12. The mechanisms of the absorptive dysfunction are not clear, but morphological abnormalities of the intestinal mucosa and/or bacterial overgrowth might play a role. Severe clinical giardiasis can cause "failure to thrive" in young children, but the impact, if any, of subclinical giardiasis on growth in general populations is not well defined. Protein-energy malnutrition appears to predispose to giardial infection, perhaps because of the accompanying hypochlorhydria, immunosuppression, and altered gastrointestinal flora. The lack of a sensitive and noninvasive diagnostic test for human giardial infection limits the investigation of the nutritional correlates of giardiasis.
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PMID:Giardiasis: nutritional implications. 675 Jul 50

23 patients with gastroenteritis and 9 with severe malabsorption syndrome related to giardiasis were investigated in a semi-prospective fashion as follows: (1) conjugated bile acid levels measured in duodenal aspirate (thin layer chromatography) in 6 patients with steatorrhea. (2) intraepithelial lymphocytes count (results expressed as the number of intraepithelial lymphocytes per 100 epithelial cells) in small intestinal biopsies from the 32 patients, 11 of which had immunoglobulin deficiency (9 IgA deficiency). The results indicate that there is no decrease in the percentage of conjugated bile acids (mean percentage 90%; normal = 80); a significantly increased percentage of intra-epithelial lymphocytes is documented in giardiasis (11.1% +/- 6.7), versus 2.3% +/- 0.5 in acute gastroenteritis (9 patients) and 6.3 +/- 0.5 in chronic diarrheas (6 patients) (p less than 0,001). This percentage, however, is significantly lower than in untreated coeliac sprue (23 patients) (12.17 +/- 11.6) (p less than 0,01). Conversely a high intraepithelial lymphocyte count does not correlate with the degree of intestinal villous atrophy (3 patients had severe and 6 partial villous atrophy) (r = 0.170). IgA deficiency should be suspected in patients with giardiasis presenting with intestinal villous atrophy (5 patients). Steatorrhea in our patients does not appear related to bile acid deconjugation. To explain enterotoxicity in giardiasis, more than a direct effect of the ventral disk of the parasite on intestinal mucosa, one should incriminate the host immune cell mediated response as shown by lymphocytic infiltration of the epithelium on small bowel biopsies.
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PMID:[Enteropathogenic mechanisms involved in giardiasis in children (author's transl)]. 710 70

Several reports have indicated that fecal elastase-1 (EL-1) determination is a new, sensitive, and specific noninvasive pancreatic function test; however, very few patients with malabsorption due to small intestine diseases have been included in the previous studies. The aim of the study was to compare the diagnostic accuracy of fecal EL-1 and fecal chymotrypsin (FCT) in distinguishing between pancreatic maldigestion and intestinal malabsorption. Three groups of subjects were studied: group A included 49 patients with known cystic fibrosis (25 males, median age 5 years); group B included 43 subjects with various small intestine diseases (17 males, median age 6 years); and group C included 45 children without any history of gastrointestinal disease (22 males, median age 5 years). In all patients, stools were collected for 72 h on a standard diet and fecal EL-1, FCT, and steatocrit tests were performed. Both EL-1 and FCT were below normal limits in all CF patients with pancreatic maldigestion not treated with pancreatic enzyme (100% sensitivity for both assays); El-1, but not FCT, was also below normal in all the CF patients with pancreatic maldigestion treated with pancreatic extracts. Both EL-1 and FCT values in the CF group were significantly lower than in subjects with various small intestinal diseases and in children without any history of gastrointestinal disease (P < 0.0001). FCT, but not EL-1, values showed an inverse statistically significant correlation with steatocrit values in the whole CF group (P < 0.001); FCT was below normal in three of four CF patients with steatorrhea on pancreatic enzyme therapy. Both EL-1 and FCT had 100% specificity when calculated in children without any history of gastrointestinal disease; in contrast, specificity was 86% for EL-1 and 76% for FCT if we considered the control group with small intestinal diseases: low EL-1 was observed in two cases of intestinal giardiasis, two cases of short bowel syndrome, one case of celiac disease, and one case of intestinal pseudobstruction; FCT was abnormal in four cases of intestinal giardiasis, three cases of celiac disease, one case of short bowel syndrome, one case of Crohn's disease, and one case of intestinal pseudobstruction. Diagnostic accuracy was 92% for fecal EL-1 and 82% for FCT. Steatocrit values were over the normal limit in 11 patients with small intestine diseases; in 7/11 of these patients at least one of the pancreatic test results was below the normal limit. In conclusions, in patients with CF, fecal EL-1 determination is not more sensitive than FCT in identifying pancreatic maldigestion; however, fecal EL-1 assay is more specific than FCT determination in distinguishing pancreatic maldigestion from intestinal malabsorption.
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PMID:Diagnostic accuracy of fecal elastase 1 assay in patients with pancreatic maldigestion or intestinal malabsorption: a collaborative study of the Italian Society of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Hepatology. 1141 13

Chronic diarrhea, defined as a decrease in stool consistency for more than four weeks, is a common but challenging clinical scenario. It can be divided into three basic categories: watery, fatty (malabsorption), and inflammatory. Watery diarrhea may be subdivided into osmotic, secretory, and functional types. Watery diarrhea includes irritable bowel syndrome, which is the most common cause of functional diarrhea. Another example of watery diarrhea is microscopic colitis, which is a secretory diarrhea affecting older persons. Laxative-induced diarrhea is often osmotic. Malabsorptive diarrhea is characterized by excess gas, steatorrhea, or weight loss; giardiasis is a classic infectious example. Celiac disease (gluten-sensitive enteropathy) is also malabsorptive, and typically results in weight loss and iron deficiency anemia. Inflammatory diarrhea, such as ulcerative colitis or Crohn disease, is characterized by blood and pus in the stool and an elevated fecal calprotectin level. Invasive bacteria and parasites also produce inflammation. Infections caused by Clostridium difficile subsequent to antibiotic use have become increasingly common and virulent. Not all chronic diarrhea is strictly watery, malabsorptive, or inflammatory, because some categories overlap. Still, the most practical diagnostic approach is to attempt to categorize the diarrhea by type before testing and treating. This narrows the list of diagnostic possibilities and reduces unnecessary testing. Empiric therapy is justified when a specific diagnosis is strongly suspected and follow-up is available.
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PMID:Evaluation of chronic diarrhea. 2208 67


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