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Query: UMLS:C0020500 (
hyperoxaluria
)
912
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fourteen patients with ileal dysfunction due to resection or bypass were encountered over an 18-month period. Symptoms had been present for a mean period of 1.8 years.
Diarrhoea
was a universal symptom, and varied from mild to incapacitating. Weight loss, due in part to malabsorption and in part to the patients' fear of eating, occurred in 10 of 14 patients. The chief metabolic abnormalities were steatorrhoea and hypokalaemia. Vitamin B12 deficiency, folate deficiency, anaemia, hypoalbuminaemia, hypocalcaemia, hypomagnesaemia,
hyperoxaluria
, and an abnormal prothrombin ratio were less frequently seen. Treatment with cholestyramine and/or long-chain fat restriction effectively reduced
diarrhoea
in every case, and this was supplemented by replacement of specific deficiencies. There was little added benefit from non-specific antidiarrhoeal agents. It was found that the major symptoms of ileal dysfunction are readily treated, but that attention should also be given to a number of nutritional deficiencies.
...
PMID:Consequences of ileal dysfunction: an approach to management. 10 34
Fourteen patients underwent small bowel bypass (SBB) takedown for complications such as chronic nausea and vomiting, excessive flatus, intractable
diarrhea
, liver dysfunction, electrolyte imbalance,
hyperoxaluria
with renal stones, and arthritis. The average weight loss in these 14 patients after SBB was 93 pounds (34% of initial weight), with a mean follow-up of 23 months. Four of the 14 patients had SBB takedown only and gained an average of 36 pounds over the ensuing 14 months. Similarly, three patients had SBB takedown with delayed (asynchronous) gastric bypass (GB) and gained an average of 55 pounds during the 14 months prior to GB. Following GB these three patients lost only an additional 8 pounds over a 12 month period, leaving them 47 pounds heavier than at the time of SBB takedown. In contrast, seven patients treated with SBB takedown and synchronous GB not only maintained the weight reduction obtained with SBB, but, in addition, had further modest weight reductions (average, 18 pounds), for a mean follow-up of 8 months. There were no serious operative or late complications with any of the above operations. In addition, the complications leading to SBB takedown resolved in each case. It is concluded that synchronous GB is an effective means of maintaining the weight reduction in the morbidly obese patient after SBB takedown.
...
PMID:Management of the morbidly obese patient after small bowel bypass failure. 88 3
The current concepts of normal fat absorption and the entero-hepatic circulation of bile acids are being reviewed with emphasis on the steps which are clinically important. Based on an understanding of normal physiology, diseases associated with steatorrhea can be classified according to pathogenetic mechanisms. In some diseases the pathogenesis of the steatorrhea is not understood. Malabsorption of fat and bile salts can have characteristic consequences such as nutritional deficiencies,
diarrhea
,
hyperoxaluria
with nephrolithiasis, and cholelithiasis. For quantitative assessment of steatorrhea chemical analysis of fecal fat is necessary.
...
PMID:[Absorption and malabsorption of fat and bile acids (author's transl)]. 89 17
A 58-year-old female patient admitted to hospital for advanced renal failure had a 40 years' history of Crohn's disease and had undergone ileocecal resection. Nevertheless, chronic
diarrhea
persisted. Subsequently calcium oxalate stones in the urine were repeatedly observed. Progressive renal failure developed. The investigation of the patient showed severe steatorrhea and pronounced
hyperoxaluria
, and renal biopsy showed severe chronic interstitial nephritis with calcium oxalate crystals. The skin biopsy revealed severe calcium oxalate vasculitis. The pathophysiology and therapy of secondary
hyperoxaluria
due to small bowel resection are discussed.
...
PMID:[Secondary oxalosis following small bowel resection with kidney insufficiency and oxalate vasculopathy]. 160 91
The active transport of conjugated bile acids by the ileum is responsible for the enterohepatic circulation of bile acids, a physiological process that ensures an ample supply to the intestine of these key biological surfactants, irrespective of the rate of their biosynthesis from cholesterol. The ileal bile acid transport system is a high capacity, low affinity secondary active Na+ co-transport system that differs in substrate specificity from that present in the hepatocyte. Ileal transport is homeostatically regulated by feedback inhibition of the bile acids that are transported. The enterohepatic circulation is responsible for the concentration profile present in the intestine--high concentrations in the small intestine and low concentrations in the large intestine. Loss of ileal absorption, when mild, leads to a sequence of events that result in increased concentrations in the large intestine causing
diarrhea
. Severe bile acid malabsorption causes decreased concentrations in the small intestine which in turn lead to fat maldigestion and fat malabsorption. The increased passage of fatty acids into the colon contributes to
diarrhea
. Fat maldigestion and malabsorption also causes increased absorption of dietary oxalate from the colon which causes
hyperoxaluria
and contributes to nephrolithiasis. In cholestatic liver disease, inappropriate upregulation of ileal bile acid transport is likely to cause retention of hepatotoxic endogenous bile acids. In familial hypercholesterolemia, efficient bile acid absorption contributes to downregulation of LDL receptors and the maintenance of elevated plasma cholesterol levels; upregulation of bile acid transport during bile acid sequestrant therapy could diminish its efficacy. Efforts are in progress to develop a suitable bile acid analogue to be administered orally for conditions of bile acid deficiency in the small intestine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Biological and medical aspects of active ileal transport of bile acids. 206 93
Malabsorptive states are frequently associated with increased urinary oxalate excretion. The authors describe a 10-year-old girl with steatorrhea,
hyperoxaluria
, and a renal calculus in a single functioning kidney. Successful management of steatorrhea corrected both the chronic
diarrhea
and
hyperoxaluria
. Enteric hyperoxaluria is a well-known etiology of calcium oxalate urolithiasis in adults. Pediatricians caring for children with malabsorptive conditions should be aware of the risk of urinary calculus formation as a result of increased dietary oxalate absorption.
...
PMID:Urolithiasis and enteric hyperoxaluria in a child with steatorrhea. 358 41
Patients with ileal disease have increased absorption of dietary oxalate,
hyperoxaluria
, and an increased incidence of nephrolithiasis. Patients with steatorrhea of varying etiologies also have
hyperoxaluria
. To determine whether steatorrhea per se is associated with nephrolithiasis, we reviewed the charts of all adult patients who had a 72-hr fecal fat analysis from 1968 to 1978. The 159 patients with steatorrhea were compared to 162 patients without steatorrhea. The two groups were comparable in age, sex, urine specific gravity, and serum uric acid and phosphorus; serum calcium was slightly less in the steatorrhea group (8.7 +/- 0.1 vs 9.0 +/- 0.1, P less than 0.02). Although 19 patients with steatorrhea had nephrolithiasis compared to 7 control patients (P = 0.01), 15 of these 19 patients had ileal disease and only 4 of the 118 patients with steatorrhea but without ileal disease had stones. Categorical data analysis revealed that steatorrhea,
diarrhea
(stool weight greater than 225 g/day), male sex, and ileal disease were significantly associated with nephrolithiasis with a relative risk of 3.0, 2.7, 3.1, and 8.0, respectively. When patients without ileal disease were analyzed separately, however, steatorrhea,
diarrhea
, and sex were no longer risk factors. In contrast, in patients with ileal disease the incidence of nephrolithiasis increased with the severity of steatorrhea. The relative risk of nephrolithiasis in male patients with ileal disease and fecal fat greater than 20 g/day was 26.3 (P less than 0.01). Thus, the presence of both ileal disease and steatorrhea greatly increases the risk of nephrolithiasis; however, neither steatorrhea alone nor ileal disease alone are risk factors for nephrolithiasis.
...
PMID:Increased risk of nephrolithiasis in patients with steatorrhea. 707 27
Because of their amphiphilic properties, bile acids have important physiological functions. However, they can also be pathogenetically active. Some recent findings on the biochemistry and enterohepatic circulation of bile acids are presented. In contrast to the adult liver where the only primary bile acids formed are cholic- and chenodeoxycholic acid, the foetal liver is able to synthesise a variety of "atypical" bile acids. Under certain circumstances, a retrograde differentiation is possible in the adult. The very effective transport systems in gut and in the sinusoidal and canalicular membrane of the liver cell limit the bile acids almost exclusively to the enterohepatic circulation. During transport in blood, through biomembranes and in the liver cytosol, bile acids are bound to carrier proteins. The carrier has been detected using photoaffinity labelling. Following biotransformation (sulphation and glucuronidation) pathogenetically active bile acids can be converted into derivatives which can be rapidly eliminated. Disturbances of these mechanisms result in functional defects and diseases. The pathological significance of bile acids in hepato-biliary diseases is represented with regard to the cholestatic and proliferative effect of individual bile acids. The significance of bile acids in chologenic
diarrhea
, steatorrhea and enteral
hyperoxaluria
are presented as examples of the pathogenetic effects of bile acids on the gut. In these diseases it is possible to recognise the specific effects of certain bile acids on the colon mucosa. Recent studies have demonstrated that bile acids are possibly of pathogenetic significance in the case of epidemiologically proven relationship between colon carcinoma and high fat, high cholesterol and low fibre diets.
...
PMID:[Pathogenic significance of bile acids (author's transl)]. 725 34
Fourteen patients with jejunoileal bypass for obesity were treated for one week with a calcium supplement of 3g daily. During this period
diarrhoea
was significantly (P < 0.005) reduced by 23 per cent (97 per cent confidence limits: 7-46 per cent). Ten of the patients had
hyperoxaluria
(median value 961 mumol/24 h; range 633-2742 mumol/24 h). The treatment with calcium significantly (P < 0.005) decreased the concentration of oxalate in urine by 23 per cent (98 per cent confidence limits: -5-+54 per cent). The calcium supplement did not increase urinary calcium-excretion rate or albumin-corrected serum calcium.
...
PMID:Calcium in the treatment of diarrhoea and hyperoxaluria after jejunoileal bypass for obesity. 739 1
A shortened small intestine may end at a stoma or be anastomosed to the colon. Patients with a jejunostomy, but not those with a colon, lose large amounts of sodium. The intake and absorption of sodium can be increased by sipping a sodium-glucose solution; stomal loss can be reduced by restricting water or low-sodium drinks. If a stoma is situated less than 100 cm along the jejunum, a constant negative sodium balance may necessitate parenteral saline supplements. Gastric anti-secretory drugs or a somatostatin analogue reduce jejunostomy losses in such patients but do not restore a positive sodium balance. Loperamide or codeine phosphate benefit some patients. Magnesium deficiency can usually be corrected by oral magnesium oxide supplements. An elemental or hydrolysed diet is not beneficial. Patients with a jejunostomy can maintain a normal diet without fat reduction. When the colon is present, unabsorbed carbohydrate is fermented to absorbable short chain fatty acids. Unabsorbed long chain fatty acids and bile salts cause watery
diarrhoea
and increased colonic oxalate absorption with
hyperoxaluria
. Such patients benefit from a high carbohydrate, low-fat and low-oxalate diet. Parenteral nutrition is needed only by the few patients unable to maintain health or avoid socially disabling
diarrhoea
despite these measures.
...
PMID:Review article: practical management of the short bowel. 769 44
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