Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (hyperphagia)
6,116 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Initially, diarrhea is almost universal but becomes self-limited unless the patient persists in overeating. Weight loss averages 75 to 100 lb the first year, with a stable level generally achieved after 18 months. Among the serious potential complications are enteritis, kidney stones, gallstones, and hepatopathology. Some can be anticipated and kept at bay by prophylactic measures like high-protein intake.
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PMID:Ileal bypass for obesity: postoperative perspective. 83 88

Deterioration in nutritional status occurs late in the progress of cancers at certain sites, but at all stages in patients with gastrointestinal cancer. Weight loss with decrease in body fat and muscle wastage, occurs to a varying degree. Superficially, the clinical condition resembles simple food deprivation. However, the derangements in metabolism are often and some patients show an elevated resting energy expenditure, disturbances of carbohydrate, fat and protein metabolism and generally, a failure to adapt to reduced food intake, which is characteristic of cachexia. Cancer cachexia then becomes characterized by signs of marked negative energy and protein balance, including hypoalbuminemia, weight loss, and anemia. On the other hand, toxohormone extracted from tumor tissues was considered as the main cause to produce cancer cachexia. However, it has become clearer that cytokines, e.g. cachectin/TNF, IL-1, LT and IFN gamma play an important role to produce cachexia. Patients who are malnourished have an incidence of postoperative complications double that seen in adequately nourished patients. The effectiveness of cancer-chemotherapy is also different in nutritional status of patients. Although in patients requiring hyperalimentation, enteral nutritional support may feasible and enteral feeding has a distinct metabolic advantage compared with parenteral feeding, there is a definite role for total parenteral nutrition in patients who have severe chronic radiation enteritis, side effect of chemotherapy, weight loss and malabsorption. Tentative weight gain and correction of hypoalbuminemia without improving patient survival may be expected by this intravenous hyperalimentation.
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PMID:[Palliative therapy in cancer 2. Nutrition control]. 169 91

Nutritional intake or absorption may be compromised by radiation therapy (RT) when large portions of the gastrointestinal tract are treated. Dietary counseling, oral supplements, tube feedings and intravenous hyperalimentation (IVH) have been employed to limit weight loss and lessen intestinal RT side effects. Unfortunately, no prospective study reviewed has shown improved tumor control or patient survival. Special diets and IVH have also been employed in select patients to relieve chronic malabsorption from severe radiation enteritis.
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PMID:Critical evaluation of the role of nutritional support for radiation therapy patients. 391 59

An elemental diet was used to prepare 11 severely debilitated malnourished patients for operation. Indications included: 1) as a substitute for parenteral hyperalimentation when catheter sepsis occurred with the latter; 2) high small fistulae; 3) short bowel syndrome; 4) radiation enteritis; and 5) partial obstruction of the gastrointestinal tract. All patients were converted to a positive nitrogen balance as evidenced by a substantial gain in weight and in serum albumin levels. All tolerated corrective operations without difficulty and their wounds healed per primum.
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PMID:Use of elemental diets to correct catabolic states prior to surgery. 420 17

Acute postprandial gastric dilatation and associated clostridial enteritis necroticans is a well recognised but unusual clinical condition. Non-pathological overeating, gastric distension, and clostridial enteritis, termed pig-bel, has been reported in Papua, New Guinea. A similar condition (Darmbrand) was reported from Germany after the second world war, but it is not a condition seen in our society today. Gastric dilatation alone may be seen in individuals with anorexia nervosa, who may occasionally indulge in episodes of overeating (bulimia). We wish to report a case of gastric dilatation associated with a fulminating enteritis, and discuss the similarities with enteritis necroticans (pig-bel).
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PMID:Acute clostridial enteritis--or pig-bel? 630 81

Hepatic and renal failure developed in association with severe enteritis and hemorrhagic proctocolitis in a patient who had had a jejunoileal bypass 8 yr previously for morbid obesity. Parenteral antibiotic treatment abolished the systemic manifestations of the enteritis, but did not change the course of the hepatic and renal failure, and prolonged hemodialysis was necessary. Liver function improved in response to hyperalimentation. Take-down of the jejunoileal bypass resulted in immediate improvement of renal function, and hemodialysis could be discontinued. Although there is no direct evidence supporting this theory, the course of this patient suggested that the renal failure was functional in origin, and was caused by a toxin generated as a result of the intestinal bypass. We suspect that the toxin originated from bacteria within the blind bowel loop. Its delivery to the renal circulation was probably facilitated by increased absorption from the ulcerated large intestine and by impaired clearance by the diseased liver. When the bacterial flora were returned toward normal by take-down of the bypassed intestine, the quantity of circulating toxins probably decreased, which allowed renal function to improve.
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PMID:Sudden reversal of renal failure after take-down of a jejunoileal bypass. Report of a case involving hemorrhagic proctocolitis, and renal and hepatic failure late after jejunoileal bypass for obesity. 680 83

Anorexia nervosa (a.n.) is a mental disorder connected with the high mortality coming up to 18%. The death causes are suicide and somatic complications resulting from cachexy, laxatives and diuretics abuse, which occurs in some patients and from vomiting provocation. The digestive tract complications are considered to be the death causes in a.n, as well. Among the surgical complications, which usual occur in the initial period of the intensive nutrition the most serious and frequent ones are oesophageal rupture in the course of vomiting provocation (Boerhaave's syndrome) and the syndrome of compression of the horizontal part of the duodenum, by the mesentery (superior mesenteric artery syndrome) leading to the gastrectasia and possible gastric necrosis and perforation. In this paper the review of the current literature concerning the digestive tract complications in a.n. has been made. Also, the courses of the diseases and the complications requiring surgical intervention in 3 patients treated between 1998 and 2000 in the Department of Child Psychiatry and the Department of Cardiosurgery of the Medical University of Warsaw have been discussed. The patients developed segmental enteritis, gastrectasia caused by the superior mesenteric artery syndrome and small intestine strangulation. The early surgical intervention in the latter case and the proper maintenance treatment in two other ones allowed to avoid more serious complications. The authors postulate profound analysis of the abdominal complaints from the point if view of surgical complications in anorectic patients in the initial period of their hospital treatment and consideration of the complete parenteral hyperalimentation in the extremely debilitated to avoid life threatening digestive tract complications.
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PMID:[Surgical complications occurring during hospitalization of patients with anorexia nervosa--literature review and a discussion of three cases]. 1229 87

The short bowel syndrome (SBS) is a complex entity due to anatomical or functional loss of part of the small bowel originating a clinical picture with severe metabolic and nutritional impairments due to reduction of the effective absorptive surface area of the gut. SBS is one of the causes of a larger entity known as "intestinal failu-Currently, mesenteric vascular accidents are the main cause in adults, followed by inflammatory bowel disease, and radiation enteritis, whereas in children, the main causes are congenital and perinatal diseases. The clinical picture associated with SBS varies according to the length and location of affected small bowel, the presence of underlying disease, the presence or absence of the large bowel and ileocecal valve, and the nature of the underlying disease. Intestinal adaptation is the process by which, throughout 1-2 years, intestinal absorption is reestablished to the situation prior to intestinal resection, and is a key factor determining whether a patient with SBS will progress to intestinal failure and depend on DPN. Intestinal adaptation may take place if the patient does oral intake higher than the usual one (hyperphagia); besides, the bowel may also adapt to secure a more effective absorption per surface area unit, either by increasing the absorptive surface area (structural adaptation) and/or slowing intestinal transit (functional adaptation). These changes are not still clearly established in humans, but there are so in animal models. The presence of nutrients within the intestinal lumen and certain gastrointestinal hormones, particularly GLP-2, have an influence on a successful adaptation process. Patients with SBS are prone to the occurrence of bacterial overgrowth that makes adaptation difficult and worsens the symptoms, besides being a factor for dependence on parenteral nutrition.
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PMID:[Short bowel syndrome: definition, causes, intestinal adaptation and bacterial overgrowth]. 1767 96

A 59-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital for treatment of acute renal insufficiency. She had been under home intravenous hyperalimentation therapy through a totally implantable central venous catheter for 2 years because of post-radiation enteritis. Clinical examination on admission revealed severe renal insufficiency complicated with hypocomplementemia, marked proteinuria and hematuria. Chest roentgenography demonstrated moderate pulmonary congestion. Hemodialysis was initiated and her pulmonary congestion improved. On the 14th and 21st hospital day, blood culture revealed Staphylococcus epidermidis colonization. Cefazolin was administered and C-reactive protein decreased, however, renal insufficiency and hypocomplementemia did not improve. To investigate the genesis of renal insufficiency, renal biopsy was performed. Light microscopic findings of the kidney revealed severe crescentic glomerulonephritis complicated with moderate tubulointerstitial damage. Immunofluorescence-microscopic findings of the kidney revealed positive IgG, IgM, C3 deposition along the capillary lumen. From these laboratory findings and the clinical course, we diagnosed her renal disease as crescentic glomerulonephritis induced by catheter-related bloodstream infection, and the central venous catheter was removed. After removal, urinary output and hypocomplementemia remarkably improved, however, unfortunately, her renal dysfunction did not improve and maintenance hemodialysis needed to be continued. Although her renal disease was not caused by ventriculo-atrial shunt but by central venous catheter-related bloodstream infection, we supposed that the pathogenesis was a closely similar entity to shunt nephritis.
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PMID:Crescentic glomerulonephritis associated with totally implantable central venous catheter-related Staphylococcus epidermidis infection. 1879 49