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Disease
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0021390 (
inflammatory bowel disease
)
23,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
93 children and adolescents with Crohn's disease have been studied. Terminal ileum (25.8%) and ileum and colon (61.3%) were the most common sites of involvement as determined by X-ray examination. The mean age at the time of diagnosis was 13.2 years. A familial incidence of chronic
inflammatory bowel disease
was found in 12 patients (12.9%). The most common symptoms were: abdominal pain, anorexia,
lassitude
, diarrhea, loss of weight. Weight below the third percentile, pain on abdominal palpation, anal lesions, mouth ulcers and clubbing of the fingers were the most common clinical signs at the time of diagnosis. Growth retardation (below the third percentile) was present in 22 of 79 children (27.8%) with a mean follow-up of 40 months. 16 patients out of 75 had initial rectal biopsies with histologic changes characteristic of Crohn's disease. 27 patients had surgical treatment; six of them experienced a relapse within a mean period of 26.7 months. Lastly, the authors show that continuous elemental enteral alimentation (CEEA) during 3 weeks induces a remission. CEEA on a longer period is specially targetted to the treatment of growth retardation.
...
PMID:[Crohn's disease in children and adolescents]. 286 58
A 63-year-old woman with a 1-year history of abdominal pain and intrahepatic cholestasis developed anorexia, weight loss,
lassitude
and diarrhoea. Studies led to a diagnosis of primary intestinal T-cell lymphoma involving especially the proximal small intestine and infiltrating the mesenteric lymph nodes, bone marrow and skin. An associated severe hypoalbuminaemia (1.3 g dL-1) was most probably the result of protein-losing enteropathy. Liver biopsy demonstrated concentric fibrosis of the bile ducts ('onion skin' lesions, with an inflammatory cell infiltrate and lymphoid aggregates) and was considered almost pathognomonic of primary sclerosing cholangitis. Sudden death due to pulmonary embolism occurred and a limited autopsy confirmed the diagnosis. Other associated diseases such as coeliac disease or
inflammatory bowel disease
were not found. This first report of the simultaneous occurrence of two rare diseases - primary sclerosing cholangitis and intestinal T-cell lymphoma - may indicate an intriguing association, possibly mediated by the effect of cytokines released by the infiltrating T-cells into the portal circulation.
...
PMID:Primary intestinal T-cell lymphoma and sclerosing cholangitis: a cytokine-mediated association? 989 8
Blastocystis hominis (B. hominis) is a parasite of uncertain role in human disease. It may be identified during a workup for gastrointestinal symptoms, usually in stools. The clinical consequences of B. hominis infection are mainly diarrhea and abdominal pain as well as nonspecific gastrointestinal symptoms such as nausea, anorexia, vomiting, weight loss,
lassitude
, dizziness, and flatulence. Case reports and series have suggested a pathogenic role of B. hominis in causing intestinal inflammation. Also some studies have suggested that
inflammatory bowel disease
(
IBD
) and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) are associated with B. hominis infection. The investigators indicate that the stools of all patients presenting with
IBD
or IBS should be examined, and culture methods for B. hominis carried out. Invasion and mucosal inflammation of the intestine with B. hominis have been observed in studies of gnotobiotic guinea pigs. The transmission, pathogenicity, culture characteristics, taxonomy, life cycle, biochemistry and molecular biology of B. hominis remain unclear. More studies are necessary for this parasite.
...
PMID:[Blastocystis hominis and bowel diseases]. 1710 62