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Query: UMLS:C0021390 (
inflammatory bowel disease
)
23,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Patients with
inflammatory bowel disease
(
IBD
) manifest growth failure which may antecede abdominal symptoms by some years. Eight of ten children with documented
IBD
had records of decreasing growth velocities. Investigation of growth hormone reserves showed excessive rather than impaired responses. Mean basal GH level was 6.2 +/- 0.75 (SEM) ng/ml. During sleep, the mean GH level rose to 26.0 +/- 4.7 ng/ml and following propranolol-glucagon stimulation, to 46.0 +/- 4.5 ng/ml. All values were significantly higher than levels obtained in a control population of 25 children investigated for short stature who were not GH deficient. The mean peak GH response following
insulin
in the
IBD
group (10.8 +/- 3.8 ng/ml), however, did not differ from the mean peak response in the control group (13.5 +/- 3.3 ng/ml). Growth failure in patients with
IBD
is not the result of GH deficiency and is not an irreversible phenomenon. On the contrary, judicious use of glucocorticoids aimed at the control of the disease usually produces compensatory growth acceleration ("catch-up growth").
...
PMID:Basal and stimulated serum growth hormone concentrations in inflammatory bowel disease. 1 69
There is conflicting evidence regarding the adequacy of hypothalamic-pituitary function in children and adolescents with chronic
inflammatory bowel disease
complicated by growth retardation and delayed sexual maturation. A child with Crohn's disease, who has never received corticosteroid therapy, had delay of both growth and sexual maturation and has been investigated over the course of his disease. In addition to a skull X-ray (normal) and thyroid function tests (normal), a standard
insulin
tolerance test (
insulin
0.15 u/kg) and a standard gonadotropin-releasing hormone (Gn-RH) test (100 microgram Gn-RH i/v) were performed when the bowel disease was in relapse and again during a remission of the bowel disease, achieved by surgery. When the bowel disease was in relapse (coincident with growth arrest) results showed an inadequate release of gonadotrophins and of growth hormone (even after pre-treatment with stilboestrol) but normal release of cortisol and prolactin. During a remission of the bowel disease coinciding with a period of rapid "catch-up" growth, release of growth hormone was normal and that of gonadotrophins supranormal. The demonstration of a reversible apparent partial hypopituitarism in this boy not only re-questions the adequacy of hypothalamic-pituitary function in
inflammatory bowel disease
but also indicates a potential diagnostic pitfall in the routine investigation of growth retardation if gastrointestinal symptoms are not prominent at presentation.
...
PMID:A case of apparent hypopituitarism complicating chronic inflammatory bowel disease in childhood and adolescence. 33 54
The aim of the present study was to further elucidate acute and chronic manifestations of Yersinia enterocolitica infection. During the period 1974-83, 458 hospitalized patients were diagnosed by antibody response and/or isolation of the microorganism. 64 patients had suffered from chronic conditions as rheumatic disease,
inflammatory bowel disease
, hepatitis, nephritis or thyroid disease for some time. Acute hepatic, renal, cardiac, pulmonary, pancreatic or neurologic involvement were observed in a substantial portion of patients; several had multiorgan disease. Acute
insulin
-dependent diabetes was seen in 2 patients, malignant mesothelioma in 2, and specific lymph node inflammation in 1. The patients were followed for 4-14 years (1987). 36/160 readmitted patients had abdominal pain and 26 had diarrhea; chronic colitis was demonstrated in 4. Some patients developed rheumatic conditions; others developed chronic disease of liver, kidneys, heart, pancreas, thyroid or nervous system. Chronic liver disease, in 22 patients, was correlated with positive tests for antinuclear antibody and rheumatoid factor; and might influence development of malignant disease, and mortality. A variety of acute and chronic clinical pictures may be associated with Y. enterocolitica infection, and further clinical research is required in this field.
...
PMID:A survey of acute and chronic disease associated with Yersinia enterocolitica infection. A Norwegian 10-year follow-up study on 458 hospitalized patients. 176 49
Short stature is a common complication of
inflammatory bowel disease
. Recently McCaffery, Nasr, Lawrence, and Kirsner (1970) concluded, from blood growth hormone (GH) levels obtained during
insulin
-hypoglycaemic provocation, that GH deficiency contributed to the retardation in growth observed in subjects with
inflammatory bowel disease
. Although it was not possible to eliminate the possibility of partial hypopituitarism, this study does not confirm the existence of GH deficiency in six subjects with short stature complicating
inflammatory bowel disease
. The nyctohemeral (night and day) serum GH is described, and the
insulin
and glucose levels in these subjects and normal sleep-related GH rises in all are demonstrated. This finding is not compatible with growth hormone deficiency. In one subject the response to arginine provocation was blunted. Three subjects manifested hyperinsulinism and evidence for ;
insulin
resistance'. These findings are unexplained but suggest that
insulin
resistance may contribute to a blunted GH response to
insulin
-induced hypoglycaemia. Blunted GH response to both arginine and
insulin
-induced hypoglycaemia may also result from continuous secretion and reduced pituitary storage of growth hormone. This possibility is suggested by the pattern of raised blood GH levels in one of the subjects.
...
PMID:Nyctohemeral growth hormone levels in children with growth retardation and inflammatory bowel disease. 473 68
In patients with
inflammatory bowel disease
treated by total parenteral nutrition (TPN), the incidence of TPN-induced cholestasis may be reduced by discontinuous (cyclic) TPN. In order to test this statement, a prospective trial was carried out in which 21 selected adults requiring at least 12 day postoperative nutrition were randomly allocated to two groups: continuous vs cyclic TPN. The efficiency, evaluated on nitrogen balance and prealbumin levels, was no different. Those patients undergoing cyclic-TPN needed more
insulin
in the first four postoperative days. The incidence of biological cholestasis was the same in the two groups. This prospective study gave strong evidence against the potential benefit of cyclic rather than continuous TPN in postoperative patients. Nonetheless, additional prospective trials using larger patient populations and greater lengths of TPN are needed to confirm these findings.
...
PMID:[Postoperative continuous or cyclic total parenteral nutrition]. 642 17
Islet cell antigen (ICA) 69 is a newly-recognized islet cell antigen to which autoantibodies have been observed in prediabetic relatives of patients with
insulin
-dependent-diabetes mellitus (IDDM). Here we extend the earlier analysis of ICA69 antibodies to patients with recent-onset IDDM and to patients with other immune-mediated diseases. ICA69 antibodies were determined by Western blot using an affinity purified recombinant fusion protein of ICA69 and maltose binding protein. ICA69 antibody quantities were determined as titres using a titration curve of a standard serum as reference. Mean logarithmic ICA69 antibody titres were 3.4 (+/- 1.4) in 99 patients with acute IDDM compared to 2.8 (+/- 0.9) in 49 healthy blood donors (p < 0.001). A higher mean ICA69 antibody titre of 4.1 (+/- 0.8) was observed in 16 patients with rheumatoid arthritis in comparison to acute IDDM (p < 0.01) and healthy control subjects (p < 0.001). The percentage of sera with ICA69 antibody titres above the 2 SD level of normal subjects was 21% in IDDM, 31% in rheumatoid arthritis and 6% in healthy blood donors. None of the patients with autoimmune thyroid disease (n = 20),
inflammatory bowel disease
(n = 9) or multiple sclerosis (n = 7) had elevated ICA69 antibodies. In IDDM, presence of ICA69 antibodies persisted and the titre remained the same over 18 months of follow-up. The relationship of ICA69 antibodies to islet cell antibodies (ICA) or
insulin
autoantibodies (IAA) was tested. The production of ICA69 antibodies was not associated in diabetic patients with the presence of any of the two other autoantibodies.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Autoantibodies to the islet antigen ICA69 occur in IDDM and in rheumatoid arthritis. 878 74
Children, like adults and parents, depend on primary care physicians to identify, treat, or refer those with mental disorders. Mental health concerns are also germane to the growing number of chronically ill children in pediatric care. This paper focuses on: 1) the level of agreement between children and parents about the presence of a mental disorder and the impact of informant on case identification; and 2) the extent to which pediatricians agree with reports by chronically ill children and/or their parents regarding such problems. The study sample includes 112 children, ages 9 to 18, with cancer, cystic fibrosis,
inflammatory bowel disease
, and
insulin
-dependent diabetes and a control group of 35 healthy subjects. Subject and a parent were interviewed separately using a highly standardized, structured interview that generates DSM-III-R diagnoses by computer algorithms. Pediatricians completed a questionnaire asking about the presence of any mental disorders. Agreement between parent and child was poor for both groups. In the medically ill group, more cases were identified by the parent interview than by child interview alone for all types of disorders. In contrast, children in the comparison group more often reported symptoms sufficient for a diagnosis than did their parents. The difference in prevalence between the two groups was significant only for the parent-identified cases, and physicians were more likely to recognize child-identified disorders. The choice of informant(s) has clear implications for case identification and case recognition in both clinical care and research in pediatric settings.
...
PMID:Mental disorders in chronically ill children: case identification and parent-child discrepancy. 800 96
In colitis, colonic epithelial cells have a shortened life span but show normal or increased expression of phenotypic markers of differentiation. This study examined the effect of differing culture conditions on the expression of such markers in colonic crypt cells. Crypt cells were enzymatically isolated from macroscopically normal large bowel mucosa resected because of neoplasia,
inflammatory bowel disease
or non-neoplastic non-inflammatory conditions. Cells cultured in the presence of serum exhibited a doubling of the rate of protein synthesis (measured by 14C-leucine uptake; p < 0.001) compared with autologous cells cultured in the absence of serum without evidence of loss of cell viability (assessed by 51Cr release from prelabelled cells) or of change in the rate of cell proliferation (assessed by total DNA content and 3H-thymidine uptake). Irrespective of the underlying colonic disease, crypt cells cultured in the absence of serum exhibited increased expression of phenotypic markers of differentiation compared with those cultured with serum: the rate of glycoprotein synthesis relative to that of protein synthesis increased by a mean of 59% and the cellular expression of brush border glycoproteins, alkaline phosphatase, and carcinoembryonic antigen significantly increased. The effects seen could not be mimicked by addition of dexamethasone or
insulin
to serum free medium. Thus, under less optimal (serum free) culture conditions, colonic crypt cells express phenotypic markers of differentiation at an accelerated rate suggesting that unfavourable microenvironmental conditions themselves are probably in part responsible for the normal or increased expression of such markers in colitis.
...
PMID:Serum free medium increases expression of markers of differentiation in human colonic crypt cells. 802 Aug 8
Therapeutic apheresis as applied to humans may encompass a single treatment or numerous treatments for disorders ranging from acute poisoning to severe chronic autoimmune disease. However, the mechanisms of beneficial effects of apheresis are not well characterized. Utilizing a miniaturized hollow-fiber membrane system, we have developed a reliable technique for long-term vascular access in the rat that permits repetitive plasmapheresis. We established vascular access in 14 animals, with 8 and 6 rats randomized to 3- and 7-wk experimental periods, respectively. Immunoglobulin levels of blood samples obtained immediately before and after each plasmapheresis were measured to examine membrane filtration characteristics. Overall, 100% of the animals survived and 93% successfully completed their assigned experimental periods. Mean decrease of immunoglobulin G and M levels for 28 plasmapheresis treatments in five rats was 66.9 +/- 8.1 and 61.0 +/- 7.3% (SD), respectively, indicating effective membrane filtration. This model of apheresis can be applied to several disorders in the rat, including, but not limited to, spontaneous
insulin
-dependent diabetes mellitus and experimental
inflammatory bowel disease
.
...
PMID:A method for chronic membrane plasmapheresis in the rat. 812 6
Malnutrition is frequently seen in patients with
inflammatory bowel disease
, and parenteral or enteral nutrition is considered essential in this patient group. However, many patients with Crohn's disease have difficulties in gaining weight in response to overfeeding, suggesting reduced energy retention. Substrate utilization and nutrient balances as well as changes in body composition were followed in 10 patients with Crohn's disease immediately in the course of remission on low-dose steroid treatment, during an eight-day period of continuous enteral nutrition at constant (protocol 1:1.5-fold basal energy expenditure) and increasing (protocol 2:0.5- to 2.0-fold basal energy expenditure) nutrient supply. Energy, substrate, and nitrogen balances all became positive in response to overfeeding. However, fat was predominantly oxidized at an infusion rate of 1.2 g/kg body wt/day, whereas carbohydrates and proteins were effectively stored. A positive energy balance was reached at an energy infusion rate exceeding 31 kcal/kg body wt/day and corresponding substrate supplies of 1.6, 1.7, and 1.1 g/kg body wt/day for carbohydrates, fat, and protein, respectively. Nitrogen balance normalized at a supply of 0.14 g/kg body wt/day, which also reduced myofibrillar protein breakdown. Considering the relative contributions made by these nutrients in the diets, an accumulation of carbohydrates and protein but a depletion in fat became evident from nutrient balances. In fact, body weight increased by 0.12 kg/day, which was explained by an increased extracellular (+0.18 kg/day) and body cell mass (+0.04 kg/day) at reduced fat mass (-0.10 kg/day). Concomitantly, plasma T3 and
insulin
secretion both increased, whereas sympathetic nervous system activity decreased with overfeeding. This is contrary to data observed in healthy subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Reduced metabolic efficiency in patients with Crohn's disease. 822 73
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