Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0021390 (inflammatory bowel disease)
23,302 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Leukocyte scintigraphy (LS) was performed in 20 pediatric patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD: 10 with ulcerative colitis, 2 with indeterminate colitis, and 8 with Crohn disease) in different stages of clinical activity. Leukocytes were separated from 15 to 60 ml venous blood and were labeled in vitro with [99mTc]HM-PAO. The segmental extent (small intestine; ascending, transverse, and descending colon; and recto-sigmoideum) of the process was determined by LS. The uptake of each bowel segment was scored in relation to the bone marrow uptake. The scintigraphic activity, calculated by summing the segment scores, was compared with laboratory parameters. The mean labeling efficacy was 76% (60-86%). The segmental extent of the process determined by LS was compared with the results of barium enema or colonoscopy with regard to 32 bowel segments. The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of LS were 93, 88, and 91%, respectively. Two extraintestinal manifestations (abdominal abscess and joint involvement) were also detected by LS. These lesions were verified by computed tomography (CT) (abscess) and on the basis of the clinical outcome (arthritis). The scintigraphic activity correlated with the C-reactive protein (CRP) level (r = 0.82, p < 0.001), the alpha 2-globulin level (r = 0.63, p < 0.02), the sedimentation rate (r = 0.51, p < 0.05), and the fS iron level (r = -0.66, p < 0.005). LS is applicable in pediatric patients. The method is an excellent technique for assessment of the extent of IBD in children. Extraintestinal manifestations of IBD can also be investigated by LS. The scintigraphic activity is a useful parameter for determination of the activity of IBD in children.
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PMID:HM-PAO-labeled leukocyte scintigraphy in pediatric patients with inflammatory bowel disease. 898 43

A 17 year old male suffered from iron deficiency of undetermined cause for 2 years. Iron substitution was able to correct it for short periods. With the exception of fatigue and recurring abdominal pain attributed to oral iron therapy no further symptoms were present. The physical status on admission was unremarkable. The laboratory detected intestinal disorders, an anemia of the chronic type without evidence for malignancy or renal failure suggested an inflammatory gastro-intestinal disorder. In spite of a twice negative noninvasive test for gluten-intolerance the clinician favored in his differential diagnosis non tropical sprue over inflammatory bowel disease (IBD, Crohn's disease, Whipple's disease). Histopathology of small bowel specimens did not indicate sprue. An ileo-colonoscopy revealed severe ulcerating ileitis and mild chronic colitis. The histologic specimen revealed a severe ileal inflammation with cosinophilia and the colon specimens epitheloid microgranuloma. These findings are highly compatible with the diagnosis of Crohn's disease. Iron deficiency anemia is common in Crohn's disease. In the current case it is due to disturbed iron uptake. Iron deficiency anemia as sole symptom of Crohn's disease is extremely rare.
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PMID:[Severe chronic iron deficiency in a 17-year-old student]. 962 33

The health benefits of specific nutrients in the diet are reviewed as they pertain to the pediatric population and its unique needs. Secretory immunoglobulins, lysozyme, interferon, and growth factors, among others, are known to confer immunological advantages to breast milk. Inhibition of bacterial pathogens, as well as permissive growth of a protective colonic ecoflora occur as a result of various cellular and biochemical mechanisms at play. The immunomodulatory properties of minerals such as iron, zinc, and selenium, are presented and the newly recognized protective role of vitamin A and its importance in developing countries and in conditions of compromised nutrition are discussed. The review also covers the role of arginine, glutamine, and nucleotides in adaptive responses of the developing gut and in pathologic states such as necrotizing enterocolitis, short bowel syndrome, and inflammatory bowel disease. Probiotics (specific microbial feeds with potential benefits to the host), and prebiotics (dietary components such as complex carbohydrates able to change the colonic microenvironment fostering colonization with non-enteropathogens) are areas of current interest because they offer alternatives for the management of the growing problem of multiple antibiotic resistance and overwhelming infections in the hospitalized patient.
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PMID:Immunonutrition: the pediatric experience. 968 69

Reactive oxygen and nitrogen species have been implicated as mediators of mucosal injury in inflammatory bowel disease, but few studies have investigated protein oxidation in the inflamed mucosa. In this study, protein carbonyl formation on colonic mucosal proteins from mice was investigated following in vitro exposure of homogenates to iron/ascorbate, hydrogen peroxide, hypochloric acid (HOCl), or nitric oxide (*NO). Total carbonyl content was measured spectrophotometrically by derivatization with dinitrophenylhydrazine (DNPH), and oxidation of component proteins within the tissue was examined by Western blotting for DNPH-derivatized proteins using anti-dinitrophenyl DNP antibodies. These results were compared with protein carbonyl formation found in the acutely inflamed mucosa from mice with colitis induced by dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) administered at 5% w/v in the drinking water for 7 d. In vitro, carbonyl formation was observed after exposure to iron/ascorbate, HOCl and *NO. Iron/ascorbate (20 microM/20 mM) exposure for 5 h increased carbonyl groups by 80%, particularly on proteins of 48, 75-100, 116, 131, and 142 kDa. Oxidation by 0.1 and 0.5 mM HOCl did not increase total carbonyl levels, but Western blotting revealed carbonyl formation on many proteins, particularly in the 49-95 kDa region. After exposure to 1-10 mM HOCl, total carbonyl levels were increased by 0.5 to 12 times control levels with extensive cross-linking and fragmentation of proteins rich in carbonyl groups observed by Western blotting. In mice with acute colitis induced by DSS, protein carbonyl content of the inflamed mucosa was not significantly different from control mucosa, (7.80 +/- 1.05 vs. 8.43 +/- 0.59 nmo/mg protein respectively, p = .16 n = 8, 10); however, Western blotting analysis indicated several proteins of molecular weight 48, 79, 95, and 131 kDa that exhibited increased carbonyl content in the inflamed mucosa. These proteins corresponded to those observed after in vitro oxidation of normal intestinal mucosa with iron/ ascorbate and HOCl, suggesting that both HOCl and metal ions may be involved in protein oxidation in DSS-induced colitis. Identification and further analysis of the mucosal proteins susceptible to carbonyl modification may lead to a better understanding of the contribution of oxidants to the colonic mucosa tissue injury in inflammatory bowel disease.
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PMID:Protein carbonyl formation on mucosal proteins in vitro and in dextran sulfate-induced colitis. 1046 97

pANCA is a marker antibody associated with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including most patients with ulcerative colitis and a subset with Crohn's disease. This study addressed the hypothesis that pANCA reacts with an antigen(s) of microbial agents potentially relevant to IBD pathogenesis. Using a pANCA monoclonal antibody, we have previously identified the C-terminal basic random-coil domain of histone H1 as a pANCA autoantigen. BLAST analysis of the peptide databases revealed H1 epitope homologues in open reading frames of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis genome. Western analysis of extracts from six mycobacterial species directly demonstrated reactivity to a single, conserved approximately 32-kDa protein. Direct protein sequencing, followed by gene cloning, revealed a novel 214-amino-acid protein, an iron-regulated protein recently termed HupB. Sequence analysis demonstrated its homology with the mammalian histone H1 gene family, and recombinant protein expression confirmed its reactivity with the 5-3 pANCA monoclonal antibody. Binding activity of patient serum immunoglobulin G (IgG) to HupB did not correlate with reactivity to histone H1 or pANCA, indicating the complex character of the pANCA antigen. However, anti-HupB IgA was strongly associated with Crohn's disease (P < 0.001). These findings indicate that the 5-3 pANCA monoclonal antibody detects a structural domain recurrent among mycobacteria and cross-reactive with a DNA-binding domain of histone H1. The association of HupB-binding serum IgA with IBD provides new evidence for the association of a mycobacterial species with Crohn's disease.
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PMID:Identification of a novel mycobacterial histone H1 homologue (HupB) as an antigenic target of pANCA monoclonal antibody and serum immunoglobulin A from patients with Crohn's disease. 1056 69

Iron supplementation is one of the principal therapies in inflammatory bowel disease. Iron is a major prooxidative agent; therefore therapeutic iron as well as heme iron from chronic mucosal bleeding can increase the iron-mediated oxidative stress in colitis by facilitating the Fenton reaction, namely production of hydroxyl radicals. In the present study colitis was induced in the iodoacetamide rat model. Forty male Whistar rats were divided into four groups, each group receiving a different diet regimen in parallel with colitis induction: Malondialdehyde was measured to assess the degree of tissue oxidative stress. There were microscopic changes, and significantly more severe colitis was seen in colonic biopsies when iron was supplemented. It was concluded that iron supplementation can amplify the inflammatory response and enhance the subsequent mucosal damage in a rat model of colitis. We suggest that the resultant oxidative stress generated by iron supplementation leads to the extension and propagation of crypt abscesses.
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PMID:Iron supplementation may aggravate inflammatory status of colitis in a rat model. 1071 57

Genome scans have identified a region spanning 40 cM on the long arm of chromosome 12 as a susceptibility locus for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). This locus contains several candidate genes for IBD, one of which is the gene for the natural resistance associated macrophage protein 2 (NRAMP2). This protein is a divalent cation transporter and is expressed in many cells and tissues. The putative role of this protein in innate immunity prompted us to investigate a possible relationship between NRAMP2 and IBD. We assessed the frequency of four restriction fragment length polymorphisms (IVS2+11A/G, IVS4+44C/A, 1254T/C, and IVS15Ex16-16C/G) in a group of 155 Crohn's disease (CD) patients, 114 ulcerative colitis (UC) patients, and 189 healthy controls. Linkage analysis was performed in a group of 70 families with multiple members suffering from IBD. We searched for additional intragenic markers and mutations by sequence analysis of the natural resistance-associated macrophage 2 gene of 33 CD patients, with a positive family history for IBD. We identified one novel restriction fragment length polymorphism in intron 15 of the gene. The frequency of the rare allele is: 0.08 in our control population. An increased frequency of this allele was found in CD patients but this difference did not reach statistical significance. A weak association between CD and homozygosity for the G allele of the IVS2+11A/G was found (OR [odds ratio] = 2.2, CI [confidence interval] = 1.3-3.9, chi2 = 8.4, p = 1.013). Nonparametric linkage analysis and transmissions disequilibrium tests did not provide evidence for linkage of NRAMP2 to IBD, UC, or CD. Sequence analysis of the exons and the iron-responsive element in a panel of 33 CD patients did not reveal any mutations in NRAMP2. Our association, linkage, and sequence analysis in IBD shows that the putative genetic risk factor on chromosome 12 likely is not NRAMP2. The weak association between the G/G genotype of IVS2+11A/G and CD may be due to linkage disequilibrium with a nearby disease-causing gene.
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PMID:Analysis of a positional candidate gene for inflammatory bowel disease: NRAMP2. 1083 68

During the past decade relevant progress has been made in the understanding and treatment of IBD-associated anemia. Effective replacement of iron deficits has become safe by using novel intravenous iron preparations such as iron sucrose. The ability of erythropoietin to interfere with key mechanisms of myelosuppression in anemia of chronic diseases also benefits patients with IBD-associated anemia. Concerns about cost effectiveness have been raised and weighed against the potential improvement in quality of life. Gastroenterologists who are caring for IBD patients should be concerned with low hemoglobin levels, since the quality of life in these patients can be as low as in anemic patients with advanced cancer. Also provided is a structured approach to cost-effective therapy.
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PMID:Anemia in IBD: the overlooked villain. 1083 75

The gut and the liver are the key organs in nutrient absorption and metabolism. Bile acids, drugs, and toxins undergo extensive enterohepatic circulation. Bile acids play a major role in several hepatic and intestinal diseases. Endotoxins deriving from intestinal Gram-negative bacteria are important in the pathogenesis of liver and systemic diseases. Chronic liver diseases can influence gastrointestinal motility, which together with other factors may contribute to bacterial overgrowth and in patients with ascites to an increased risk of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. Patients with end-stage liver disease frequently develop portal hypertension leading to varices, gastric vascular ectasia, and portal hypertensive gastroenteropathy. Several liver and biliary abnormalities are observed in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (primary sclerosing cholangitis, autoimmune hepatitis, cholelithiasis). The primary defect in hemochromatosis is located in the intestine, causing an inappropriate increase in iron absorption, and the liver is the site of earliest and heaviest iron deposition. Elevated transaminases are observed in many patients with celiac disease, and steatohepatitis frequently develops in patients with jejunoileal bypass and short bowel syndrome. Furthermore, the liver is the primary organ for metastasis of intestinal cancer. Many viral, bacterial, fungal, and parasitic diseases affect the intestine as well as the liver and the biliary tract.
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PMID:Gut-liver axis. 1085 47

Anemia is a common problem in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). It is related to low Karnofsky scores, loss of weight, impaired physical activity, low tolerance to the underlying disease, and a poor growth rate in children. Multiple factors can contribute to the anemia in IBD, such as iron, folic acid or B(12) deficiency, treatment with immunosuppressive drugs or sulfasalazine, hemolysis, and anemia of chronic disease. Anemia of chronic disease is characterized by impaired iron utilization, lower erythropoietin (EPO) production than needed, and a low response of bone marrow erythroid progenitor cells to EPO. In recent years, recombinant human erythropoietin (rhEPO) has been used in combination with iron for the correction of refractory anemia in IBD patients (adults or children) with good results. There is increasing evidence that rhEPO may correct refractory anemia in IBD (both ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD)). In addition, such therapy may give IBD patients the opportunity to predonate blood before surgery and to avoid blood transfusions. One must not forget to exclude or correct other causes of anemia in IBD patients before administering rhEPO. Furthermore, the enhancement of erythropoiesis by EPO makes it mandatory to administer oral or intravenous iron supplementation during therapy to meet the increased demand. rhEPO is safe in IBD patients. Further studies with larger numbers of patients are needed to optimize the therapy with rhEPO in the refractory anemia of IBD.
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PMID:Anemia in inflammatory bowel disease - the role of recombinant human erythropoietin. 1096 11


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