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Query: UMLS:C0021831 (enteropathy)
4,403 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Because of the potential relationship of increased urinary crystalloid excretion and concentration to stone formation, urinary calcium and uric acid excretion patterns were studied prospectively in 65 patients with inflammatory bowel disease and compared with excretion patterns in patients with functional bowel disease (controls) receiving similar dietary prescriptions. Mean 24-hr urinary calcium excretion was higher in both ulcerative colitis (212 mg, p <0.02) and granulomatous bowel disease (168 mg, p = n.s.) than in controls (118 mg). Urinary calcium excretion exceeded 250 mg/24 hr in 11 of 34 patients with inflammatory bowel disease but in none of the controls. Eight of these 34 patients compared with one of 10 controls excreted urine with calcium concentrations greater than 20 mg/100 ml. Mean 24-hr uric acid excretion was slightly higher in granulomatous bowel disease (520 mg) than in ulcerative colitis (450 mg) or functional bowel disease (451 mg). Eight patients with inflammatory bowel disease but no control subject excreted > 700 mg. The mean urinary uric acid concentration was significantly higher in ulcerative colitis (538 mug/ml, p <0.05) and granulomatous bowel disease (558 mug/ml, p <0.02) than in controls (338 mug/ml). The mean morning urine pH was lower (5.5, p <0.01) in ulcerative colitis than in the other groups.These results indicate increased excretion and higher concentration of calcium and uric acid in some patients with inflammatory bowel disease on the usual treatment programmes. Only very long-term prospective studies of such patients can help to document the true contribution of increased crystalloid concentration and excretion to kidney stone formation in inflammatory bowel disease patients.
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PMID:Urinary crystalloid excretion in patients with inflammatory bowel disease. 542 54

Routine detailed gastroenterological investigations were performed in a series of 47 ankylosing spondylitics. Evidence of chronic inflammatory bowel disease was found in eight patients, a prevalence of 17%. Unsuspected bowel disease was found in the absence of symptoms in three of these patients.
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PMID:Inflammatory bowel disease in ankylosing spondylitis. 543 Mar 78

Electronmicroscopical studies have been carried out on colonic biopsies from patients with long-term laxative abuse, amyloidosis, diabetic autonomic neuropathy or chronic inflammatory bowel disease. The results of these investigations indicate that submucosal nerve fibres are damaged to an extent dependent upon the intensity of the toxic agent. The main pathological features range from distension or ballooning of axons, reduction of nerve-specific cell structures and increase in lysosomes to a total degeneration of whole nerve fibres. While the degenerative process is uniform, differentiation between disease states can be made on the basis of specific additional lesions such as the presence of typical amyloid fibrils, diabetic microangiopathy or the inflammatory process in inflammatory bowel disease. No changes were found in Whipple's disease or gluten-sensitive enteropathy. It is concluded that the structural alterations may provide a morphological explanation for the disturbances in gut motility, as an intact intramural nervous system is a necessary prerequisite for the regular coordination of normal peristalsis.
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PMID:Ultrastructural changes in the gut autonomic nervous system following laxative abuse and in other conditions. 617 11

Sacroiliac uptake ratios based on 99Tcm methylene diphosphonate images were calculated in 14 patients with ankylosing spondylitis, 23 patients with non-specific backache, 33 patients with inflammatory bowel disease (ulcerative colitis 19, Crohn's disease 14) and 33 control subjects. Twenty-eight of the control subjects were patients referred from a breast cancer clinic. In the control subjects, and in 20 patients with inflammatory bowel disease who did not have back pain, sacroiliac ratios decreased significantly with increasing age (p less than 0.001 and p less than 0.01 respectively). Sacroiliac uptake ratios were significantly higher in ankylosing spondylitis than in patients with non-specific backache. Seven of the 14 patients with ankylosing spondylitis had higher sacroiliac ratios than any recorded in the control subjects. Eleven patients with inflammatory bowel disease had abnormally high sacroiliac uptake ratios; ten of these patients had back pain. Increased sacroiliac joint uptake in such patients may reflect early sacroiliitis. No relationship was detected between sacroiliac uptake and the activity of the bowel disease. Sacroiliac uptake ratios were significantly higher in the inflammatory bowel disease patients suffering from back pain than in age and sex matched patients with (a) inflammatory bowel disease but no back pain or (b) non-specific backache.
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PMID:Sacroiliac joint uptake ratios in inflammatory bowel disease: relationship to back pain and to activity of bowel disease. 621 68

Of 12 patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and ankylosing spondylitis (AS) or sacroiliitis (SI), only 4 (32%) had HLA-B27. Family studies revealed 3 B27-negative relatives with AS, 1 with SI, 1 with SI and IBD, and 1 with IBD alone. HLA haplotypes did not segregate with disease. These data suggest a non-HLA linked genetic predisposition to IBD which also confers susceptibility to spondylitis, even in the absence of expression of bowel disease.
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PMID:The spondylitis of inflammatory bowel disease. Evidence for a non-HLA linked axial arthropathy. 645 May 95

There is a variable temporal relationship between the presenting symptoms of inflammatory bowel disease and associated hepatic disease: hepatobiliary disease may precede, occur with, or occur many years after the onset of the bowel disease. We describe six patients in whom hepatobiliary disease of initially obscure origin preceded the development of inflammatory bowel disease. The colitis which subsequently developed in these patients was symptomatically mild. In our series, there was a high prevalence of sclerosing cholangitis. We conclude that in patients with chronic hepatobiliary disease of obscure origin, evaluation should include detailed questioning about bowel symptoms and routine sigmoidoscopy to screen for subclinical colitis. If a diagnosis of colitis is made in such a patient, endoscopic retrograde cholangiography may be indicated to evaluate the biliary tree for sclerosing cholangitis.
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PMID:Hepatobiliary disease that precedes ulcerative colitis. 650 28

Based on reported success and safety, 1121 sigmoidoscopies were performed in 964 patients seen privately by one surgeon, as a routine office screening procedure, using the flexible 60-cm sigmoidoscope instead of the rigid 25-cm instrument. The doubling of the distance that was examined doubled the diagnostic yield for neoplasia and inflammatory bowel disease, specific or nonspecific. As compared with barium-enema examinations, the yield was even greater: 5:1 for neoplasia, 7:1 for inflammation, 3:1 for polyps greater than 1 cm, and 5:1 for false-negative, false-positive, or equivocal x-ray findings. No serious complications were encountered in any of the examinations including 72 polypectomies performed in the office. The study supports flexible fiberoptic sigmoidoscopy as a major screening tool for individuals in private practice in truly evaluating the interior of the lower 60-cm of the colorectum for neoplasia and for the diagnosis and monitoring of bowel disease or neoplasia confined to that area.
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PMID:Experience with routine office sigmoidoscopy using the 60-cm flexible colonoscope in private practice. 665 90

A review of our records disclosed eight children with pyoderma gangrenosum. All had associated inflammatory bowel disease, and four had arthritis. In three patients the bowel disease was severe and required resection of portions of the affected bowel. The cutaneous lesions had a chronic course (average duration, 2 1/2 years), and systemic therapy was required in seven cases. Previously reported cases of pyoderma gangrenosum in children are reviewed, and the management of this skin disorder in childhood is discussed.
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PMID:Pyoderma gangrenosum in childhood. 672 42

Pyoderma gangrenosum is most commonly associated with inflammatory bowel disease and rheumatoid arthritis, but it has been associated with various haematological malignancies. A 54-year-old man with no history of bowel disease or arthritis presented with a leg ulcer, which healed after treatment. Results of bone marrow aspiration were compatible with primary thrombocythaemia. Seven weeks later there were pronounced recurrence of the ulceration and pyoderma gangrenosum was diagnosed. The appearance of pyoderma gangrenosum associated with blood disorders may differ from that associated with bowel and joint disease.
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PMID:Pyoderma gangrenosum associated with primary thrombocythaemia. 681 Oct 33

The complications of ulcerative colitis generally develop during the first two years of disease. The mortality is higher than expected and the highest likelihood of colectomy also occurs early in the disease. Mortality in Crohn's disease is greater than expected, especially in males. For both conditions, the overall mortality has decreased steadily, and currently is less than 5%. Ulcerative colitis is curable with proctocolectomy and ileostomy. In Crohn's disease, intestinal resection and reanastomosis is followed by recurrence in the majority of patients. The recurrence rate after proctocolectomy and ileostomy for Crohn's disease of the colon also is considerable, ranging from 20% to 35%. In ulcerative colitis, the more colon involved, the more frequent and more serious are the complications. In Crohn's disease, the anatomic pattern of disease tends to predict the type and extent of complications. Both ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease appear to follow a more severe course in children and adolescents with "inflammatory bowel disease." Patients with either ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease are at increased risk for the later development of cancer. In ulcerative colitis, the excess risk is limited to colorectal cancer. Patients with Crohn's disease have increased cancer rates for both the small and large bowel. Finally, most patients with these diseases are able to maintain normal occupations and enjoy reasonably stable social and economic situations. The successful adaptation of patients with inflammatory bowel disease is influenced by a hopeful, optimistic personality and by an encouraging, supportive physician.
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PMID:The prognosis of inflammatory bowel disease. 682 95


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