Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0021831 (enteropathy)
4,403 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A retrospective study of nine patients with active pyoderma gangrenosum at the time of operation for inflammatory bowel disease showed two patterns of postoperative skin healing: 1) prompt healing within 2 months, occurred in five patients with moderate to severe inflammatory bowel disease. 2) skin disease persisted in four others, healing only after a year. Three of these patients had mild ulcerative colitis, and in them, the operation was carried out in the hope of curing crippling pyoderma gangrenosum. The fourth patient had only an intestinal bypass for ileitis. Our observations suggest that prompt skin healing may occur after surgery in patients with severe inflammatory bowel disease, but not necessarily in those with milder bowel disease or in those in whom some bowel disease persists.
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PMID:Does intestinal resection heal the pyoderma gangrenosum of inflammatory bowel disease? 686 78

Lactose breath hydrogen tests were given to 70 children and adolescents with chronic ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease in order to determine the prevalence of lactose malabsorption in childhood inflammatory bowel disease. Twenty-nine percent of these patients demonstrated lactose malabsorption; the majority of these children (70%) experienced gastro-intestinal symptoms during the test. The prevalence was not significantly different whether the diagnosis was ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease. With the exception of those with diffuse small bowel disease, the location of intestinal involvement with Crohn's disease and the severity of clinical symptoms did not affect lactose malabsorption. Lactose malabsorption was not more frequent in patients with inflammatory bowel disease than in a group of children with recurrent abdominal pain and normal gastrointestinal x-rays, although significant differences in the prevalence of lactose malabsorption were observed in relation to ethnic background. Milk incubated with commercially available yeast lactase (lactAid, Surgarlo Co., Atlantic City, N.J.) for greater than 24 h prevented an increase in breath hydrogen when administered to 6 patients previously shown to have lactose malabsorption.
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PMID:Lactose malabsorption in children and adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease. 689 2

The diagnosis and management of dilatation of the colon and free intestinal perforation in inflammatory or infective bowel disease are reviewed with reference to 32 cases seen during an 8-year period. Toxic dilatation of the colon occurred in 20 patients, including 6 with infective colitis. Ileostomy with subtotal colectomy and mucous fistula is a satisfactory operation for toxic dilatation due to inflammatory bowel disease. Patients with infective colitis can generally be treated without operation. Free intestinal perforation was seen in 12 patients. Colonic perforation may occur in association with toxic dilatation, but more usually it occurs without dilatation as a complication of Crohn's disease. Free perforation of the ileum was seen after a short illness in patients with Crohn's disease.
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PMID:Toxic dilatation and perforation in inflammatory bowel disease. 711 66

Although malnutrition is common in Crohn's disease, some features are often overlooked. We have examined the value of simple anthropometric measurements in identifying the patients who were likely to have clinical features of malnutrition. Measurements were performed in 106 patients with Crohn's disease, 106 with ulcerative colitis and 106 healthy controls; all measurements were significantly reduced in patients with Crohn's disease (P less than 0.01) compared with controls and colitis patients who had similar measurements. Patients with Crohn's disease most severely affected had diffuse small bowel disease or recurrent disease following surgery. Those who had previous resections but no recurrence were similar to controls. Crohn's patients with colonic and ano-rectal disease were similar to patients with colitis. Anthropometry provides a simple method of documenting the nutritional status of patients with inflammatory bowel disease and helps to identify those with both clinical and biochemical features of malnutrition.
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PMID:Malnutrition in inflammatory bowel disease: an anthropometric study. 714 85

Histamine exhibits various biological effects in inflammatory and immunological reactions. To further define its potential role in allergic enteropathy and inflammatory bowel disease, both gut mucosal histamine levels and histamine release from endoscopic biopsy samples were measured. Tissue histamine content resulted from addition of the released amount of histamine and the remaining part of tissue histamine. The results demonstrate highly elevated mucosal histamine levels of the large intestine in allergic enteropathy. In inflammatory bowel disease histamine content and secretion were found to be significantly increased particularly in affected mucosa of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis than in unaffected tissue or in healthy controls. These findings give strong evidence that mast cell mediators like histamine play a role in the pathogenesis of these diseases. Mucosal histamine is thus concluded to contribute to the immuno-inflammatory reactions of the intestine found in these disease states and to reflect the degree of colonic inflammation in Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis.
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PMID:Mucosal histamine content and histamine secretion in Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis and allergic enteropathy. 754 99

Interleukin-2 (IL-2)-deficient (IL-2-/-) mice develop anemia and colonic inflammatory bowel disease. To elucidate the mechanism of this disease, we have bred IL-2-/- mice to two strains of immunodeficient mice, RAG-2-deficient (RAG-2-/-, lacking B and T cells) and JH-deficient mice (JH-/-, lacking B cells). IL-2-/-, RAG-2-/- double-mutant mice are disease free, while IL-2-/-, JH-/- double-mutant mice succumb to bowel disease at the same rate as IL-2-/- littermates. IL-2-/-, JH-/- mice do not, however, succumb to anemia. Thus, spontaneous intestinal inflammation in IL-2-/- mice requires mature T cells, not B cells, while anemia is dependent on B cells.
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PMID:T cells, but not B cells, are required for bowel inflammation in interleukin 2-deficient mice. 759 26

Approximately 60% of sera from ulcerative colitis (UC) patients contains Igs reactive with neutrophil components, raising the question of the origin of these anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic Abs (ANCA). Our assertion that ANCA is a marker for a mucosal disease-related immune response predicts the existence of ANCA producing B cell clones in the lamina propria lymphocyte (LPL) fraction of UC patients. This hypothesis was tested by examining 12-day culture supernatants of LPL ANCA expression. LPL were isolated from surgically removed mucosa from patients with UC, Crohn's disease (CD), and diverticulitis. Normal mucosa was obtained from accident victims or normal margins of colon cancer resections. Supernatants were assayed by a fixed neutrophil ELISA. The ANCA staining pattern of supernatants expressing ANCA, as determined by ELISA, was assessed by indirect immunofluorescent staining of alcohol-fixed neutrophils. ANCA was found in 70% of culture supernatants from UC LPL fractions. In contrast, only approximately 11% of supernatants from CD and diverticulitis/normal (noninflammatory bowel disease (IBD)) LPL displayed ANCA binding. A perinuclear (pANCA) staining pattern was obtained with 70% of ANCA-expressing UC LPL supernatants, whereas ANCA-expressing CD and non-IBD LPL supernatants displayed a cytoplasmic reaction. PBL and mesenteric lymph node lymphocytes lacked spontaneous pANCA production, and pANCA production from PBL was not inducible. These findings indicate the existence of pANCA-producing B cell clones in mucosal lesions of UC patients and support our hypothesis that pANCA production is a consequence of a mucosal immune response specific to UC.
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PMID:Perinuclear anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies are spontaneously produced by mucosal B cells of ulcerative colitis patients. 767 39

Etiology of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is still unknown. A lot of experimental models of these diseases have been developed during the last years. They can be classified as spontaneous and induced models. Spontaneous models are infectious, genetic or of unknown etiology. Induced models are infectious, immune-mediated, chemical or genetic. All these models share some characteristics with IBD. In general, they are characterized by a chronic inflammation of the gut, and often, this inflammation appears secondary to mucosal abnormalities leading to an abnormal immune and inflammatory response toward luminal material. The most interesting models are thus those that share not only clinical and pathological characteristics with IBD, but also early mucosal abnormalities. From that point of view, the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) enteropathy is probably one of the most interesting model for Crohn's disease (CD). In effect, this model shares an early modification with CD, that is increased intestinal permeability. In animals NSAID enteropathy, the increased intestinal permeability appears early after NSAID administration and is followed by inflammatory lesions. These lesions seem to be secondary to the increased permeability and depend on intraluminal materials, such as alimentary antigens or bacterial fragments. A possible link between the increased permeability and the inflammatory lesions could be an abnormal immune and inflammatory response toward the intraluminal materials. If the increased intestinal permeability in CD was confirmed, the same mechanisms could be implicated in its pathophysiology.
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PMID:Experimental models of inflammatory bowel disease. 770 99

We sought to prospectively characterize and compare the symptoms of children > or = 5 years of age with recurrent abdominal pain to previously established criteria for irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) in adults. For all eligible subjects, a detailed questionnaire concerning characteristics of abdominal pain and defecatory pattern was completed at presentation. In addition, a battery of screening tests was performed and additional evaluation was done at the discretion of their physician. In all, 227 subjects fulfilled the entrance criteria, but 56 were subsequently excluded because of diagnoses of inflammatory bowel disease (nine cases), lactose malabsorption (46 cases), or celiac disease (one case). Of the remaining 171 patients, 117 had IBS symptoms. In the IBS subjects, lower abdominal discomfort (p < 0.001), cramping pain (p < 0.0009), and increased flatus (p < 0.0003) were more common, whereas dyspeptic symptoms such as epigastric discomfort (p < 0.003), pain radiating to the chest (p < 0.009), and regurgitation (p < 0.02) were more common in the non-IBS subjects. Our study not only confirms the clinical heterogeneity of children with recurrent abdominal pain but also concomitantly demonstrates that most children with this disorder have symptoms that fulfill the standardized criteria for IBS in adults. The identification of subgroups of children with recurrent abdominal pain can provide a framework for the diagnosis of functional bowel disease as well as establish the need for invasive and expensive tests.
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PMID:Characterization of symptoms in children with recurrent abdominal pain: resemblance to irritable bowel syndrome. 913 90

The ultrasonographic findings in a one-and-a-half-year-old female basenji with immunoproliferative enteropathy are described. On ultrasonographic examination, generalised thickening of the small bowel wall was found, ranging between 4 and 6 mm. The normal layered appearance of the intestinal wall was replaced by three distinct layers; an innermost enlarged hyperechogenic layer; an enlarged poor echogenic layer, and an outer hyperechogenic layer. These findings are consistent with the histopathological appearance of this particular chronic inflammatory bowel disease, since the inner layer probably represents the infiltrated mucosa, the middle layer the infiltrated lamina propria and the outer layer the serosa. Thus, the ultrasonographic finding of generalised thickening of the intestinal wall in a basenji presenting with chronic diarrhoea, weight loss, anorexia or vomiting is strongly indicative of immunoproliferative enteropathy.
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PMID:Ultrasonographic findings in a basenji with immuno-proliferative enteropathy. 772 94


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