Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0021831 (
enteropathy
)
4,403
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Six cases of tubular disorder of antenatal onset responsible for biological manifestations characteristic of Bartter syndrome and severe hypercalciuria are reported. In all six cases, severe hydramnios occurred during pregnancy between the 26th and 28th week after the last menstrual period. All six patients were born prematurely; gestational age ranged from 20 to 35 weeks. Major polyuria with dehydration occurred immediately after birth. The amounts of
water
and sodium needed to compensate urinary losses ranged from 280 to 370 ml/kg/day and 25 to 43 mmol/kg/d, respectively, during the first two postnatal months. Decreased serum potassium levels and increased plasma levels of renin and aldosterone were seen in all six patients. Increased urinary excretion of calcium was evidenced during the first postnatal week in three cases. Urinary calcium excretion in the six patients ranged from 15 to 30 mg/kg/d. Nephrocalcinosis developed in all six patients and two patients developed urinary lithiasis. One patient died at one month of age from necrotizing
enteropathy
. The five remaining patients gradually developed severe growth failure with measurements between 4 and 5.5 SDs below the mean. These five patients had evidence of hyperparathyroidism including increased serum levels of parathyroid hormone (5/5), increased serum alkaline phosphatase activity (4/5), and roentgenographic bone changes (1/5). Ionized calcium assays performed in three of the five patients disclosed low values (range 1.25-1.47 mmol/l; mean = 1.35; normal values = 1.42-1.62), although total serum calcium levels were normal or high (range 2.16-2.98 mmol/l; mean 2.61; normal values = 2.45-2.65) probably as a result of chronic dehydration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Antenatal form of Bartter's syndrome]. 845 38
Association of different psychological and neurological disturbances with gluten intake in coeliac patients was repeatedly described. In the present study gluten-induced
enteropathy
was elicited in rats by prolonged intragastric administration of gliadin from birth to 10 weeks. Various neurological (contact and visual placing reactions, equilibrium on horizontal bar) and behavioral tests (open field and Morris
water
maze task) were used to assess the possible deficits. No substantial differences were found in the behavior of rats fed with gliadin compared with those fed with bovine serum albumin (control group). The only difference found between control and experimental rats was that gliadin-fed rats showed slightly higher emotionality in the open field test. It is concluded that prolonged application of gliadin to young rats at
enteropathy
-inducing dosages does not modify their behavior.
...
PMID:Study of behavior of rats with gluten-induced enteropathy. 874 45
The authors tested the suitability of 10 cell lines for assessment of the virulence of strains of Yersinia enterocolitica by the cytotoxicity test. Line LLC-MK2, HEp-2, HeLa, L-132 and L929 are most suitable. Lines LEP, 3T3, MDCK and McCoy are usable, line BHK-21 is unsuitable. On the same cell lines also the invasiveness of the virulent and non-virulent strains of Y. enterocolitica was assessed. For detection of the internalization of bacteria a modified method of double fluorescent staining was used which is simpler and more rapid. The invasiveness, similarly as the cytotoxicity of the virulent strain was proved on all tested cell lines, contrary to the non-virulent strain which was neither cytotoxic nor invasive. Using strains of Y. enterocolitica, isolated from faeces of patients with diarrhoea of infectious etiology or another
bowel disease
and from
water
, the cytotoxicity method was compared with recommended biochemical virulence tests used in this country: bond with Congo red, crystal violet, dependence on Ca2+ and pyrazinamidase activity. Strains of serotype 0:5, 0:6.31 and 0:7.8 biotype 1 gave in all tests negative results, strains of serotype 0:3 biotype 4 differed. The highest number of positive strains was detected by the cytotoxicity test. The positivity of strains of this serotype was assessed by the invasiveness test in vitro. The cytotoxicity test was thus proved to be a very effective, rapid and easy test of detection of the virulence of Y. enterocolitica strains.
...
PMID:[Cytotoxicity and invasive virulence of Yersinia enterocolitis strains in various mammalian cell lines]. 875 2
Calcium stones arise from imbalances between urinary excretions of insoluble salts and
water
. Idiopathic hypercalciuria and hyperparathyroidism are the calcium disorders usually associated with elevated levels of calcium in the urine. Renal tubular acidosis is associated with a disordered acid-base status that results in low urine citrate. Hypocitraturia itself is a cause of calcium stones because it leaves urine calcium free to complex with either oxalate or phosphate. Elevated urine oxalate is commonly associated with dietary excesses,
bowel disease
, and, rarely, primary hyperoxaluria. Hyperuricosuria, usually of dietary origin, when reversed can cause a fall in new calcium stones.
...
PMID:Pathogenesis and treatment of calcium stones. 889 Mar 96
Two studies were conducted to investigate whether vitamin A-deficient rats were more susceptible to intestinal injury caused by methotrexate (MTX), since vitamin A deficiency alone causes only mild changes to jejunal structure and function. Weanling male rats were fed a vitamin A-deficient diet (-VA) for 40-42 d and compared to rats either pair-fed (PF) or with free access (+VA) to the same diet. Drinking
water
of PF and +VA rats was supplemented with 37.5 microg (Study 1) or 75 microg (Study 2) vitamin A (Rovimix A 500W)/d. Rats in each group received MTX (-VAMTX, PFMTX, +VAMTX) or vehicle. MTX administration reduced intestinal mucosal wet weight, protein and DNA concentrations, and sucrase and maltase activities in -VA and PF rats (P < 0.02). In Study 1, -VAMTX rats developed a severe jejunal
enteropathy
and had a higher incidence of diarrhea (P < 0.005), greater weight loss (P < 0.005), more disruption of villus architecture (P < 0.0001) and lower disaccharidase activity (P < 0.007) than PFMTX rats. Similar results were observed in Study 2. Liver retinol concentration (but no other variable) was greater in rats receiving 75 microg vitamin A/d (P < 0.001) than in those receiving 37.5 microg/d. The interaction of vitamin A deficiency and small intestinal injury may explain the efficacy of vitamin A supplementation in preventing childhood diarrheal disease mortality in developing countries, and highlights the need for ensuring adequate vitamin A status in people worldwide with diseases and/or treatments which may injure the gastrointestinal tract.
...
PMID:Vitamin A deficiency exacerbates methotrexate-induced jejunal injury in rats. 916
A questionnaire was sent to 238 members of local pig discussion groups in the West Midlands region of England to identify farm level factors associated with the occurrence of diarrhoea in grower-finisher pigs. The questions related to the occurrence, diagnosis and aetiology of scour problems on the farm, the prevalence of common porcine diseases on the farm, the classes of pigs, staff employment, source of replacement stock and biosecurity measures, the husbandry techniques such as piglet management, use of medication, movement and mixing of pigs, dung removal and pen preparation between batches of pigs, and the physical resources such as floor type, pen divisions, watering, feeding and dung disposal systems. Replies from 105 producers keeping grower-finisher pigs were included in the analysis, 50.5 per cent of which had had a scour problem at some time in the previous three years. The causes of scour had been identified as colitis (34.3 per cent), swine dysentery (10.5 per cent) or porcine
enteropathy
(3.8 per cent). There was a significant association between the following factors and the occurrence of diarrhoea in grower-finisher pigs: the use of
water
medication for weaners (odds ratio = 11.8; P = 0.002), the tail-docking of piglets (odds ratio = 8.6; P = 0.003), the use of a wet feeding system for finishers (odds ratio = 5.9; P = 0.009), finishers housed on partially slatted floors (odds ratio = 3.6; P = 0.044), and the use of an isolation procedure for incoming breeding stock involving exposure to dung (odds ratio = 3.5; P = 0.046). The use of disinfectant in the preparation of pens between batches of pigs appeared to be protective (odds ratio = 0.3; P = 0.046).
...
PMID:Epidemiology of enteric disease in grower-finisher pigs: a postal survey of pig producers in England. 1023 11
Controlled clinical trials to a standardised protocol were conducted into the effect of a
water
-soluble antibiotic on proliferative
enteropathy
and its causative agent (Lawsonia intracellularis) on commercial pig farms at six sites in four European countries. Clinical signs of the disease and L intracellularis-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-positive pigs were detected in pens of six- to 12-week-old pigs (weighing 5 to 55 kg) immediately before each trial. Matched pens of randomised pigs were either left unmedicated (32 to 59 pigs per trial), or medicated orally with 10 mg/kg of a
water
-soluble combination of lincomycin and spectinomycin powder (21 and 42 mg, respectively, of antibiotic activity per litre) for either seven days (33 to 61 pigs per trial), or 14 days (33 to 61 pigs per trial), delivered via the drinking
water
. Investigators did not know which pens received which treatment In most of the affected pigs in each trial, diarrhoea due to L intracellularis resolved within three to seven days after the medication began, whereas most unmedicated pigs remained diarrhoeic for at least 10 days. On average the medicated pigs gained more weight than the unmedicated pigs over the 21-day trial period (P=0.01). In two trials, the absence of L intracellularis after the treatment ended was confirmed by the PCR.
...
PMID:Therapeutic efficacy of water-soluble lincomycin-spectinomycin powder against porcine proliferation enteropathy in a European field study. 1067 91
We performed MR imaging of the small bowel (MRSB) in 20 patients using
water
as an oral contrast agent, to improve the demonstrability of pathologic conditions without a large amount of intestinal fluid. Bowel lumen and folds were clearly visualized: duodenum in 13(65%), jejunal loops in 14 (70%), ileal loops in 15(75%), and ileocecum in 8 (40%) cases. Furthermore, conventional enteroclysis was performed in 16 of 20 patients, and the MRSB findings were comparable with those of conventional enteroclysis. If conventional enteroclysis is used as the gold standard, MRSB visualized luminal stenosis in 11 of 13(84.6%), displacement or extrinsic compression in 4 of 5(80%), polypoid lesion in 3 of 4(75%), and fistula formation in one of one cases. None of four ulcerative lesions could be visualized by MRSB. Our MRSB technique is a noninvasive, easy method that does not require a long time. Accordingly, MRSB can be used in addition to the conventional MR sequence. MRSB has potential usefulness for evaluating small-
bowel disease
without radiation exposure.
...
PMID:[MR imaging of small bowel with water administration]. 1190 35
The aim of this study was to prospectively define the role of multiplanar spiral CT enterography with a new negative oral contrast material for noninvasive assessment of the small bowel in patients with Crohn's disease. Thirty patients with established Crohn's disease prospectively underwent spiral CT enterography at 45-60 min after distension of the small bowel with 1400 ml of a negative oral contrast material (Mucofalk
water
enema). Spiral CT scans were obtained 50 s after administration of intravenous contrast material with the following parameters: 5-mm collimation; 7.5-mm/s table feed; and 3-mm reconstruction interval. The adequacy of bowel opacification, luminal distension, and the contribution of two-dimensional multiplanar reformatted imaging were assessed by two observers. Spiral CT imaging findings were compared with results of enteroclysis as well as endoscopic and histological findings in all patients. Spiral CT enterography with Mucofalk
water
enema was well tolerated in 29 of 30 patients. Findings on spiral CT enterography were comparable with those of barium studies in 25 of 30 patients, superior to those on barium studies in 4 patients, and inferior in 1 patient ( p<0.05). The addition of multiplanar reformatted images to axial spiral CT scans significantly improved observers' confidence in image interpretation ( p<0.05) but did not reveal additional abnormalities. Multiplanar spiral CT enterography with Mucofalk excellently provides information in patients with Crohn's disease. This technique accurately depicts the level of small bowel obstruction and the extent of inflammatory small
bowel disease
and its extraluminal complications.
...
PMID:Multiplanar spiral CT enterography in patients with Crohn's disease using a negative oral contrast material: initial results of a noninvasive imaging approach. 1219 78
Kidney stones are increased in patients with
bowel disease
, particularly those who have had resection of part of their gastrointestinal tract. These stones are usually CaOx, but there is a marked increase in the tendency to form uric acid stones, as well, particularly in patients with colon resection. These patients all share a tendency to chronic volume contraction due to loss of
water
and salt in diarrheal stool, which leads to decreased urine volumes. They also have decreased absorption, and therefore diminished urinary excretion, of citrate and magnesium, which normally act as inhibitors of CaOx crystallization. Patients with colon resection and ileostomy form uric acid stones, as loss of bicarbonate in the ileostomy effluent leads to formation of an acid urine. This, coupled with low urine volume, decreases the solubility of uric acid, causing crystallization and stone formation. Prevention of stones requires treatment with alkalinizing agents to raise urine pH to about 6.5, and attempts to increase urine volume, which increases the solubility of uric acid and prevents crystallization. Patients with small bowel resection may develop steatorrhea; if the colon is present, they are at risk of hyperoxaluria due to increased permeability of the colon to oxalate in the presence of fatty acids, and increased concentrations of free oxalate in the bowel lumen due to fatty acid binding of luminal calcium. EH leads to supersaturation of urine with respect to CaOx, in conjunction with low volume, hypocitraturia and hypomagnesuria. Therapy involves a low-fat, low-oxalate diet, attempts to increase urine volume, and agents such as calcium given to bind oxalate in the gut lumen. Correction of hypocitraturia and hypomagnesuria are also helpful.
...
PMID:Stones from bowel disease. 1247 41
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Next >>