Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022104 (irritable bowel syndrome)
8,033 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Scoring systems for assessment of clinical activity of IBD were used to evaluate 62 children with IBD (14 with CD, 35 with CU and 13 with CNS). The PCDAI system was most effective in children with CD. In children with CU, both modified Truelove-Witts and Rachmilewitz indexes are equally effective, however use of the Truelove-Witts scale is simpler. The Rachmilewitz scale is better in distinguishing between UC and CNS.
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PMID:[Evaluation of nonspecific inflammatory bowel disease in children using disease activity scoring systems]. 864 55

This study was undertaken to determine whether measurement of fecal lysozyme is helpful in determining disease activity in inflammatory bowel disease. In 112 patients with Crohn's disease, 46 patients with ulcerative colitis, and 40 controls, fecal lysozyme concentration was measured. Results were correlated with CDAI and AI in Crohn's disease and with Truelove and Witts' grading in ulcerative colitis. Fecal lysozyme concentration (mean +/- SEM) was significantly (P < 0.001) higher in Crohn's disease (75 +/- 14 microg/g) and ulcerative colitis (238 +/- 33 microg/g) than in controls (6 +/- 1 microg/g). There was only a weak correlation between fecal lysozyme concentration and CDAI (r = 0.32; P = 0.001) and AI (r = 0.38; P < 0.0005) in patients with Crohn's disease and with Truelove and Witts' grading (r = 0.47; P = 0.001) in ulcerative colitis. When CDAI > or = 150 or AI > or = 100 were used as the standard for active disease, fecal lysozyme concentration was elevated in 78% of patients with active colonic Crohn's disease. In ulcerative colitis fecal lysozyme concentration was increased in active disease (95% in grade II and 94% in grade III) as compared 33% in grade I. Measurement of fecal lysozyme is of little help in diagnosing and determining disease activity of inflammatory bowel disease as whole, but it may be of help for diagnosis and assessment of activity of colonic IBD.
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PMID:Fecal lysozyme in assessment of disease activity in inflammatory bowel disease. 953 56

The use of corticosteroids to treat patients with inflammatory bowel disease [IBD] has been the bedrock of IBD therapeutics since the pioneering work of Truelove and Witts in the UK in the 1950s and subsequent large cohort studies in the USA and Europe. Nevertheless, although effective for induction of remission, these agents do not maintain remission and are associated with a long list of recognised side effects, including a risk of increased mortality. With the arrival of an increasing number of therapies for patients with IBD, the question arises as to whether we are using these agents appropriately in contemporary practice. This review discusses the historical background to steroid usage in IBD, and also provides a brief review of the literature on side effects of corticosteroid treatment as relevant to IBD patients. Data on licensed medications are presented with specific reference to the achievement of corticosteroid-free remission. We review available international data on the incidence of corticosteroid exposure and excess, and discuss some of the observations we and others have made concerning health care and patient-level factors associated with the risk of corticosteroid exposure, including identification of 'at-risk' populations.
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PMID:The Historical Role and Contemporary Use of Corticosteroids in Inflammatory Bowel Disease. 3217 Mar 14