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)

We review 28 patients with IBD (14 UC and 14 CD) diagnosed in a period of eight years (1982-1990). The age at the onset of symptoms was similar in both groups (8.1-8.7 years), but the delay in diagnosis was significantly higher in CD (16.2 months). Fever, growth retardation and oral and perianal lesions were more frequent in CD. Articular, mucocutaneous and hepatic were the more usual extraintestinal manifestations. All of them were more frequent in CD. The same comment can be made with respect to the abnormal laboratory test results. Colonoscopy including histological studies was the useful diagnostic method. An increase of the incidence of IBD it has been observed.
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PMID:[Inflammatory disease of intestine in the child]. 179 88

Although most T cells express the alpha/beta TCR, the gamma/delta TCR is expressed only on a small percentage of peripheral lymphocytes and CD3+ intestinal T cells. The most striking feature is a wide variation in the proportion of gamma/delta+ T cells in freshly isolated peripheral blood cells from normal individuals and patients with IBD. The augmentation of the gamma/delta+ T cell subpopulation derived from human intestinal biopsies after repeated stimulation with MT, even in the absence of filler cells, suggests that gamma/delta+ cells from human gut mucosa may play a role in generating a primary immune response to MT.
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PMID:Expression of gamma delta T lymphocytes derived from human intestinal biopsies. 183 84

Coarse-spray (CS) administration of a commercial S1133 reovirus vaccine in chickens for prevention of clinical viral tenosynovitis (VT) infection was evaluated. In Expt. 1, one-day-old specific-pathogen-free (SPF) white leghorns were vaccinated with a combination of reovirus, Newcastle disease (ND), and infectious bronchitis (IB) vaccines by CS and infectious bursal disease vaccine by the subcutaneous (SQ) route. In Expt. 2, one-day-old commercial broilers were vaccinated by CS with reovirus vaccine and Marek's disease (MD) vaccine by SQ. In Expt. 3, one-day-old commercial broilers received reovirus vaccine in combination with ND-IB vaccines at 1 day of age by CS and MD vaccine by SQ. Some birds received an initial or second vaccination at 7 days of age by CS or the drinking-water (DW) route. Birds vaccinated by CS at 1 day of age with reovirus vaccine did not produce circulating virus-neutralizing antibody against reovirus, although they had resistance to VT infection. In contrast, initial or booster vaccination at 7 days of age by CS or DW resulted in an antibody response and greater resistance to challenge than did CS vaccination at 1 day of age. There was no difference in efficacy between CS and DW routes at 7 days of age. The reovirus vaccine did not interfere with other vaccines as measured by serologic (ND-IB-IBD) or challenge (MD) studies.
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PMID:Efficacy of coarse-spray administration of a reovirus vaccine in young chickens. 185 16

By using two-color immunofluorescence with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) and phycoerythrin (PE)-labelled monoclonal antibodies and multiparameter flow cytometry, we investigated lamina propria lymphocyte subsets of patients with ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD). Leu-3/Leu-2 (CD4/CD8) ratio of lamina propria lymphocytes (LPL) of CD (mean +/- SD: 1.9 +/- 0.8, P less than 0.01) was significantly decreased compared with controls (3.3 +/- 1.1), because of an increased number of CD8+ lymphocytes. The majority of lamina propria CD4+ cells were CD4+, Leu-8- and CD4+, CD45R- both in controls and IBD tissue. Many lamina propria T lymphocytes were activated, expressing HLA-DR antigen not only in IBD but also in controls. NK cells defined by CD16 and CD 56 (3.0 +/- 1.4%, P less than 0.01) were significantly decreased in patients with UC compared with controls (6.5 +/- 3.0%). A low proportion of B cells in the intestinal mucosa expressed Leu-8 antigen and CD23 antigen. The proportion of activated B cells of LPL was high in IBD mucosa as well as normal mucosa. These findings suggest that local activation of B cells leads to the loss of the expression of Leu-8 antigen and CD23.
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PMID:Two-color immunofluorescence and flow cytometric analysis of lamina propria lymphocyte subsets in ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. 191 70

Elevated constitutive expression of major histocompatibility (MHC) class II antigens occurs in the enterocytes of patients with IBD. It has been suggested that this aberrant expression of class II molecules may play a role in the pathogenesis of IBD. We examined two possible reasons for such a finding. 1) Heightened sensitivity of IBD enterocytes to endogenous gamma interferon (gamma IFN) and 2) enhanced endogenous secretion of gamma interferon by intestinal cells in close proximity to the enterocytes (lamina propria lymphocytes). Constitutive and gamma interferon stimulated HLA-DR and DP density on intestinal epithelial cells (IEC) and peripheral blood monocytes (PBM) from UC patients (IEC n = 13; PBM n = 20), CD patients (IEC n = 14; PBM n = 18) and non-IBD controls (IEC n = 12; PBM n = 20) were measured via flow cytometry (mean channel fluorescence). gamma IFN production by PHA stimulated and unstimulated lamina propria lymphocyte (LPL) cultures of UC patients (n = 11) CD patients (n = 8) and non-IBD controls (n = 11) was measured using a vesicular stomatitis virus/WISH cell bioassay. We found significantly greater gamma IFN secretion by IBD-derived PHA stimulated LPL than from non-IBD stimulated controls (CD = 39.4 +/- 12.4u; UC41.5 +/- 6.8u; NL = 22.4 +/- 8.3u, p less than 0.05) while gamma IFN induced HLA-DR and DP upregulation was no greater in IBD-derived IEC and PBM than in non-IBD controls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The expression and regulation of class II antigens in normal and inflammatory bowel disease peripheral blood monocytes and intestinal epithelium. 193 20

The development of new drug therapy is an evolutionary process progressing from clinical success with current treatments through an understanding of interactions in the immune and inflammatory events that culminate in the tissue injury of IBD. The basic immunoinflammatory response is reviewed, with identification of the recognized and potential sites of activity of current therapies. Potential sites and implications for future interventions by newer therapies are discussed as we anticipate the discovery of the etiology and eventual cure for ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease.
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PMID:Inflammatory bowel disease revisited: newer drugs. 197 6

A retrospective review of 27 patients undergoing anal fistulography is presented. The etiology of the 27 fistulas studied are as follows: cryptoglandular infection in 18, IBD in 7 (Crohn's 6, CUC 1), iatrogenic in 1, and foreign body perforation in 1. Twenty-six fistulograms revealed either direct communication with the anus or rectum, or abscess cavities/tracts, or both. Two fistulograms revealed no radiographic evidence of fistula (one patient had two fistulograms). In 13 of the 27 patients (48 percent) information obtained from the fistulograms revealed either unexpected pathology (n = 7) or directly altered surgical management (n = 6). We conclude that anal fistulography in properly selected patients may add useful information for the definitive management of fistula-in-ano.
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PMID:The role of fistulography in fistula-in-ano. Report of five cases. 199 16

There is a strong association between PSC and IBD. PSC is the most common hepatobiliary lesion seen in association with IBD. Whether there are two subsets of PSC, one associated with IBD and one unassociated, is controversial. A lower male to female ratio in patients without IBD supports this view. The demonstration of the haplotype DRw52a in 100% of patients with PSC, irrespective of the absence of IBD, speaks against this view. Patients with isolated PSC tend to present with jaundice, pruritus, and fatigue more frequently than those with combined PSC and IBD. There may also be a difference in bile duct involvement between patients with and without IBD combined with PSC. Apart from usually being a total colitis, either Crohn's colitis or UC, the IBD associated with PSC cannot be distinguished from IBD without PSC with respect to symptoms and clinical course. Patients with combined IBD and PSC may have somewhat worse prognosis than those with isolated PSC. The majority of patients developing BDC have concomitant IBD, suggesting that patients without IBD represent a different subgroup of PSC and run a different clinical course. Most studies have, however, found no differences in epidemiology, pathogenetic factors, clinical findings related to the hepatobiliary disease and prognosis between those who present with PSC alone and those who present with combined PSC and IBD. A major problem when discussing the relationship between IBD and PSC is that the bowel is inadequately examined in many of the studies relating to this question.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Relationship of inflammatory bowel disease and primary sclerosing cholangitis. 204 87

The incidence and prevalence of inflammatory bowel disease in the population served by the Sagunto Hospital during 1983-1989 is reported. The global incidence of IBD is 9.07 cases/100,000 inhabitants. The mean incidence of ulcerative colitis has been 4 +/- 2.15; a peak incidence of 8.2 was observed in 1985. It was 3.3 in 1989. Prevalence was 28.87/100,000 inhabitants. The mean incidence of Crohn' disease is 3.06 +/- 1.76/100,000 inhabitants/year, with an increase from 0.8 in 1983 to 5.7 in 1989. Prevalence of Crohn's disease is 21.4/100,000 inhabitants.
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PMID:[Incidence of inflammatory bowel disease in Sagunto]. 209 Jan 71

The venous occlusion test was applied to 17 patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD; 7 cases of Crohn's disease, 10 cases of ulcerative colitis). Results were compared to those obtained in 20 healthy matched control subjects. Patients with IBD had significantly decreased t-PA Ag release (p less than 0.001) and had no significant vWF Ag release. Residual PAI activity was evidenced after venous stasis in the IBD group but not in the control group. Hypofibrinolysis was more important in patients with an evolutive IBD than in patients with IBD in remission. Impaired systemic fibrinolytic capacity might contribute to an increased risk for thromboembolic complications and to the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease.
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PMID:Impaired fibrinolytic capacity in patients with inflammatory bowel disease. 211 29


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