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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Calcium metabolism was studied prospectively in 12 patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Two patients showed mild hypocalcemia,
malabsorption
of calcium, and elevated plasma parathyroid hormone concentrations. Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D was decreased in one and low-normal in the second. These two patients and a third showed aminoaciduria on thin layer chromatography. Calcium metabolism was apparently restored to normal by dihydrotachysterol, a vitamin D analog, but no improvement in neurologic function resulted. Bone radiographs taken in search of metabolic
bone disease
showed a significant increase in the incidence of congenital vertebral anomalies in the ALS patients (50% versus 8%). The relationship of the abnormalities in calcium metabolism and in vertebral structure to the etiology of motor neuron disease is not known.
...
PMID:Calcium metabolism in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. 86 4
Mild rickets was present in 7, and 3 others with severe
bone disease
developed widespread skeletal demineralization and multiple fractures. The intake of vitamin D was apparently loosely related to the severity of the osteodystrophy. The latter however, was closely linked to both the serum inorganic phosphate and the calciumXphosphate product. The serum calcium was directly related to the infant's gestational maturity, hypocalcaemia being present in those born before 35 weeks. Pathogenetic factors have probably included reactive hyperparathyroidism and nutritional deprivation associated with preterm delivery. Five of the infants who had biliary atresia developed radiological evidence of osteoporosis from about twelve months of age. This may be related to protracted calcium
malabsorption
, but its true nature remains to be elucidated.
...
PMID:The osteodystrophy of prolonged obstructive liver disease in childhood. 125 25
Between August 1980 and October 1990 we treated 36 patients with home total parenteral nutrition (HTPN) with a cumulative treatment duration of 92 years. They included 14 females and 22 males ranging in age from newborn to 75 years, with a mean of 38 +/- 21. The 4 commonest indications for HTPN were short bowel syndrome (mainly due to mesenteric occlusion (50%), inflammatory bowel disease 14%), motility disorders (14%) and
malabsorption
(11%). All-in-one nutritional mixtures utilizing the big-bag technique were used for all patients. Broviac or Hickman catheters were implanted in 35 patients and an infusion port in 2. Infusions were administered during the night for 8-12 hours with a volumetric pump. 14 patients are still receiving HTPN (39%) while in 8 it was discontinued as they can maintain their nutritional status by the gastrointestinal route (22%). 14 patients have died (39%), 3 from HTPN-related causes (2 of sepsis and 1 of liver failure). Catheter-related sepsis was 0.42/year of HTPN. Other common complications were metabolic
bone disease
, deranged liver function and cholecystolithiasis. 80% were able to return to work, school, or housekeeping activities, or at least to take care of themselves and cope with HTPN unaided. Social rehabilitation was full or partial in 72% and only 29% were house-bound and needed major assistance. Patients with a poor life quality tended to be older and suffer from intestinal diseases as a manifestation of a systemic disorder, such as atherosclerosis or malignancy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A decade of experience with home total parenteral nutrition]. 180 Feb 76
Abuse of alcohol is considered to be an important risk factor for fractures and osteoporosis. Alcohol abuse is associated with deleterious changes in bone structure detected by histomorphometry, and with a decrease in bone mineral density. These changes may also be produced by factors commonly associated with alcohol abuse, e.g., nutritional deficiencies, liver damage, and hypogonadism. Thus the etiology of alcohol-associated
bone disease
is multifactorial. Alcohol has, however, clear-cut direct effects on bone and mineral metabolism. Acute alcohol intoxication causes transitory hypoparathyroidism with resultant hypocalcemia and hypercalciuria. Prolonged moderate drinking elevates serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels, whereas chronic alcoholics are characterized by low serum levels of vitamin D metabolites with resultant
malabsorption
of calcium, hypocalcemia, and hypocalciuria. Independently of whether alcohol consumption is of short duration, social, or heavy and chronic, it seems to suppress the function of osteoblasts, as evidenced by low serum levels of osteocalcin. It has recently been reported, however, that alcohol can also have a beneficial effect on bone. Among postmenopausal women, moderate alcohol consumption correlates positively with central and peripheral bone mineral density, and with serum estradiol levels.
...
PMID:Alcohol and bone. 193 4
Home parenteral nutrition has prevented malnutrition in patients who cannot maintain adequate nutrition by enteral feedings alone. The risk of bone and mineral abnormalities in these patients is significant for several reasons. Pre-existing skeletal disease can occur from factors known to affect the population at large as well as from malnutrition,
malabsorption
, and corticosteroid use related to the underlying disease process. Long-term use of infused nutrients and potential toxins can further alter bone turnover. Hypercalciuria is frequently present during HPN, yet its etiology is poorly defined. Parenteral nutrition admixture concentrations of calcium, phosphorus, protein, sodium, and dextrose may all play a role. Any development of acidosis can certainly aggravate hypercalciuria, which may be an indirect marker of abnormal bone turnover. Although increased protein intake can promote the development of acidosis-induced calciuresis, infused phosphorus and acetate can help reduce calcium excretion. Parenteral nutrition contamination by aluminum can cause a spectrum of osteomalacic
bone disease
similar to aluminum-associated changes seen in renal failure patients. Even with recent attempts to remove aluminum from the parenteral admixture, low-turnover
bone disease
can still occur. At present, HPN-related
bone disease
is a poorly understood entity because of its multifaceted nature. Patients receiving long-term parenteral nutrition should be considered to have an increased risk for the development of metabolic
bone disease
. Early monitoring for and treatment of
bone disease
should be considered in all patients receiving HPN.
...
PMID:Long-term parenteral nutrition and metabolic bone disease. 211 69
The prevalence, type, and factors that may influence the development of
bone disease
in primary biliary cirrhosis, have been investigated in 20 consecutive patients, who, in addition to liver function tests and mineral and vitamin D metabolism studies, were submitted to a transiliac bone biopsy after tetracycline double-labeling for quantitative histomorphometric examination. Intestinal calcium absorption was also assessed in 16 patients. Seven patients (35%) had reduced bone volume and were considered osteoporotic. Three also had bone mineralization impairment, but did not have criteria for osteomalacia. Bone formation was depressed in 15 patients, and bone resorption was low or normal in 19 cases. Eroded surfaces were reduced in all osteoporotic patients. Duration of primary biliary cirrhosis was significantly longer in patients with osteoporosis (6.3 +/- 0.6 yr) than in those without osteoporosis (2.6 +/- 0.6, p = 0.004). Moreover, osteoporosis was more prevalent in postmenopausal women, and in those who had intestinal calcium
malabsorption
, which was present in 80% of osteoporotic patients but in only 18% of nonosteoporotic patients (p = 0.03). Osteoporosis and mineralization bone impairment were unrelated to the severity of cholestasis. 25-Hydroxyvitamin D was significantly lower in those patients with intestinal calcium
malabsorption
. The results of this study indicate that osteodystrophy in primary biliary cirrhosis is characterized mainly by "low-turnover" osteoporosis, which is related to the duration of the liver disease, postmenopausal condition, and calcium
malabsorption
.
...
PMID:Factors influencing the development of metabolic bone disease in primary biliary cirrhosis. 222 Jul 29
Fractional absorption of calcium was determined in 9 children aged 4.9 to 16.9 yr with chronic cholestatic liver disease to determine the role of calcium
malabsorption
in the development of metabolic
bone disease
. Radiological evidence of rickets was absent in all patients, but bone density, measured by single beam photon absorptiometry of the distal radius, was reduced in eight of nine subjects. Serum calcium and phosphorus concentrations were normal in all except one subject. Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration was decreased compared with controls in only one of nine patients, but serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D concentrations were diminished in seven of nine subjects. In all subjects, dietary calcium and phosphorus intakes were greater than 80% of the RDA. Fractional absorption of calcium, determined by oral and intravenous administration of stable calcium isotopes, was similar in cholestatic compared with control subjects (37.1% +/- 12.5% vs. 34.0% +/- 16.4%). In the cholestatic subjects, calcium absorption correlated with serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (r = 0.871, p less than 0.002) but not 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations. Calcium balance, assessed by the duplicate diet method, was positive in four of five subjects. Anthropometric measurements were performed to examine the relationship between nutritional status and bone mineral content. Heights of all subjects were less than or equal to the 10th percentile and fat stores and somatic protein stores were less than the 25th percentile in six of nine subjects. We conclude that factors other than calcium
malabsorption
and decreased serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration contribute to diminished bone mass in children with cholestatic liver disease.
...
PMID:Calcium absorption in bone disease associated with chronic cholestasis during childhood. 222 18
D-lactate accumulates in some patients with
malabsorption
who continue oral intake of carbohydrate leading to a clinical syndrome of acidosis and encephalopathy. To assess the possibility that D-lactate contributes to acidosis and/or metabolic
bone disease
in patients with
malabsorption
receiving long-term parenteral nutrition yet maintaining oral intake, D-lactate levels in serum and urine were measured in 14 long-term parenteral nutrition subjects (average duration of support 74 months) and 27 control subjects. Significant elevations in both serum and urine D-lactate were found in only two parenteral nutrition subjects. Both subjects with elevated D-lactate levels had bone pain, x-ray evidence of fractures, and biopsy evidence of osteomalacia. These studies suggest that D-lactate accumulation may be a heretofore unappreciated metabolic abnormality associated with metabolic
bone disease
and acidosis in patients with
malabsorption
who are supported by long-term parenteral nutrition.
...
PMID:D-lactate and metabolic bone disease in patients receiving long-term parenteral nutrition. 249 43
There are two sources of vitamin D available to man: The more important source is the cholecalciferol (vitamin D3), which is produced photochemically in the skin from the provitamin, 7-dehydrocholesterol; vitamin D ingested with food is of secondary importance, but assumes a critical role when an individual is deprived of solar exposure. Vitamin D therefore is not strictly a vitamin. A deficiency of vitamin D ultimately results in osteomalacia in adults and rickets in children, and provision of sunlight or small oral doses of the vitamin can cure this bone condition. There are, however, many less common conditions in which small doses of the vitamin are ineffective, whereas larger doses of vitamin D can achieve healing of the
bone disease
. These conditions are collectively called vitamin D-resistant diseases and include hypoparathyroidism, genetic and acquired hypophosphataemic osteomalacias, renal osteodystrophy, vitamin D-dependent rickets, and the osteomalacia associated with liver disease and
intestinal malabsorption
. Unfortunately, large doses of vitamin D continue to be prescribed for a wide variety of diseases in which there is little scientific evidence of their efficacy. The benefits and dangers of high doses of vitamin D are discussed and the problems arising from inappropriate or poorly supervised treatment with vitamin D presented. The serum concentration of the active metabolite of vitamin D, 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D is increased in certain disease states, and the pathophysiology of some these diseases are presented. The exciting developments in tumour differentiation and the role of high doses of 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D for the control of leukaemia and other blood and skin diseases are discussed.
...
PMID:High-dose vitamin D therapy: indications, benefits and hazards. 250 9
Home parenteral nutrition (HPN) provides long-term nutritional support for persons whose absorptive capacity is compromised by a variety of
intestinal malabsorption
problems. However, the presence of vitamin and mineral deficiency syndromes that normally would not have time to develop in the hospitalized patient receiving total parenteral nutrition has been reported in patients receiving HPN. This study entails a longitudinal survey of plasma concentrations of vitamins A, E, and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, as well as the minerals zinc, copper, and selenium, in patients receiving HPN. Plasma samples from eight patients who had been on HPN for 1-92 months before the study began were obtained once a month over a 12-month period. The blood was drawn immediately before their evening infusion of TPN in order to approximate fasting plasma nutrient concentrations. Patient values were compared to fasting control values and to published norms. Values for vitamin A, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, and zinc all were within the normal range, and there was no evidence of metabolic
bone disease
. Plasma vitamin E and copper concentrations exceeded the normal range for most of the 12-month period. Of all of the nutrients studied, only plasma selenium concentrations were consistently in the low-normal to below-normal range. Selenium levels in patients on HPN should be monitored regularly, and supplementation may be necessary if clinical conditions warrant.
...
PMID:Plasma vitamin and mineral status in home parenteral nutrition patients. 311 95
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