Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (malabsorption)
7,319 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 50 year-old male with diffuse hyperthyroid goiter treated with I131 who develops a papillary carcinoma is presented. After thyroid resection, substitution therapy with thyroid hormone (levothyroxine) was started, and a selective malabsorption for this hormone was verified.
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PMID:[Diffuse hyperthyroid goiter treated with I131, papillary carcinoma occurring after iodine radioisotope treatment, and thyroxine malabsorption. A clinical case]. 184 99

Dietary intake and nutritional status were studied in two groups of patients after total gastrectomy (n = 10) and after partial gastrectomy (n = 10). All patients were reconstructed with a Roux-en-Y loop. Investigations were carried out 4-17 years after the operation. Eight patients in the group undergoing total gastrectomy and four patients undergoing partial gastrectomy had gastric carcinoma and were without recurrent disease 5-15 years after the operation. A clinical dietician conducted an anthropometric evaluation. All patients underwent an upper gastrointestinal endoscopy, clinical examination, [14C]triolein breath test and a blood chemistry profile. The median weight loss from operation to investigation was 2.1 kg in the partial gastrectomy group and 6.7 kg in the total gastrectomy group (n.s.). After partial gastrectomy three patients had a subnormal body mass index (n.s.). This was not found in the total gastrectomy group. Energy intake was below that recommended in seven patients in the partial gastrectomy group (three of them had a subnormal body mass index) and in two in the total gastrectomy group (n.s.) [14C]triolein breath testing revealed fat malabsorption in three patients after partial gastrectomy and in five patients after total gastrectomy (n.s.).
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PMID:Nutritional status after total and partial gastrectomy with Roux-en-Y reconstruction. 193 92

Thirty of 81 consecutive HIV antibody positive patients referred with non-cryptosporidial diarrhoea had no potential infectious cause; most had AIDS related complex rather than the full blown syndrome. Opportunistic infections with cytomegalovirus (CMV), mycobacterium avium-intracellulare (MAI), and herpes simplex virus (HSV), which allowed a diagnosis of AIDS to be made, were found in 19 patients and were the presenting features of AIDS in five. Other potential pathogenic species included entamoeba, giardia, campylobacter, and salmonella (without septicaemia). Cytomegalovirus infection was often accompanied by abdominal pain. Severe weight loss (greater than 10 kg) at presentation was found in patients with CMV infection and MAI. Bloody diarrhoea was confined to the group with HSV procitis. Malignant causes of diarrhoea were rare. Two patients developed a squamous carcinoma of the anorectal margin and one a non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. In only two of 12 patients who had Kaposi's sarcoma was this considered as a cause of diarrhoea. Rigid sigmoidoscopy showed macroscopic abnormalities in over a third (32) of the 81 patients with non-cryptosporidial diarrhoea. Most commonly this was severe inflammation (17) or discrete ulceration (four) [three of whom had CMV colitis]. Kaposi's sarcoma was identified in 11 patients. Non-specific inflammation was seen histologically in 40 of the 60 patients with no sigmoidoscopic inflammatory changes. Barium enema only revealed an abnormality in a minority of the patients and a colonoscopy only revealed information additional to rigid sigmoidoscopy in two patients--one with CMV ulcers in the transverse colon and the other with evidence of Kaposi's sarcoma not seen in the rectum. Ten patients had a rectal biopsy examined by electron microscopy as no infective cause of diarrhoea was uncovered. In four of these microtubular structures which are commonly seen in viral infections were found and two had prelymphomatous changes and in one of these frank lymphoma has developed. We recommend multiple stool analysis, sigmoidoscopy and rectal biopsy as the initial investigations in these patients reserving tests of malabsorption, colonoscopy, and barium enema for the small number of more difficult cases.
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PMID:Non-cryptosporidial diarrhoea in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infected patients. 253 10

Many approaches have been proposed to differentiate between steatorrhea due to pancreatic insufficiency and intestinal disease. Bo-Linn and Fordtran recently suggested that fecal fat concentration (FFC) is a useful screening test for this distinction. Our aim was to validate their result in a large group of patients. Fecal fat concentrations were calculated for 613 fecal fat tests in 538 patients. Included were 88 patients with pancreatic steatorrhea (13 pancreatic carcinoma, 6 cystic fibrosis, and 69 chronic pancreatitis) and 525 with nonpancreatic steatorrhea. The mean FFC of patients with pancreatic disease (15.0 +/- 1.9 g%, mean +/- SEM) was significantly higher than that of patients with other diseases causing malabsorption (8.9 +/- 0.3 g%, p less than 0.001). Forty-two percent of patients with pancreatic steatorrhea had an FFC below 10 g%. The overlapping of the FFC of steatorrhea due to pancreatic disease and that produced by celiac disease, gastric resection, and other conditions suggests that this approach does not differentiate between pancreatic and intestinal steatorrhea.
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PMID:Fecal fat concentration in the differential diagnosis of steatorrhea. 291 27

The results of all dual isotope tests (2142) carried out on 1989 patients, 807 males (40.6%) and 1182 females (59.4%), during a 10 year period (1976-1985 inclusive) in the Grampian Health Board Area (population 497,272) have been reviewed. Patient age ranged from 5-95 years with 45.5% over 60 years. The referring specialties were Gastroenterology (47.6%), Haematology (11.3%), Paediatrics (2.1%) and all others (39.0%). According to the manufacturer's recommended criteria, results were classified as normal in 1054 (49.2%), abnormal in 659 (30.8%), equivocal in 337 (15.7%) and unsatisfactory in 92 (4.3%) tests. Vitamin B12 malabsorption of ileal type was indicated in 544 tests (25.4%) and of gastric type in 115 (5.4%). Of the latter, 76 were related to pernicious anaemia, 10 to previous gastric surgery and 2 to gastric carcinoma. Of the 337 patients with equivocal results, 138 patients were reviewed and 115 (83.3%) found to have a documented cause for gastric malabsorption (96 pernicious anaemia and 19 previous gastric surgery). In 172 patients with proven pernicious anaemia the manufacturer's recommended criteria for gastric malabsorption were completely satisfied in only 76 (44.3%) but 167 (96.5%) had an excretion ratio greater than or equal to 1.3 and 127 (73.8%) a ratio greater than or equal to 1.7. Unsatisfactory tests were mainly due to incomplete urine collection (91.3%) or contamination with another isotope (5.4%).
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PMID:A survey and critical evaluation of a dual isotope (Dicopac) vitamin B12 absorption test. 292 Jul 38

Thirty-six totally depancreatectomized patients were followed up for 4-124 months. Pancreatectomy had been performed because of fulminant pancreatitis (in 10), chronic hyperalgic otherwise untractable pancreatitis (in 7), exocrine carcinoma of the pancreas (in 16), cystadenocarcinoma of the pancreas (in 2) and insulinoma (in 1). The longest survival duration was in chronic pancreatitis patients: 57 +/- 17 months. A normal socio-professional reinsertion was obtained in 16 patients, mainly those with non-malignant pancreotopathies. At the end of the survey, ten of the carcinoma patients had died, versus none in the other groups. Diabetes mellitus was characterized by the absence of ketonuria, and the frequent occurrence of hypoglycemia (in 15 patients) and infection (in 6). Malabsorption caused osteomalacia in one patient.
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PMID:Survival and rehabilitation after total pancreatectomy. A follow-up of 36 patients. 300 Aug 43

In our first 200 cases of primary hyperparathyroidism confirmed by operation 12 were also shown to have a long history either of a malabsorption syndrome or of chronic renal-glomerular failure. We consider that they first went through a phase of secondary hyperparathyroidism, during which one or more of the glands became autonomous adenamata. This then produced the biochemical changes of "primary" hyperparathyroidism, necessitating excision of the adenoma. This condition is best described as "tertiary" hyperparathyroidism. The transition from secondary to tertiary hyperparathyroidism occurred in four of the 12 patients while under our observation. We think the same process can be traced retrospectively in the other eight cases. The concept of tertiary hyperparathyroidism may help to explain the high incidence of other diseases in association with primary hyperparathyroidism.The behaviour of the parathyroid glands provides a valuable model for the investigation of tumour formation in man. All states occurred in our patients with primary hyperparathyroidism, from normal through hyperplasia to adenoma formation and finally to parathyroid carcinoma.
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PMID:Tertiary hyperparathyroidism. 569 Dec

Sixty-two patients with cervical carcinoma were treated in 1966 to 1968. Thirty-two patients who were alive in 1982 were reevaluated concerning intestinal function. An initial low folate value associated with the disease did not correlate with prognosis. A late low folate value indicated malabsorption and not recurrence of the carcinoma. Malabsorption was found in 5/23 patients (22%) and 3 of these (13%) had vitamin B12 deficiency. Intestinal damage in tumour free patients occurred in 2/62 (3%) patients. It is suggested that late silent complications such as malabsorption should be looked for in the preventive care of these patients.
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PMID:Intestinal damage and malabsorption after treatment for cervical carcinoma. 632 85

A survey of vitamin D status in 152 patients with chronic gastrointestinal conditions and 104 patients with chronic liver diseases is presented. Mild deficiency was common and severe deficiency, as judged by plasma 25-OHD levels less than 8 nmol/l, was encountered in every disease category tested. In the gastrointestinal disease patients, deficiency was significantly more common in patients following gastroenterostomy than other gastric surgery, in patients with active Crohn's disease than in those with inactive disease and in patients with chronic pancreatitis or pancreatic carcinoma with cholestatic features than in those without cholestatic features. Deficiency was as common in patients with Crohn's disease who had not been treated surgically as in those who had. There was no significant correlation between plasma 25-OHD levels and any laboratory index of malabsorption or malnutrition except for serum albumin in the gastric surgery patients, haemoglobin and ESR in the Crohn's disease patients and albumin and vitamin E in the group of patients with gastrointestinal disorders taken as a whole. In the chronic liver disease patients, those with late primary biliary cirrhosis had lower plasma 25-OHD levels than those with histological Stage I and II disease who all had normal levels, and those with pruritus and jaundice were more commonly severely deficient. Whatever the underlying disease process, patients with other coincidental medical conditions were much more likely to be deficient as were patients with cholestasis. Evidence of secondary hyperparathyroidism and osteomalacia on bone histology indicated the clinical relevance of the vitamin D deficiency. This study showed no relationship between abnormal plasma vitamin D binding protein levels and vitamin deficiency.
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PMID:A survey of vitamin D deficiency in gastrointestinal and liver disorders. 654

Intragastric bacterial colonization is well known in pernicious anaemia (PA), but its consequences have rarely been investigated. We have studied the clinical history, blood samples, and endoscopic biopsies from the stomach and duodenum of 80 patients with PA. In a random subgroup of 22 patients gastric juice was collected for aerobic culture and for estimation of nitrate, nitrate-reducing bacteria, nitrite, and N-nitrosamines; duodenal juice was studied in parallel in eight of these subjects. Gastric and duodenal juice had high bacterial counts; faecal organisms were found in 14 patients. The mean count of nitrate-reducing bacteria was significantly higher than in a control group of patients with peptic ulcer disease (p less than 0.001), as was the nitrite concentration (p less than 0.001). Thirty-three of the 80 patients had gastric dysplasias; 1 early gastric carcinoma was also found. Duodenitis was present in 39 out of 80 cases, in 6 associated with partial villous atrophy. A history of malabsorption and/or chronic intermittent diarrhoea was obtained significantly more often from patients with duodenitis. Four patients developed acute gastroenteritis shortly before or during the time of the study, two having a salmonella infection. Bacterial overgrowth in PA may be facilitated by altered immunological conditions, since low serum levels of IgA and IgG were found in this patient group.
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PMID:Pernicious anaemia, intragastric bacterial overgrowth, and possible consequences. 674 Feb 11


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