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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Blood flow disturbances in the gastrointestinal tract can lead to serious illness. They can be acute or chronic, their cause may be arterial or venous occlusion or hypotonia. Lesions of the gastrointestinal tract caused by ischemia depend on localisation, acuteness and degree of the blood flow disturbance. They may reach from focal and segmental ischemic lesions to extensive necroses of the entire intestinal tubes. The most serious ischemic disease is the embolic and thrombotic occlusion of the arteria mesenterica superior due to previous arterosclerotic damage. Infarction of a large part of the intestines and peritonitis can be the consequence. These patients' only chance of survival is early diagnosis--as a rule exclusively via angiography--and immediate surgery. Chronic occlusion of the arteria mesenterica superior leads to angina abdominalis which mainly occurs after food intake and can last for hours. The reason may also be a general arteriosclerosis. Men are affected more frequently and at a younger age than women. As a consequence of lowered intestinal blood flow these patients suffer from
malabsorption
and heavy weight loss. Conservative therapy is not effective. These patients, too, will have to be treated surgically after previous angiography. Vascular disease with decreased blood flow as its consequence can be found in a number of inflammatory diseases, in malign hypertensian, in
collagen disease
and in other more rare diseases as pseudoxanthoma elasticum or Ehlers-Danlos-syndrome. In the case of ischemic colitis arterial and more rarely venous occlusions cause decreased blood flow in the big bowel. A frequent consequence is colitis in the left colon which is characterized by acuteness, pain in the left side of the abdomen and by heavy rectal bleeding. Diagnosis is established by means of endoscopy, barium enema and angiography. Primarily therapy of ischemic colitis is of the conservative type. In severe cases with gangrene and peritonitis the colon has to be resected.
...
PMID:[Disorders of the blood circulation in the gastrointestinal tract]. 32 26
Evaluation of stored iron by means of DFOX-induced sideruria in 101 subjects with various degree of hyposideraemia with or without anaemia, is reported. Three groups were examined: 49 patients with chronic loss of blood and
malabsorption
and urinary iron values up to 1 mg/24hr; 43 with non-bleeding neoplasia,
collagen disease
, lymphoma, cirrhosis of the liver etc. and values of 1-2mg/24 hr; 9 with rheumatoid arthritis and cirrhosis of the liver and values over 2 mg/24 hr. The reasons why hyposideraemia may accompany incipient of frank tissue hypo-, normo- or hypersiderosis are discussed.
...
PMID:[Desferrioxamine in the diagnosis of hypo-, normo-, and hypersiderotic hyposideremia]. 84 86
Scleroderma (progressive systemic sclerosis) is a systemic
collagen disease
in which the upper gut is frequently involved. In particular, most patient show altered esophageal motility, which frequently result in severe esophagitis, often resistant to therapeutic measures. The small bowel is also frequently involved by the disease, especially in the late stage of scleroderma. Small bowel alterations are sometimes clinically silent, but can also be the origin of
malabsorption syndrome
, small intestine perforation, pneumatosis cystoides or chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction. The occurrence of an altered gastrointestinal motility in scleroderma can be detected by means of manometric techniques; their use in the wide area of collagenopathies may help understanding the pathophysiology of the altered gastrointestinal function frequently existing in these diseases.
...
PMID:[Changes in upper gastrointestinal motility during scleroderma]. 207 74
Twenty-four cases of polymyositis, 3 (12.5%) of them Dermatomyositis, have been treated and followed up for over 12 years. Majority (75%) were males. Inflammatory lesion was the cause in 18 (75%),
collagen disease
in 4 (16.7%) and malignancy in 2 (8.35%). Presenting features were fever (100%), proximal muscle weakness (95.8%) and tenderness (54.2%), facial and respiratory muscle weakness (4.2%). Raised CPK and transaminases, electromyogram abnormality and positive muscle biopsy were recorded in all. All were treated with steroids. Complication/associations noted were arthalgia (25%), dysphagia (20.6%), peripheral neuritis (8.35%), diabetes mellitus (4.2%), pulmonary fibrosis (4.2%) and
malabsorption
(4.2%). Fourteen cases (58%), all of inflammatory aetiology, recovered completely. Seven cases (29.2%) developed permanent atrophy of affected muscles. Cases with
collagen disease
and malignancy fared worse and deteriorated because of the primary disease.
...
PMID:Polymyositis--a review and follow up study of 24 cases. 800 72