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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Prevention of vascular disease and acute pancreatitis is the goal of hyperlipidemia treatment. The risk of
coronary heart disease
(
CHD
) increases with increasing plasma cholesterol levels because low-density lipoprotein (LDL), the major carrier of cholesterol in the plasma, is atherogenic. High-density lipoprotein (HDL), especially the HDL2 subfraction, protects against
CHD
. Hypertriglyceridemia, although not an independent risk factor for
CHD
, is generally accompanied by low HDL cholesterol (HDLch), which may predispose to
CHD
. Reducing plasma LDL and raising HDL levels are thus goals in preventing
CHD
. Serum LDL levels may be lowered by reducing saturated fat and cholesterol intake; weight loss may decrease LDL but is more effective in lowering plasma triglycerides and raising HDLch. The percent of total calories from polyunsaturated, monounsaturated, and saturated fats should be less than 10%, up to 10-15%, and less than 10%, respectively. High cholesterol intake increases the flux of cholesterol, which may be harmful to arterial walls, but beyond a certain point does not increase plasma cholesterol levels. Some diets change the composition rather than the level of LDL and apoproteins. Weight reduction and maintenance are the most effective dietary measures to lower plasma triglycerides; omega-3 fatty acids (fish oils) have shown promise in reducing triglyceride but not cholesterol levels. Substitution of starch for sugar lowered triglyceride levels toward normal in hypertriglyceridemia patients. Fasting triglyceride levels rise in all individuals fed high-carbohydrate diets, but the high levels persist in hypertriglyceridemia patients. Weight loss, cessation of cigarette smoking, increased physical activity, good control of diabetes, and moderate alcohol use all raise HDLch levels. Vitamin E deficiency causes neurological sequelae in children with severe
malabsorption
problems due to abetalipoproteinemia or cholestatic liver disease.
...
PMID:Nutritional management of plasma lipid disorders. 255 90
Selective adult-type hypolactasia, the main cause of primary
malabsorption
of lactose, shows considerable variation in terms of its symptoms, which mainly depend on the amount of milk consumption. The article discusses congenital lactase deficiency and familial lactose intolerance. Links between hypolactasia and non-specific abdominal complaints,
coronary heart disease
and cataract are presented. The decrease in lactase activity in the brush border of jejunal mucosa, associated with diseases of the mucosa or any other condition which damages the enterocytes, is discussed as a cause of secondary hypolactasia. It is shown that adult-type primary hypolactasia and selective lactose
malabsorption
represent a major problem in the everyday work of general practitioners, particularly in populations where hypolactasia is common. Therefore, the examination and treatment of non-selected patients with vague abdominal complaints is important in primary health care. As the need for calcium in humans is largely met by the intake of milk, the consumption of milk has to be in amounts that are tolerable for the individual.
...
PMID:Clinical picture of hypolactasia and lactose intolerance. 804 17
The basis for treatment of lipid disorders in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus is weight reduction by diet and exercise, and additional control of glycaemic condition with oral antidiabetics, alone or in combination with insulin. Hypercholesterolaemic, mildly hypertriglyceridaemic non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus patients respond to cholesterol
malabsorption
caused by dietary sitostanol ester margarine, while long-term statin treatment of respective coronary patients significantly lowers the recurrence of coronary events, in addition to improving the lipid disorder. However, no information is available concerning the preventive effect of long-term improvement of lipid disorders in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus patients without
coronary heart disease
, or in patients with the 'classical' type of diabetic lipid disorder, that is, hypertriglyceridaemia with low HDL and normal-low LDL-cholesterol levels. In this group of patients, beneficial lipid effects can be obtained (although perhaps not normalization) with fibrates alone or, especially, in combination with current statins.
...
PMID:Treatment of lipid disorders in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 941 74
Renewal has occurred in the use of plant sterols for the treatment of hypercholesterolemias. A novel development was to convert plant sterols to corresponding stanols and esterify them to fat soluble form. In contrast to the crystalline plant sterols or stanols, plant stanol esters can be easily consumed during normal food intake in soluble form in different fat-containing food constituents when they have a potent cholesterol-lowering effect, shown in normo- and hypercholesterolemic men and women without or with
coronary heart disease
, children and diabetes. Cholesterol lowering is approximately 10% for total and 15% for LDL cholesterol, with the respective values for stanol ester margarine (2-3 g/day stanols) being 15% and 20%. Stanol esters reduce cholesterol absorption efficiency by up to 65%, increase cholesterol elimination in feces as cholesterol itself, usually not as bile acids, and stimulate cholesterol synthesis. Serum beta-carotene level is lowered, but no fat
malabsorption
or lowering of serum fat soluble vitamins have been observed. In contrast to plant sterols, stanols and their esters are minimally absorbed and they reduce serum plant sterol concentrations, also preventing statin-induced increase of plant sterols. Stanol ester margarine has been included in dietary treatment of hypercholesterolemia followed by the addition of drug treatment in resistant cases.
...
PMID:Regulation of cholesterol metabolism by dietary plant sterols. 1009 84
We studied changes in serum cholestanol and plant sterols (indexes of cholesterol absorption) and cholesterol precursors (indexes of cholesterol synthesis) in response to cholesterol reduction by way of 1 year's treatment with atorvastatin (n = 102) and simvastatin (n = 105) treatments in patients with
coronary heart disease
. Serum cholesterol levels and ratios of the precursor sterols to cholesterol after 1 year of treatment were reduced in proportion to the pretreatment values (33% +/- 1% by simvastatin and 36% +/- 1% by atorvastatin; P <.01 for difference between groups) for cholesterol; the respective reductions in the precursor sterol:cholesterol ratios were also higher with atorvastatin (50% +/- 2% for lathosterol) than with simvastatin (42% +/- 1%; P <.01 between groups), but the ratio of squalene to cholesterol was increased (17% +/- 5%, P <.001) by atorvastatin. Plant sterol concentrations were gradually increased by atorvastatin but decreased initially by simvastatin. However, their ratios with respect to cholesterol were increased by as much as 82% with atorvastatin and by as much as 39% with simvastatin. In conclusion, effective inhibition of cholesterol synthesis and subsequent reduction in serum cholesterol levels by statins lead to increases in serum plant-sterol levels, probably as a result of reduced biliary secretion and enhanced absorption of these sterols. Because serum plant sterols have been claimed to be involved in the early development of atherosclerosis, the question arises whether continuously increasing serum plant sterols during long-term statin treatment should be prevented by cholesterol
malabsorption
(eg, by plant stanol ester consumption), especially in subjects with high baseline plant sterol values and effective sterol absorption.
...
PMID:Serum noncholesterol sterols during inhibition of cholesterol synthesis by statins. 1257 49
Our purpose is to provide a framework for diagnosing the inherited causes of marked high-density lipoprotein (HDL) deficiency (HDL cholesterol levels <10 mg/dL in the absence of severe hypertriglyceridemia or liver disease) and to provide information about
coronary heart disease
(
CHD
) risk for such cases. Published articles in the literature on severe HDL deficiencies were used as sources. If apolipoprotein (Apo) A-I is not present in plasma, then three forms of ApoA-I deficiency, all with premature
CHD
,and normal low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels have been described: ApoA-I/C-III/A-IV deficiency with fat
malabsorption
, ApoA-I/C-III deficiency with planar xanthomas, and ApoA-I deficiency with planar and tubero-eruptive xanthomas (pictured in this review for the first time). If ApoA-I is present in plasma at a concentration <10 mg/dL, with LDL cholesterol that is about 50% of normal and mild hypertriglyceridemia, a possible diagnosis is Tangier disease due to mutations at the adenosine triphosphate binding cassette protein A1 (ABCA1) gene locus. These patients may develop premature
CHD
and peripheral neuropathy, and have evidence of cholesteryl ester-laden macrophages in their liver, spleen, tonsils, and Schwann cells, as well as other tissues. The third form of severe HDL deficiency is characterized by plasma ApoA-I levels <40 mg/dL, moderate hypertriglyceridemia, and decreased LDL cholesterol, and the finding that most of the cholesterol in plasma is in the free rather than the esterified form, due to a deficiency in lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase activity. These patients have marked corneal opacification and splenomegaly, and are at increased risk of developing renal failure, but have no clear evidence of premature
CHD
. Marked HDL deficiency has different etiologies and is generally associated with early
CHD
risk.
...
PMID:Clinical presentation, laboratory values, and coronary heart disease risk in marked high-density lipoprotein-deficiency states. 2129 40
Chronic alcohol abuse leads to malnutrition, and thus to the deficiency of many nutrients, including vitamins and trace elements. Most often comes to the deficiency of all vitamins, however because the clinical implications, the most important is folic acid (vitamin B9) deficiency. Biochemical effect of folate deficiency is elevated homocysteine concentration in the blood, named "cholesterol of XXI. century". In the paper, the folate and homocysteine metabolism in alcohol abuse was discussed. Mechanisms of alcohol action on folate homeostasis in the human body have been indicated. Chronic alcohol consumption leads to deficiency of this vitamin due to their dietary inadequacy,
intestinal malabsorption
, decreased hepatic uptake and increased body excretion, mainly via urine. The decreased concentration of serum folic acid may occur in 80% of alcoholics. The cause of elevated concentrations of homocysteine in the serum of alcohol abusers is also a deficiency of vitamins involved such as vitamin B12 and pyridoxal phosphate. Disturbance of folic acid and homocysteine metabolism in alcohol abusers can lead to serious clinical consequences. Folic acid deficiency leads inter alia to macrocytic and megaloblastic anemia and neurological disorders. Megaloblastic anemia occurs in about half of alcohol abusers with chronic liver diseases. In turn, high level of homocysteine in blood is associated with an inreased risk of cardiovascular diseases. Hyperhomocysteinemia is an independent risk factor that favors the occurrence of acute coronary syndromes in patients with
coronary heart disease
.
...
PMID:[Disturbances of folic acid and homocysteine metabolism in alcohol abuse]. 2159 78
Bariatric surgery is becoming increasingly popular in the treatment of severely obese patients who failed to lose weight with the help of non-surgical interventions. Such patients are at increased risk for premature death, type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, gallstones,
coronary heart disease
, dyslipidemia, some cancers, anxiety, depression, and degenerative joint disorders. Although bariatric surgery appears to be the most effective and durable treatment option for obesity, it is associated with a number of surgical and medical complications. These include a range of conditions, of which dumping syndrome and malnutrition due to
malabsorption
of vitamins and minerals are the most common. To achieve better surgery outcomes, a number of postsurgical strategies must be considered. The aim of this review was to describe possible complications, ailments, and important moments in the follow-up after bariatric surgery. Adequate lifelong monitoring is crucial for the achievement of long-lasting goals and reduction of post-bariatric complications.
...
PMID:Follow-up after bariatric surgery: A review. 3254 50