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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The sprue syndromes, tropical and nontropical sprue, were both described as disease entities in the 1880s and share similar morphological features with varying degrees of villus atrophy of the small intestinal mucosa, and both present clinically with
malabsorption
. Recent cell kinetic studies of the turnover of the intestinal epithelium in sprue have convincingly demonstrated that the flat mucosa is caused by increased efflux (cell death) with compensatory crypt hyperplasia. The pathogenetic insult in tropical sprue appears to be a persistent overgrowth of the small intestine by enteric pathogens after a bout of turista. The pathogenesis of nontropical sprue is determined by both genetic factors, demonstrated with a strong association with certain HLA haplotypes (B8, DR3, DR7 and DC3) and presumably also environmental events (virus infection?), which render the mucosa susceptible to gluten. The cause of the
malabsorption syndrome
is multifactorial and results from both intraluminal and cellular events. The digestion of proteins, carbohydrates, and lipids is compromised due to decreased pancreatic and biliary secretion. The absorption of the digestive products is also severely affected due to decreased activity of microvillus enzymes (dipeptidases and disaccharidases) and a presumed reduction in the number of transport carriers. The clinical presentation is identical and the distinction between tropical and nontropical sprue is based on the history (ie, exposure to a tropical environment) and the response to treatment. Tropical sprue is cured by treatment with tetracycline and folic acid, whereas nontropical sprue responds to a gluten-free diet. Nontropical sprue is associated with
dermatitis herpetiformis
by common genetic and morphological features, and the skin lesions in
dermatitis herpetiformis
are also responsive to a gluten-free diet. Finally, there appears to be an increased incidence of intestinal malignancies (lymphoma, adenocarcinoma) in nontropical sprue.
...
PMID:The sprue syndromes. 390 13
Achlorhydric atrophic gastritis occurs in approximately 25% of patients with
dermatitis herpetiformis
(DH). The effect of gluten withdrawal on the gastric condition was studied in 35 patients, with a control group of 20 patients continuing their habitual diet. Gastrointestinal examinations were performed initially and repeated after about 1 3/4 years. Adherence to the diet was confirmed by dietary interviews, improvement of
malabsorption
test results and intestinal villous structure, and decreased dapsone requirement. Neither the non-restricted diet nor the gluten-free diet had any effect on gastric morphology, the ability to secrete gastric acid, serum gastrin levels, or the frequency or titres of circulating parietal cell antibodies. The findings indicate that gluten is not responsible for the perpetuation of the gastric affection in DH, in contrast to the enteropathy.
...
PMID:Influence of gluten-free diet on the gastric condition in dermatitis herpetiformis. 399 62
A double-lumen perfusion technique has been used to study amino acid and peptide absorption in eight normal control subjects, 13 patients with untreated adult coeliac disease, and 16 patients with
dermatitis herpetiformis
who had varying morphological abnormalities of the small bowel. All subjects were perfused with isotonic solutions containing 10 mM glycyl-L-alanine and 10 mM glycine + 10 mM L-alanine. Patients with adult coeliac disease had impaired absorption of glycine (p < 0.01) and L-alanine (p < 0.05) from the amino acid solution compared with the control subjects. Amino acid uptake from the dipeptide solution was not significantly impaired, although four individual patients had impaired uptake of both amino acids. In contrast to these findings, very few patients with
dermatitis herpetiformis
had impaired amino acid absorption from either solution. Sodium absorption was impaired from both solutions when the groups of patients with adult coeliac disease and
dermatitis herpetiformis
with subtotal villous atrophy and partial villous atrophy were studied, and there were patients in each group who secreted sodium and water. The results suggest that
malabsorption
of dietary protein is unlikely to occur in
dermatitis herpetiformis
but may occur and contribute to protein deficiency seen in some severe cases of adult coeliac disease. The impairment of sodium and water absorption provides evidence that there may be functional impairment of the jejunal mucosa in
dermatitis herpetiformis
as well as in adult coeliac disease.
...
PMID:Amino acid and peptide absorption in patients with coeliac disease and dermatitis herpetiformis. 482 Jun 29
Twenty-one patients with
dermatitis herpetiformis
initially controlled by dapsone or sulphonamides have been treated with a gluten-free diet and reassessed at intervals for up to 15 months (mean 11.9 months). According to routine histological and dissecting microscope criteria the small-bowel lesion improved in 10, but when mean epithelial cell height was used as a measure 15 patients improved. Five of the patients with diarrhoea improved after withdrawing gluten from the diet but none reverted to completely normal bowel habit. The tests for
malabsorption
showed little improvement in the treatment period. Twelve patients needed less dapsone to control their skin complaint, the mean dose falling from 144 mg. to a mean of 70 mg. per day; of these three stopped using this drug altogether.
...
PMID:Results of treatment of dermatitis herpetiformis with a gluten-free diet after one year. 535 41
The status of the jejunal mucosa and of the intestinal absorptive capacity were investigated and related to the occurrence of antibodies against reticulin and gluten in 55 patients with
dermatitis herpetiformis
(DH), 28 on a normal, 11 on a gluten-reduced and 16 on a gluten-free diet. The mucosal status was characterized on the basis of histopathological findings and the numbers of intra-epithelial lymphocytes. Absorption was evaluated by 5-h urine and 1-h serum D-xylose tests. There was a positive correlation between the degree of pathological mucosal changes,
malabsorption
and the occurrence of circulating antibodies against reticulin and gluten. The serum xylose test was more sensitive than the urine xylose test for screening of the relatively mild enteropathy of DH and identified 88% of the patients with an abnormal mucosal status. The serological test (antibodies to reticulin and gluten) identified 80% of such patients. Among patients on a gluten-free diet there was some discrepancy between the serum xylose and the serological test, in that 5 of the 16 patients on this diet had an abnormal serum xylose test result, but no antibodies. In DH patients on a normal diet, the presence of antibodies to reticulin and gluten provided the same information about the presence of mucosal lesions as the serum xylose test. In the whole material a combination of the serum xylose test and the serological test identified 24 of 25 patients with an abnormal mucosal status.
...
PMID:Dermatitis herpetiformis: relation between circulating antibodies against reticulin and gluten, small-intestinal mucosal status and absorptive capacity. 619 85
In 23 patients with
dermatitis herpetiformis
(DH) and five patients with linear-IgA bullous dermatosis (BD), we evaluated the occurrence of histologic jejunal changes and small-bowel function abnormalities. None of the patients showed clinical signs or symptoms of
malabsorption
. Morphological jejunal changes consistent with gluten-sensitive enteropathy were found in 82% of DH patients and in 60% of BD patients. However, BD patients showed only mild jejunal histologic abnormalities, whereas more severe jejunal lesions were found in most patients with DH. Functional tests showed a rough correlation with the severity of the jejunal lesions, being almost completely normal in BD patients and DH patients with mild intestinal damage, whereas most of DH patients with subtotal or total villous atrophy showed abnormal d-xylose tests and folic acid assays. Lactose tolerance tests (H2 breath test and blood glucose after oral lactose load) showed no correlation with the degree of jejunal damage.
...
PMID:Small-bowel involvement in dermatitis herpetiformis and in linear-IgA bullous dermatosis. 635 70
A review of the skin changes in
malabsorption syndrome
, is presented; dividing the symptoms in skin, mucous membranes and adnexal involvement. In this way, acquired ichtyosis, hiperpigmentation changes, purpura and echimosis and eczematoid or psoriatic-like with generalized pruritus are described. The mucous membranes alterations are the most frequent ones, the angular cheilitis, glositis, ulcerations and aphthaes are pointed out, as well as the changes in the shape and colour of hair and nail abnormalities. Special mention deserve the particular cases of
malabsorption
syndromes that appears in: acrodermatitis enteropathica,
dermatitis herpetiformis
, Whipple disease, Cronkhite-Canada syndrome, dermatogenic enteropathy and abnormalities that occur as complication from the surgery treatment for obesity improvement.
...
PMID:[Cutaneous manifestations of the malabsorption syndrome]. 638 94
A 21-year-old man with coeliac disease and
dermatitis herpetiformis
presented successively with erosive ileitis (warranting surgical resection) and erosive jejunitis (proven by jejunoscopy). Discontinuous antibiotic therapy was associated with a gluten-free diet and evolution was favorable as judged with five years follow-up.
Malabsorption
with mucosal ulcerations can be due to: a) chronic ulcerative duodeno-jejuno-ileitis or Jeffries' disease; b) coeliac disease which may be classified as possible, probable, or certain according to the strictness of criteria. Our case is the fourth in which a villous response was proven after gluten-free diet. It is also particular in that the erosions were superficial; c) malignant lymphoma which can reasonably be excluded here. This observation confirms that a gluten-free diet may be effective after surgical resection of the ulcerated segment in complicated coeliac disease and shows that antibiotics may be an useful adjuvant to therapy.
...
PMID:[Celiac disease, dermatitis herpetiformis and erosive jejunoileitis]. 662 14
A total number of 134 patients with subtotal or partial villous atrophy, of whom 49 had
dermatitis herpetiformis
, were investigated with blood folate assay and xylose and lactose absorption tests. Faecal fat excretion was determined in 71 patients without
dermatitis herpetiformis
(coeliac group). A comparison was made between three patient groups, the patients with
dermatitis herpetiformis
and the coeliac patients studied in 1970-74 and 1975-79, respectively. From clinical and biochemical analyses of these patients we conclude that although a combination of the four
malabsorption
tests used here still detect a majority of coeliac patients, small intestinal biopsy may reveal villous atrophy also in patients without any laboratory evidence for
malabsorption
by these commonly used tests. In
dermatitis herpetiformis
, however, the sensitivity of the tests used was low; these
malabsorption
tests therefore have little diagnostic value in this category of patients.
...
PMID:Conventional malabsorption tests: do they detect the adult patient with villous atrophy? 670 55
This study describes, in 6 patients with a flat small intestinal mucosa and splenic atrophy, a particular lesion of the mesenteric lymph nodes termed "cavitation." In 4 women and 2 men with abdominal mass, intestinal obstruction, or suspected celiac disease-associated lymphoma, unusual pseudocystic lymph node lesions were found in the jejunal or jejunoileal mesentery. These lesions consisted histologically of a large central cavity occupied by hyaline-type material and surrounded by fibrous tissue and remnants of lymph node structures. There was no histologic evidence of malignant lymphoma or mesenteric panniculitis. Diffuse subtotal villous atrophy involving at least the jejunum was found in each case, together with unequivocal biological and morphological evidence of splenic atrophy, severe
malabsorption
, and a history of chronic or childhood diarrhea. HLA B8 or DR3, or both, was present in 4 of 4 cases;
dermatitis herpetiformis
was present in 1 case. An unequivocal mucosal response to a gluten-free diet was observed in 2 cases. Four patients died of cachexia or hyposplenism-related infections. We conclude that cavitation of mesenteric lymph nodes is an original feature which may be associated with splenic atrophy and a flat small intestinal mucosa; some of these patients may have celiac disease. Pathogenesis is unknown.
...
PMID:Cavitation of mesenteric lymph nodes, splenic atrophy, and a flat small intestinal mucosa. Report of six cases. 674 13
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