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)

Carbohydrate and lipid metabolism were studied in 10 patients who had undergone total pancreatectomy. The results were compared with Type I diabetic patients and normal subjects, all of whom were matched for age, sex and weight. At the same level of glycemic control, the daily need for insulin was significantly lower in the patients with pancreatogenic diabetes than in those with Type I diabetes. Concentrations of serum total VLDL and HDL triglyceride were higher in the pancreatectomized patients than in the diabetic or normal controls, whereas concentrations of serum total and LDL cholesterol were significantly lower. The composition of the VLDL, LDL and HDL particles was abnormal in the totally pancreatectomized patients as all three lipoprotein fractions were enriched in triglyceride. HDL2 cholesterol was similar in the totally pancreatectomized patients to that in the other two groups but HDL3 cholesterol was lower. Postheparin plasma lipoprotein lipase and hepatic lipase activities were normal. It is concluded that in totally pancreatectomized patients the changes in the lipoprotein profile on reflect more the action of various confounding factors, i.e. malabsorption, continuance of alcohol abuse and dietary changes than the impact of the diabetes itself.
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PMID:Glycemic control and serum lipoproteins after total pancreatectomy. 405 43

Six patients with hyperphagia (ingestion of 5-11 000 Kcals/day) associated with severe malabsorption and steatorrhoea are described. The cause of the malabsorption was coeliac disease in three patients, Crohn's disease with ileal resection in two, and carcinoma of the pancreas in one patient. There was no evidence of neurological or endocrine disease (apart from mild diabetes mellitus in the patient with carcinoma of the pancreas) but three patients suffered from severe depression. This association may be commoner than previously realized and be revealed in patients with steatorrhoea of unexplained severity by careful dietary assessment. Its detection has therapeutic implications since restriction of caloric and fat intake decreased steatorrhoea without weight loss in several of the patients described.
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PMID:Hyperphagia in intestinal disease. 453 69

A total of 107 patients with chronic pancreatitis from the London area seen between 1968 and 1973 have been reviewed; they comprised 30 with calcific pancreatitis and 77 with chronic or chronic relapsing pancreatitis without calcification. The commonest clinical features were pain, diabetes, malabsorption, and peptic ulcer. Alcohol was a probable aetiology in nearly half the cases, a different finding from those of previous surveys and possibly associated with the increased consumption of alcohol in England in the last 20 years.
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PMID:Chronic pancreatitis in England: a changing picture? 482 Oct 40

There is a higher incidence of restless legs syndrome (Ekbom's syndrome) in patients after gastric surgery (11.3%) and with diabetes mellitus (17.0%) and uraemia (17.3%) than in patients who have been diagnosed as having a psychonoeurosis (4.0%) and in controls (2.0%). Three patients with malabsorption syndrome complained of restless legs, but these patients had abnormal neurological signs. The incidence after gastric surgery and in diabetes mellitus and uraemia remained high even when patients with any abnormal neurological signs were excluded.
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PMID:Restless legs syndrome, with particular reference to its occurrence after gastric surgery. 549 6

The available data show that GIP is at present the strongest candidate for the insulin-secreting factor of the gut named incretin. Its release is triggered by the absorption of ingested nutrients. GIP acts on the B-cells of the pancreas by potentiating glucose-induced insulin secretion. The role of GIP as an enterogastrone is less well established. The release of GIP from the gut cells seems to be regulated by the composition and the amount of the ingested food, by the rate of absorption of nutrients by neural factors (vagal), and by feedback control mediated by insulin. In addition, the adaptation of the intestine to individual eating habits influences the response of the GIP cells. It is suggested that an overactive enteroinsular axis, i.e. enhanced GIP secretion, participates in the development of the hyperinsulinaemia of obesity and maturity onset diabetes mellitus. In gastrointestinal diseases accompanied by malabsorption the GIP response is diminished. In gastrointestinal disorders with rapid gastric emptying (duodenal ulcer) or with accelerated passage of the nutrients through the intestine, hypersecretion of GIP and insulin occurs. This may be significant for the reactive hypoglycaemia of these conditions.
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PMID:Gastric inhibitory polypeptide. 610 91

Nineteen children underwent subtotal pancreatectomy for hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia. Of the four who were older than 10 years of age at onset of symptoms, three had islet adenomas, and one had endocrine cell dysplasia (ECD). The two patients with multiple adenomas had a family history of multiple endocrine neoplasia, type 1 (MEN 1). Of the 15 who were younger than 1 year of age at onset of symptoms, 12 had ECD alone, and three had ECD with adenomatosis. Four children required a second surgical procedure and near-total pancreatectomy because of persistent hypoglycemia. All 19 patients' conditions improved, with no postsurgical complications. After near-total pancreatectomy, all four patients were treated for fat malabsorption, but only two required insulin because of secondary diabetes mellitus. We concluded that subtotal pancreatectomy is a safe, effective adjunct to the treatment of children with hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia.
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PMID:Surgical management of hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia in children. 614 50

Acarbose, an alpha-glucosidase inhibitor, lowers the glycemic excursion following the ingestion of carbohydrates, in particular, sucrose. This was confirmed with increasing doses of acarbose (0, 50, and 100 mg) and the causes investigated. The absorption of the glucose moiety of sucrose was determined from plasma tracer concentrations when overnight-fasted normal subjects received a 100-g oral sucrose load labeled with sucrose [(1-14C]glucose and a simultaneous intravenous infusion of [3-3H]glucose. As the dose of acarbose given with the sucrose load was increased from 0 to 100 mg, the percentage of the load appearing in the peripheral circulation decreased from 90% to 62%. Malabsorption was confirmed by the appearance of breath hydrogen. Simultaneously, absorption time increased from 243 to 411 min. Maximal glycemic excursions were therefore lowered from 64 to 31 mg/dl. The plasma concentrations of gastric inhibitory polypeptide and insulin decreased with the acarbose dose so that the fractional disappearance rate of glucose also decreased. However, the concentrations of glucagon-like immunoreactivity (GLI) rose, confirming the ileal appearance of malabsorbed sucrose.
Diabetes 1984 Mar
PMID:The effects of an alpha-glucoside hydrolase inhibitor on glycemia and the absorption of sucrose in man determined using a tracer method. 636 57

Cystic fibrosis is the most common fatal inherited disease of Caucasians. At present, cystic fibrosis accounts for most cases of chronic progressive pulmonary disease and for many other clinical features in the first three decades of life. Thus, it is a challenge to both pediatricians and internists, particularly chest physicians. The diagnosis is based on the triad of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, pancreatic insufficiency, and increased levels of electrolytes in the sweat. The cardinal test for confirmation of the diagnosis is the "sweat test," which is an excellent discriminant for cystic fibrosis, even in adults. Ancillary features of cystic fibrosis may be of diagnostic assistance (eg, nasal polyposis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa in sputum, azoospermia, and others). Treatment of the pulmonary disease must be emphasized. Choice of antibiotics should be based on the results of sputum culture, but P aeruginosa is the most common pathogen. Removal of secretions by regular postural drainage and percussion is an integral part of the program. Pneumothorax, massive hemoptysis, cor pulmonale, and other complications may be encountered. Sinusitis is almost universal, and nasal polyposis is frequently present. Pancreatic insufficiency occurs in over 80 percent of the patients with cystic fibrosis and may result in intestinal malabsorption. Massive salt loss through the sweat in hot weather, a distinctive type of biliary cirrhosis without jaundice, gallbladder abnormalities, cholelithiasis, and diabetes mellitus also may be found. Of special importance are intestinal obstructive complications (meconium ileus in newborn infants with cystic fibrosis and intestinal obstruction due to fecal accumulation or intussusception in adults). Azoospermia is present in 95 percent of men and there is reduced fertility in women; however, pregnancy does occur in cystic fibrosis. This chronic and ultimately fatal disease produces a predictable set of psychosocial complications.
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PMID:Diagnosis and treatment of cystic fibrosis. An update. 637 70

A 28-year-old woman suffering from diabetes, malabsorption and pulmonary tuberculosis was treated successfully with ethambutol and rifampicin intravenously for 4 months. The drugs were given through a catheter placed in the upper caval vein. One month after the treatment was started the sputum cultures became negative. During oral therapy the patient suffered from characteristic "flu" syndrome which surprisingly disappeared during the intravenous treatment. The possible causes are discussed. Allergic reactions to rifampicin appeared among the staff. The results of the allergological examinations are mentioned and directions for handling rifampicin powder are suggested.
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PMID:Long-term intravenous rifampicin treatment. Advantages and disadvantages. 645 21

Based on the results of treatment of a personal series of 13 cases of pseudocyst of the pancreas, between 1974 and the present day, it is suggested that the choice of therapy should be surgical. An internal shunt is preferred for pseudocysts as a result of acute pancreatitis or injury, whereas a wider cysto-wirsung jejunostomy is recommended for cysts developing during the course of chronic pancreatitis. These proposals follow analysis of immediate and long-term (mean: 51 months) follow-up, on the basis of mortality, morbidity, pain symptoms, malabsorption and postoperative diabetes.
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PMID:[Treatment of pancreatic pseudocysts]. 647 70


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