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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Intestinal inflammation seems invariably to be associated with increased epithelial proliferation. In the small bowel the pathological consequences of this area an increase in the crypt proliferative compartment and a decrease in the absorptive villus compartment, which can lead to
malabsorption
. In the colon, it is more difficult to examine changes in cell proliferation, but using Ki67, epithelial proliferation has been shown to be increased in ulcerative colitis and parasitic infection. The teleological advantage of increasing epithelial proliferation during intestinal inflammation is presumably in an effort to get rid of parasitized or infected epithelial cells, or to rapidly replace cells which have been lost. Rejection of helminth parasites from rodent small bowel is associated with partial villous atrophy and crypt hypertrophy, which is probably part of the host response making the mucosa inhospitable to the parasites. The short-term nutritional disadvantage of
malabsorption
is outweighed by the long-term advantage of being parasite-free. However, when the intestinal inflammation is elicited by a dietary constituent, the consequences are only pathological. At the moment there is no information as to the mechanisms by which inflammatory cells alter mucosal morphology and epithelial renewal. The restructuring of mucosal morphology in the flat-mucosa involves considerable adaptation of the connective tissue elements of the lamina propria. Whether this occurs in response to changes in epithelial renewal is not known. Finally, it is clear that activated T cells in the lamina propria can produce a flat-mucosa. In diseases such as Trichuris
dysentery
and ulcerative colitis there is no or very little T cell activation, even though epithelial proliferation is increased. Increased epithelial proliferation therefore may occur in response to different inflammatory stimuli.
...
PMID:Epithelial proliferation in response to gastrointestinal inflammation. 145 51
Human intestinal nematodes, all of which can be acquired in the continental United States, can cause a variety of ills including iron deficiency anemia, surgical emergencies, eosinophilic pneumonia,
malabsorption
,
dysentery
, myositis, and death. The severity of illness is related to the number of parasites acquired exogenously or the ability of the parasite to multiply within the host. Diagnosis of clinically significant infection can usually be made by stool examination, and appropriate treatment requires an understanding of the life-span and pathogenic potential of the parasite.
...
PMID:Human intestinal nematodiasis in the United States. 503 12
Net electrolyte and water transport and unidirectional Na+ fluxes were examined in ligated colonic loops of clinically normal pigs and in pigs with swine
dysentery
(etiologic agent Treponema hyodysenteriae) in the presence or absence of theophylline. In normal pigs, theophylline abolished net Na+ absorption via a reduction in the lumen-to-blood flux, decreased Cl- absorption, and increased HCO3- accumulation in the lumen. In infected pigs, all net ion transport was abolished, with the addition of theophylline producing little effect. The absence of net Na+ absorption in infected pigs was also the result of a decreased lumen-to-blood flux. Seemingly, colonic
malabsorption
may be the primary transport alteration in swine
dysentery
. Concentrations of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) and cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) were measured in samples of colonic mucosa from normal and infected pigs after in vitro exposure to a Ringer's solution containing 0 or 20 mM theophylline. Basal values of cAMP or cGMP did not increase in infected colonic mucosa. There was a diminished capacity of the infected mucosa to respond to theophylline. Alterations in ion transport in conjunction with measurements of cAMP and cGMP indicated that the pathogenic mechanism(s) in swine
dysentery
were not similar to those of Salmonella, Shigella, Vibrio cholerae, or Escherichia coli diarrhea.
...
PMID:Pathophysiologic features of swine dysentery: cyclic nucleotide-independent production of diarrhea. 630 41
Routine data used to study infectious diseases may contain biases which obscure trends. A 16-year series (up to 1968) of routine laboratory data was used to study patterns of incidence of infective gastroenteritis for which no laboratory diagnosis could be made. An artificial pattern was detected. This arose because GPs tended to refer a greater proportion of their patients during
dysentery
epidemics. Multiple regression analysis was used to separate out this effect so that the underlying trends could be observed. The seasonal pattern of undiagnosed cases showed an autumn peak. There were also early-winter epidemics of disease with little or no excretion of red blood or pus cells in the diagnostic faeces specimen. Some of the winter communicable disease among older children and adults appeared to be associated with signs of a temporary fat
malabsorption
in pre-school age cases. Undiagnosed cases in older children and adults were not related to the E. coli serotypes causing disease in infants during this period. The statistical method applied increased the usefulness of these routine data. Although this series of laboratory records is now more than a decade old the results of the analysis can be compared with new observations as more is learned about the epidemiology of previously unrecognized pathogens, especially rotaviruses.
...
PMID:Monitoring infectious diseases using routine microbiology data. II. An example of regression analysis used to study infectious gastroenteritis. 700 91
Traveler's diarrhea is usually a short, self-limiting illness lasting on average 3-5 days. The illness may present either as (1) acute watery diarrhea, (2) diarrhea with blood (
dysentery
) or (3) chronic diarrhea, often with clinical evidence of fat or carbohydrate
malabsorption
. The majority of cases of traveler's diarrhea are due to intestinal infection and resolve without specific treatment. Antibiotics can reduce the severity and duration of the illness and are always indicated for dysenteric shigellosis and amoebiasis. Oral rehydration therapy is the mainstay for managing water and electrolyte depletion.
...
PMID:Traveler's diarrhea: clinical presentation and prognosis. 767 46
Infectious diarrhea
in calves is most commonly associated with enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli, Cryptosporidium parvum, rotavirus, coronavirus, or some combination of these pathogens. Each of these agents leads to diarrhea through either secretion or
malabsorption
/maldigestion, though the specific mechanisms and pathways may differ. Specific pharmacologic control and treatment are dependent on gaining a greater understanding of the pathophysiology of these organisms.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology of diarrhea in calves. 1917 81
The microaerophilic parasite
Giardia lamblia
is a causative agent of
dysentery
affecting hundreds of millions of people around the globe every year. The symptoms of the disease, commonly referred to as giardiasis, are diarrhea, nausea, and
malabsorption
. Treatment of giardiasis is exclusively based on chemotherapy with antigiardial drugs, including metronidazole, albendazole, and nitazoxanide. In this review, all drugs currently used in the treatment of
Giardia
infections are discussed with a special emphasis on treatment failure and drug resistance.
...
PMID:Drug Resistance in the Microaerophilic Parasite
Giardia lamblia
. 2625 2