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)

Eighty infants have been treated for neonatal necrotising enterocolitis within a period of five years. Twenty-five per cent developed strictures of the small or large intestine. Four cases of atresia including two with multiple cyst formation were seen. Four patients developed severe malabsorption requiring hyperalimentation with slow recovery of small bowel function in two survivors. The radiological features of these complications is illustrated and the role of radiology in the management of these patients is discussed.
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PMID:Strictures and other late complications of neonatal necrotising enterocolitis. 42 20

An infant with Hirschsprung's enterocolitis developed a fulminant secretory diarrhea unresponsive to all conventional therapy until cholestyramine was administered. A 12-fold decrease in prostaglandin E (PGE) levels in the colostomy fluid was documented in response to cholestyramine therapy. It is postulated that increased PGE activity, enterotoxin, and bile acid malabsorption may be involved in the enterocolitis of Hirschsprung's disease.
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PMID:Hirschsprung's enterocolitis, prostaglandins, and response to cholestyramine. 68 92

A 58 year old Chinese male, one week after arriving in Canada from Hong Kong, presented with acute abdominal pain and diarrhoea which was rapidly followed by Escherichia coli infection causing septicaemia and meningitis. His past history revealed bronchial asthma for 15 years treated with steroids. At laparotomy, 7 days after the onset of symptoms, he was found to have extensive haemorrhagic infarction of the small bowel and right colon. Examination of the fibrosed mesenteric vessels revealed numerous filariform larvae of Strongyloides stercoralis, within the walls, and in all layers of bowel wall. The role of the parasite in the production of obliterative arteritis in this fatal case of haemorrhagic enteropathy is discussed. Clinical strongyloidiasis, in uncomplicated cases, varies from mild to severe with gastroenteritis, nausea, colicky abdominal pain, electrolyte imbalance and symptoms of malabsorption syndrome (MARCIAL-ROJAS, 1971). In malnourished individuals and patients with debilitating infections, either newly acquired or asymptomatic latent infection with S. stercoralis can assume severe dimensions (BROWN and PERNA, 1958; HUGHTON and HORN, 1959). Similarly, in patients on steroid (CRUZ et al., 1966; WILLIS and MWOKOLO, 1966; NEEFE et al., 1973) and immunosuppressive therapy for lymphomatous diseases or deficient in immune response (ROGERS and NELSON, 1966; RIVERA et al., 1970), systemic strongyloidiasis is often fatal. The increased frequency of auto-infection in such patients with a breached immune barrier is, however, unclear. Further complications of this infection due to severe enterocolitis result in sepsis, bacteraemia and meningitis (BROWN and PERNA, 1958; HUGHTON and HORN, 1959). This paper presents a fatal case of S. stercoralis infection which illustrates an uncommon if not unique, mechanism in its production of haemorrhagic enteropathy leading to sepsis and death.
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PMID:Fatal bowel infarction and sepsis: an unusual complication of systemic strongyloidiasis. 122 84

It is a review of long-term investigations in the field of treating chronic enterocolitis in children admitted to Pyatigorsk sanatoria. The disease is proposed to be managed with different therapeutic factors: sinusoidal currents, mud, radon, oral mineral water. Such combination proved beneficial as it corrected the principal pathogenetic mechanisms of chronic enterocolitis: inflammation, dysbacteriosis, malabsorption syndrome, enzymatic defects, etc.
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PMID:[Physical factors in the treatment of chronic enterocolitis in children]. 129 20

We report coexistent collagenous colitis and collagenous sprue in a 62-year-old woman with diarrhea. Investigations suggested malabsorption, and small intestinal biopsies demonstrated a flattened mucosa with subepithelial collagen deposition. Colonic biopsies also showed a thickened subepithelial collagen band as well as a striking lamina propria inflammatory cell infiltrate. Symptomatic remission was induced with a gluten/lactose-free diet, oral prednisone, and sulfasalazine and has been maintained with gluten restriction alone. Repeat biopsies after 2 months demonstrated restoration of normal small intestinal and colonic collagen bands; only a chronic inflammatory cell infiltrate (consistent with microscopic/lymphocytic colitis) persisted in colonic biopsies. We propose that, in this instance, collagenous enterocolitis represented a diffuse manifestation of gluten sensitivity.
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PMID:Collagenous enterocolitis: a manifestation of gluten-sensitive enteropathy. 150 Jun 61

The essential effects of Tocopherol are based on its antioxidative capacity. Tocopherol, however, is just one in a group of antioxidants, which are important for the organism. Established indication for therapeutical application of vitamin E in infancy is only vitamin-E-malabsorption in connection with chronic cholestasis, pancreatic insufficiency (cystic fibrosis) and short bowel syndrome. In emergency therapy vitamin E is suggested with high dosage in case of shock lung and haemolytic-uraemic syndrome. Positive effects of daily vitamin E application in connection with prophylaxis of retinopathy prematurity, bronchopulmonary dysplasia and intraventricular encephalorrhagia of premature infants of severe underweight are not established. Very questionable therapeutic or prophylactic efficiency is opposed to the risk of higher incidence of severe complications in caring for premature infants of severe underweight, such as enterocolitis necroticans and neonatal septicaemia.
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PMID:[The use of vitamin E in childhood]. 209 6

Neuronal intestinal dysplasia is defined as a structural disorder of the innervation of the gut which clinically resembles Hirschsprung's disease. Between 1977 and 1988 12 patients were diagnosed by enzyme histochemistry. In 3 of these patients Hirschsprung's disease was associated. Constipation was the main symptom in 6 patients with neuronal intestinal disease and in all three patients with associated Hirschsprung's disease. The other patients firstly presented with an enterocolitis, a congenital atresia of the jejunum and a chronic enteritis with malabsorption. The wide clinical variability and the lack of a clear therapeutic management valid for all patients is conspicuous.
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PMID:[Variability of clinical symptoms in neuronal intestinal dysplasia]. 219 64

Combined investigation of 121 patients with chronic colitis (CC) has shown chronic gastroduodenitis in 90.9% and the intestinal malabsorption syndrome in all the patients. Comparison of the frequency of intestinal malabsorption symptoms has shown that they are less marked in CC than in chronic enterocolitis with predominant intestinal lesion.
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PMID:[The comprehensive diagnosis of changes in the stomach and small intestine in patients with chronic colitis]. 225 61

A 78-yr-old previously well caucasian female presented with a 6-wk history of profuse watery diarrhea and weight loss. Clinical investigation showed evidence of mild malabsorption. Multiple biopsies of colonic mucosa revealed a wide subepithelial band of collagen typical of collagenous colitis. Duodenal biopsies showed similar collagen deposition and partial villous atrophy. Some amelioration of symptoms occurred with sulfasalazine therapy. This is the first reported case of collagenous colitis with histological evidence of small intestinal involvement. At least in some patients, collagenous colitis and collagenous sprue appear to be manifestations of a single disease. For such cases, the term collagenous enterocolitis is suggested.
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PMID:Collagenous enterocolitis: a case of collagenous colitis with involvement of the small intestine. 289 10

The tests with lactose loading followed by the assay of blood sugar were conducted in 500 normal subjects, aged from 18 to 89 years, and 262 patients with gastro-intestinal diseases, aged from 25 to 55 years. When lactose malabsorption was detected, aspiration biopsy of the small intestine mucosa was performed followed by the study of the structure and the level of a number of disaccharidases (lactase, maltase, saccharase). Lactose malabsorption was detected in 72 (14.4%) out of 500 normal subjects (10.6%--aged 18-59, and 20%--aged 60-89 years), among them there were 12.5% of Russians, 13% of Byelorussians and 5.8% of Ukrainians (aged 25-55 years). The secondary lactose malabsorption was recorded in 44% of patients with ulcerative colitis, in 33% of patients with chronic enterocolitis, in 11.5% of patients with gastric ulcer, in 8% of those with duodenal ulcer, in 23.5% of patients with chronic gastritis attended by lowered secretory function, and in 8% of those with enhanced secretory function.
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PMID:[Current problems of lactase deficiency]. 296 77


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