Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0024523 (malabsorption)
7,319 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Three cases of severe anorexia are reported. It results in a strong protein malabsorption with hepatic steatosis and in a syndrome of mental depression which needed the re-establishment of the intestinal-continuity. Although a mild post-operative anorexia is regular and contributes to the weight loss, massive anorexia must be considered as a new and redoubtable unpredictible complication of the surgical treatment for obesity, which may hinder the intestinal adaptation and increase the protein malabsorption.
...
PMID:[Anorexia: a redoubtable complication of the surgical treatment for obesity after jejuno ileal by-pass (author's transl)]. 9 23

Necropsy of a 34-year-old women four years after she had undergone pancreaticoduodenal resection showed amyloidosis, fatty liver, and cachexia. In life a malabsorption syndrome had been diagnosed two years after the resection, but at this stage tests for amyloidosis were still negative. Besides the fatty liver, positive histochemical tests for lipids (lipoproteins) in amyloid deposits were also found. Taken together with other findings these features reinforce the suggestion that lipprotein accumulation plays an essential part in the formation of amyloid.
...
PMID:Secondary amyloidosis developing after pancreaticoduodenal resection. 86 80

Absorption of 57Co-labelled vitamin B12 - intrinsic factor (IF) complex and its binding to mucosal precipitate and brush border fractions of rat small intestine was studied in rats pair-fed with a liquid diet containing ethanol 5 g/100 ml, 35% of calories, or isocalorically substituted sucrose. IF was obtained from rats fasted for 18 h. and for each experiment the amount of vitamin B12 added was the minimum required to achieve maximum binding to IF. Rats fed alcohol exhibited hepatic steatosis, proliferation of smooth endoplasmic reticulum, and disordered mitochondria after 6 weeks on the diet, and absorption of vitamin B12, fed with IF by stomach tube, was reduced signficantly. In contrast, binding of 57Co-labelled vitamin B12 -IF complex to mucosal precipitate and brush border fractions was never less than that of fractions from control rats at 4, 8 and 12 weeks on the alcohol diet. Furthermore, binding to the brush border was significantly greater in alcohol-fed rats at 12 weeks whether expressed per unit of beta-naphthylamidase (EC 3.4.1.1) activity or per milligram of protein. Total mucosal sucrase (EC 5.2.1.26) and beta-naphthylamidase were unchanged or slightly increased (beta-naphthylamidase at 12 weeks) on the alcohol-containing diet indicating that total brush border membrane was not reduced. Total brush border binding activity was the same in alcohol-fed and control rats at each time period. These results indicate that malabsorption of vitamin B12 in rats fed alcohol cannot be due to decreased binding of the vitamin B12 - IF complex by brush border membrane receptors, or secondary to a net decrease in membrane receptors.
...
PMID:Lack of effect of alcohol on small intestinal binding of the vitamin B12 - intrinsic factor complex. 97 75

Since 1964, 41 patients with strictly defined, severe primary (dietetic) protein malnutrition have been studied under metabolic ward conditions during prolonged periods, initially on a low (20 g) and later on a high (100 g) protein diet. Clinical, nutritional, hematological, intestinal absorptive and histological studies were performed in the malnourished state, during and after protein repletion. Classical signs and symptoms of malnutrition, lasting for at least 4 months, were present in most patients. Mild diarrhea was frequent. All were normoblastically anemic, hypoproteinemic, and hypocholesterolemic; serum folate values were normal or low but serum B12 values were normal or high. Liver biopsy showed fatty liver in the cases where it was performed. Mild malabsorption was detected in over one-half of the patients, with moderate intestinal radiological abnormalities. Malabsorption was independent of concomitant folate deficiency. All the clinical, absorptive and histological abnormalities reversed with treatment consisting only of a high protein diet. In addition to protein lack, another factor has to be invoked in the pathogenesis of the intestinal abnormalities present in severely malnourished adults from rural areas in the tropics.
...
PMID:Enteropathy in adult protein malnutrition: a review of the Cali experience. 114 51

Malnutrition is common among alcoholics because alcohol displaces protein-, vitamin-, and mineral-containing foods in the diet, and chronic alcohol consumption results in maldigestion and malabsorption of essential nutrients. In addition, alcohol exerts direct toxic effects on both the liver and gut, resulting in structural alterations in the intestine and the development of fatty liver, alcoholic hepatitis, and cirrhosis. Liver injury is preceded by an adaptive phase characterized by accelerated metabolism of drugs (including ethanol), and hyperlipemia, secondary to hypertrophy and hyperactivity of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum. Side effects include enhanced hepatotoxicity of CCI4 and possibly energy wastage. Alcoholics should not be led to beleive that correction or prevention of nutritional deficiency will prevent liver damage in the face of continued alcohol abuse.
...
PMID:Alcohol and malnutrition in the pathogenesis of liver disease.. 117 54

After reviewing recent data concerning the pathologic physiology of cystic fibrosis the authors present an anatomoclinical study of 30 infants, of which 13 neonates, with a diagnosis of mucoviscidosiss, emphasizing the clinical and pathohistologic polymorphism of this affection, and, particularly involvement of the liver and intestines. Specific hepatic lesions were encountered in only 10% of the group studied (Bodian biliary cirrhosis and mucus stoppers in the bile ducts). Unspecific hepatic lesions were dominant, common with those of neonatal hepatitis, and hepatic steatosis. Stress is laid on the presence of atrophy of the villi in children with hepatic steatosis, proof of a lesional substrate of malabsorption in this disease. The authors note the early onset of hepatic lesions, the gravity of the cases with an early clinical expression and hepatic biopsy puncture as the only method revealing hepatic affection in cystic fibrosis. In the first semester of life there exists purely digestive forms, hepatic steatosis and oedematous dystrophy in infants at this age being highly suspect of the etiology.
...
PMID:[Clinical and histopathologic polymorphism in cystic fibrosis]. 250 62

Sixteen patients given total pancreatectomy were experienced, and the essential points of postoperative management were reported. The morbid states after total pancreatectomy consist of: a deficiency of pancreatic endocrine function, a deficiency of pancreatic exocrine function, loss of the duodenum and upper jejunum, the influence of partial or total gastrectomy, and the influence of dissection around the superior mesenteric artery. These states influence each other and become more complicated. The management period is divided into five parts as follows; a period of intravenous nutrition, the early half; water replacement period, the late half; hyperalimentation period, a period of intravenous and enteral nutrition, a period of enteral, intravenous and oral nutrition, a period of oral and enteral nutrition, and a period of oral nutrition. In each period, a special form of management is needed. The essential points of long-term management are as follows: The use of suitable doses of pancreatic enzyme and antidiarrheal agents for the cure of severe maldigestion and malabsorption. Also, intermittent IVH or elemental diet are effective for recovery from deteriorative malnutrition. For the prevention of hypoglycemic attack, training of the patients and the maintainance of good nutrition are important. These patients have a high incidence of infection, and so speedy treatment must be given if this occurs. Fatty liver must be treated by intermittent IVH or elemental diet. As total pancreatectomy imposes a severe burden on the patient, including self-injection of insulin, the indications of this operation must be decided carefully giving due consideration to its radicality.
...
PMID:[Postoperative management of total pancreatectomy]. 309 14

We describe a child, the issue of phenotypically normal parents, who had fat malabsorption, both intestinal and hepatic steatosis, and serum cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations of 38 and 63 mg/dl, respectively. Lipoprotein electrophoresis, Ouchterlony double diffusion, and electron microscopy demonstrated that normal low density lipoproteins (LDL: 1.006 less than rho less than 1.063 g/ml) were absent. Lipoprotein particles in the rho less than 1.006-g/ml fraction were triglyceride rich, very large (93.2 +/- 35.1 nm), and contained the B-48 but not the B-100 apoprotein; both species of apolipoprotein (apo) B were found in the parents' lipoproteins. These chylomicrons and chylomicron remnants were present even in the patient's fasting plasma, which suggested prolonged dietary fat absorption. Plasma levels of high density lipoprotein lipids and proteins were low, and the phosphatidylcholine/sphingomyelin ratio was reduced as in typical abetalipoproteinemia. The monosialylated form of apo C-III was not identified on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, which suggested that this protein was elaborated only with very low density lipoproteins (VLDL). A radioimmunoassay for apo B employing a polyclonal antisera to plasma LDL gave apparent plasma apo B levels of 0.6, 66, and 57 mg/dl in the patient and his father and mother, respectively. The displacement curve generated by the parents' VLDL and LDL did not did not differ from control lipoproteins. The patient's chylomicron-chylomicron remnant fraction displaced normal LDL over the entire radioimmunoassay range, but the efficiency of displacement was strikingly less than with B-100 containing lipoproteins. If the patient's B-48 protein is not qualitatively abnormal, these results confirm very limited immunochemical cross-reactivity between at least one major epitope on B-100 and the epitopes expressed on B-48. The apo B defect in this patient appears to be recessive. It abolishes B-100 production and may additionally limit the formation of B-48.
...
PMID:Apolipoprotein B-100 deficiency. Intestinal steatosis despite apolipoprotein B-48 synthesis. 403 Oct 57

The authors report the case of a 32-year old woman admitted for hepatomegaly, weight loss, and moderate diarrhea. Liver function tests showed anicteric cholestasis with slight increase in serum level of transaminases. Liver biopsy demonstrated massive steatosis. Biological and radiological investigations of the small intestine showed a malabsorption pattern. Stool fat excretion was 54 g per day. Duodenal biopsies disclosed total villous atrophy. A ten-day treatment with metronidazole (1,5 g per day), followed by a gluten-free diet, resulted in rapid improvement of hepatic and intestinal symptoms. This case report shows that: 1) adult celiac disease may be the cause of severe steatosis; 2) anicteric cholestasis with or without hepatomegaly during the course of adult celiac disease may be secondary to steatosis, as well as primary biliary cirrhosis or malignant infiltration of the liver; 3) bacterial overgrowth should be searched and eventually treated in the case of massive fatty liver occurring in adult celiac disease.
...
PMID:[Massive hepatic steatosis disclosing adult celiac disease. Study of a case and review of the literature]. 685 13

To evaluate possible effects of alcohol consumption on vitamin A and retinol-binding protein (RBP) status, baboons were pair-fed a nutritionally adequate liquid diet containing 50% of total calories either as ethanol or isocaloric carbohydrate. Fatty liver developed after 4 months of ethanol feeding with a 59% decrease (P less than 0.001) in hepatic vitamin A levels, and fibrosis or cirrhosis developed after 24-84 months with a 95% decrease (P less than 0.001). Similarly, hepatic vitamin A levels of rats fed ethanol (36% of total calories) were decreased after 3 weeks (42%, P less than 0.01) and continued to decrease up to 9 weeks. In contrast, vitamin A contents in the kidney and testis were increase 2-3 fold in ethanol-fed rats after 9 weeks. Serum vitamin A and RBP levels were not significantly changed in rats. When dietary vitamin A was increased 5-fold, hepatic vitamin A was again decreased in ethanol-fed rats. When dietary vitamin A was virtually eliminated, the depletion rate of vitamin A from endogenous hepatic storage was 2.5 times faster in ethanol-fed rats than in controls. It is concluded that chronic ethanol consumption decreases hepatic vitamin A, and that some mechanisms other than malnutrition and malabsorption may be involved in this process.
...
PMID:Hepatic vitamin A depletion after chronic ethanol consumption in baboons and rats. 719 10


1 2 3 4 5 Next >>