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)

A patient with granulomatous gastritis is described. Two years after the presentation of his gastric disease he developed pernicious anemia. Lack of intrinsic factor production secondary to Crohn's disease of the stomach is felt to be the cause of his Vitamin B12 malabsorption.
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PMID:Pernicious anemia caused by Crohn's disease of the stomach. 43 4

A suicidal 67-year-old woman with manic-depressive psychosis took an overdose of asprin, amitriptyline and diazepam. The initial effects were pyrexia, tachycardia, hyperpnea, metabolic acidosis, electrocardiographic changes, hypoprothrombinemia, gastritis, and pancreatitis. Four to six weeks later, she was examined because of persistent abdominal pain with mausea, anorexia anemia, and possibly a malabsorption syndrome. An exploratory laparotomy was performed. The surgeon found several previous adhesions, a small intestinal volvulus, and a nodular pancreas. This suggested previous perforation of the small bowel from enteritis, causing a "blind-loop" syndrone. The invilved section of the small bowel was resected. With appropriate treatment, the patient is well three months after operation.
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PMID:Unusual abdominal complications of a suicidal overdose of analgesic and psychotropic drugs in an elderly patient. 61 54

Dietary deficiency of vitamin B-12 has been reported, yet most people ingesting vitamin-B12-deficient diets even for many years appear to achieve a balance that does not lead to overt signs and symptoms of deficiency. I present the case of a vegan of 25 years' duration who developed severe neurologic abnormalities due to vitamin-B12 deficiency. His diet provided 1.2 microgram of vitamin B12 daily at most. Despite normal Schilling test findings, he absorbed subnormal amounts of vitamin B12 given with ovalbumin. This poor absorption appeared to be related to his gastritis, achlorhydria, and subnormal intrinsic-factor secretion. Probably, vitamin-B12 deficiency in this patient resulted from both dietary restriction and the subtle malabsorption, neither of which would have sufficed alone to produce the clinical problem. Possibly such malabsorption may also be present in many of those vegans developing overt vitamin-B12 deficiency in whom Schilling test findings have been normal.
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PMID:Nutritional vitamin-B12 deficiency. Possible contributory role of subtle vitamin-B12 malabsorption. 64 50

An analysis of the experience at the University of California Hospital, San Francisco, with the diagnosis and treatment of fifty-nine postgastrectomy syndromes shows that stomal obstruction (sixteen patients), the most common syndrome, was best treated by total reconstruction rather than stomal revision. Disappointment with the results of other procedures for the dumping syndrome (50 per cent improvement) has convinced us of the need to adopt the use of reversed jejunal interposition for surgical treatment of this condition. Because a precise etiologic diagnosis of bilious vomiting is often elusive, the preferred procedure is isoperistaltic jejunal interposition, since it eliminates the afferent loop and prevents bile from entering the stomach. All five patients with malabsorption were improved by conversion from BII to BI. Four of five patients with diarrhea were improved by various procedures (not including a reversed segment of intestine in the midjejunum). Three patients with reflux alkaline gastritis were improved by Roux-en-Y gastrojejunostomy or isoperistaltic jejunal interposition. Either is effective. Thus, in our experience if an unquestionable diagnosis of stomal obstruction, malabsorption, or reflux alkaline gastritis can be established, there is ample justification for an optimistic outlook regarding surgical therapy.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of late postgastrectomy syndromes. 121 35

A distinctive form of gastritis, characterized by lymphocytic infiltration of pit epithelium, has recently been described in association with evidence of Campylobacter pylori infection. We have evaluated simultaneous small bowel and gastric biopsies from 22 patients with diarrhea or malabsorption, all of which showed small bowel changes characteristic of sprue or spruelike disease. In 10 of 22 patients, striking lymphocytic gastritis was identified. Cases positive for lymphocytic gastritis had a mean of 46.5 lymphocytes per 100 epithelial cells, compared with a mean of 3.5 in normal gastric controls and 5.1 in abnormal controls, including cases with Campylobacter gastritis. Concurrent small bowel biopsies had a mean of 47.2 lymphocytes per 100 epithelial cells. Cases without lymphocytic gastritis had means of 10.8 and 39.9 lymphocytes per 100 gastric and intestinal epithelial cells, respectively. Campylobacter organisms were identified in only 1 of the 10 patients with lymphocytic gastritis and in 3 of the 12 patients without lymphocytic gastritis. Intraepithelial lymphocytes in small bowel and stomach were positive for the antibody MT-1, indicating a T-cell infiltrate at both sites. These findings suggest that lymphocytic gastritis may occur as a manifestation of celiac sprue or spruelike disease and that the lymphocytic infiltration of celiac sprue may affect gastric epithelial mucous cells.
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PMID:Lymphocytic gastritis in patients with celiac sprue or spruelike intestinal disease. 229 86

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

Intestinal digestive and absorptive function and the gross and histologic appearance of the gastrointestinal tract were evaluated in Basenji dogs with chronic diarrhea, asymptomatic Basenji dogs, and healthy control dogs. Gastric rugal hypertrophy, lymphocytic gastritis, and gastric mucosal atrophy occurred in asymptomatic and affected Basenji dogs. All affected dogs had moderate or severe intestinal lesions characterized by villous clubbing and fusion, increased tortuosity of intestinal crypts, and diffuse infiltration of mononuclear inflammatory cells. Intestinal lesions in asymptomatic Basenji dogs invariably were less severe than those in affected dogs, but the small intestinal lamina propria of asymptomatic Basenji dogs consistently contained greater numbers of mononuclear inflammatory cells than did that of control dogs. The proportion of cells containing each immunoglobulin isotype (IgG, IgM, IgA) was similar among affected Basenji dogs, asymptomatic Basenji dogs, and control dogs. As compared to healthy beagle controls, intestinal function was abnormal in both affected and asymptomatic Basenji dogs evaluated by combined N-benzoyl-L-tyrosyl-p-aminobenzoic acid and d-xylose test, but malabsorption and maldigestion were most pronounced in affected Basenji dogs.
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PMID:Gastroenteritis of basenji dogs. 327 85

An investigation of 102 men comprising alcoholics, patients with non-ulcer dyspepsia, and healthy controls is reported. It demonstrates that alcohol is a cause of chronic gastritis and the severity of the mucosal lesion is directly related to the duration of excess drinking. Contrary to popular belief, chronic gastritis does not give rise to symptoms. The effect of alcohol on the gastric mucosa is a direct one and is not mediated by malnutrition, hepatic damage, intestinal malabsorption, anaemia, ascorbic acid deficiency, or any disturbance in immune tolerance. The natural history of chronic gastritis is described, involving an initial hypertrophy and hyperfunction of the gastric mucosa, followed by atrophy and hypofunction. Cigarette smoking is confirmed as another cause of chronic gastritis. The non-ulcer dyspepsia syndrome is unrelated to chronic gastritis.
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PMID:Chronic gastritis, alcohol, and non-ulcer dyspepsia. 508 67

Intestinal permeability was investigated with a chromium-51-EDTA (edetic acid) absorption test in 36 non-intoxicated alcoholic patients without liver cirrhosis or overt clinical evidence of malabsorption or malnutrition. Patients abstaining from alcohol for less than 4 days almost invariably had higher intestinal permeability than controls, and in many the abnormality persisted for up to 2 weeks after cessation of drinking. The presence of gastritis did not correlate with the presence of increased permeability. The site of altered intestinal permeability was shown by an in-vitro permeability test to be the small bowel. The increased intestinal permeability to toxic "non-absorbable" compounds of less than 5000 molecular weight may account for some of the extraintestinal tissue damage common in alcoholic patients.
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PMID:The leaky gut of alcoholism: possible route of entry for toxic compounds. 614 32

Malignant lymphoma involves the gastrointestinal tract as a primary or secondary in the course of disseminated lymphoma. Although primary lymphoma has received the most attention in the literature, secondary lymphoma of the gastrointestinal tract is much more common. The gastrointestinal manifestations and complications are a common problem and there is a lack of information as to diagnosis, management and prognosis. Intensive application of currently-available diagnostic techniques including radiology, cytology, endoscopy, biopsy and gastric secretory studies should be pursued for the evaluation of patients with lymphoma. The management of the multiple gastrointestinal complications such as monilial esophagitis, hemorrhagic gastritis, stress erosions, intestinal perforation, diarrhea, malabsorption and radiation damage that may then affect the gastrointestinal tract in the course of malignant lymphoma or its treatment requires very careful supportive management. Each modality of tretment for lymphoma may be associated with a variety of complications which compromise the structure and function of the gastrointestinal tract and which may be at times more devastating than the underlying neoplasm. Early recognition and active treatment of these complications is vital.
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PMID:The gastrointestinal manifestations and complications of malignant lymphoma. 699 13


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