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)

Diseases presenting with dyspepsia fall into two general categories: organic and functional. Overall, most patients with dyspepsia have no underlying identifiable disease process. The diagnostic yield of organic causes is less in younger patients, and, conversely, serious organic lesions are common in elderly dyspeptic patients. The commonest organic causes of dyspepsia are peptic ulcer disease, gastroesophageal reflux, biliary tract disease, and gastric cancer. Symptoms and physical signs may help to differentiate these organic causes from functional dyspepsia but endoscopic or radiographic/ultrasound studies are usually necessary to ensure the appropriate diagnosis. Less common organic causes of dyspepsia not to be overlooked include drugs, pancreatitis, malabsorption syndromes, metabolic disorders, ischemic heart disease, and collagen vascular disorders.
...
PMID:Dyspepsia: organic causes and differential characteristics from functional dyspepsia. 189 24

Total gastrectomy due, principally, to malignant diseases, has two aims: a) to carry out an adequate oncological operation, and b) to perform a simple reconstruction of the digestive tract which must avoid biliary esophageal reflux. All other functional disturbances may be controlled by adequate diet. Pseudogastric jejunal pouches are, at present, being abandoned. The reduced intestinal malabsorption--favored by the loss of the stomach and the bacterial proliferation--is kept under control, it seemed, by the function of the "ileal brake", which, when certain fat acids and other substances reach the ileum, produce hypomotility of the jejunum with slowing up of the intestinal flow. In such patients, an important catabolism prolongs for some weeks after the operation, and lose also weight due to poor appetite and not eating enough. In view of this, it is considered justified the application of an enterostomy tube during the operation, in order to provide a supplement of food by direct intestinal way, which should begin to be used only after the first postoperative days (five-six).
...
PMID:[Physiopathologic concepts related to patients undergoing total gastrectomy]. 269 18

Our recent study comparing gastric with jejunal feedings in neonatal piglets demonstrated better weight gain, less diarrhea, and less fat malabsorption in animals fed gastrically. These differences were postulated to be due either to loss of duodenal osmoregulation and absorption, and/or to loss of the combined effects of salivary enzymes, gastric emptying, and gastric secretions on jejunal feedings. The objective of this investigation was to determine the relative contributions of gastric and duodenal function to the differences between gastric and jejunal feedings. Seven piglets (3 to 5 days old, 1.5 to 2.0 kg) underwent operative transgastric insertion of a duodenostomy tube placed just distal to the pylorus. Intravenous fluids and antibiotics were administered for two days postoperatively, then Premature Enfamil Formula (24 kcal/oz; Mead Johnson, Evansville, IN) was administered continuously through the feeding tube. The animals were maintained on 115 kcal/kg/d as in the previous study. Weight, fecal fat analysis, and stool characteristics were determined throughout the 2-week period. The resulting data were compared with data from our previous study comparing gastric with jejunal feedings. These data suggest the vital importance of gastroduodenal contributions of absorption, osmoregulation, and regulation of nutrient concentrations in improving the nutritional status of experimental animals. Duodenal feedings may be preferred to either gastric or jejunal feedings because they provide equivalent nutritional support without the gastroesophageal reflux and aspiration reported with gastric feedings in the neonatal population.
...
PMID:Transduodenal feedings: a superior route of enteral nutrition. 311 58

In 24 patients with progressive systemic sclerosis (PSS) the pentagastrin-stimulated gastric acid secretion was determined to investigate if acid hypersecretion is associated with reflux-oesophagitis--the most common complication to oesophageal involvement in PSS. Gastro-oesophageal reflux was observed in 12, reflux-oesophagitis in 9 and oesophageal mycosis in 8 patients. Gastric acid secretion was increased in 13 (54%) patients and tended to be higher in patients with oesophagitis. Patients with reflux and increased acid secretion seemed to be free from oesophageal mycosis. Bacterial overgrowth and malabsorption are known complications to intestinal scleroderma and these items were investigated using non-invasive methods. Four patients had increased bile acid deconjugation, 3 had increased (14C)xylose degradation indicating bacterial overgrowth and 7 patients had decreased fat absorption in the triolein breath test. Nutritional status with respect to selenium, folate, cobalamin and fat-soluble vitamins was essentially normal.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal function in patients with progressive systemic sclerosis. 383 May 21

When conventional treatment with upright positioning and thickened feedings fails to control vomiting associated with gastroesophageal reflux (GER) of infancy, malnutrition and growth failure may result. If this occurs, fundoplication is usually recommended. In this study, 12 infants with growth failure associated with GER were given a trial of short-term (11.1 +/- SE 1.6 days) continuous-drip nasogastric (NG) feedings prior to surgical referral. Five of 10 infants for whom long-term follow-up (3-12 months) was obtained showed immediate weight gain, cessation of vomiting, and long-term resolution of growth failure without the need for surgery. All infants who had a favorable long-term response showed evidence of catch-up growth during the first 7 days of NG feeding. Infants who did not begin catch-up growth during the first 7 days did not benefit from longer periods (up to 21 days) of NG feeding. Poor response to NG feedings was associated with the presence of other medical problems (p = 0.024), including chronic pulmonary disease, malabsorption, cerebral palsy, and laryngomalacia. Four infants who did require fundoplication still showed no improvement in growth 2-6 months after surgery. In infants with GER and growth failure without other complicating disorders, a 7-10-day course of NG feeding may improve nutrition and bring about a permanent resolution of vomiting.
...
PMID:Clinical response to short-term nasogastric feeding in infants with gastroesophageal reflux and growth failure. 641 90

Systemic scleroderma involves the gastro-intestinal tract in over 50 p. 100 of cases, the commonest target organs being the oesophagus, the small intestine, the colon and the stomach in that order. The G-I symptoms of this collagenosis are all related to disorder of motility secondary to disturbances of innervation and then to atrophy of the smooth muscle and fibrous infiltration. Oesophageal involvement results in gastro-oesophageal reflux and/or dysphagia due to the lack of tonicity of the lower oesophageal sphincter and a reduction of peristalsis. Disease of the small intestine may cause pseudo-intestinal obstruction or a secondary malabsorption syndrome due to abnormal intraluminal bacterial flora. Colonic involvement causes severe constipation with formation of faecoliths. Finally, scleroderma may be complicated by an acute abdominal syndrome: occlusion due to diffuse reduction in small intestinal motility, peritonitis due to perforation of the small intestine, ileo-colonic infarction, gastro-intestinal haemorrhage complicating telangiectasia. Treatment is purely symptomatic: classical remedies for gastro-oesophageal reflux and its complications, and antibiotics for malabsorption syndromes.
...
PMID:[Digestive localizations of scleroderma]. 652 55

In recent years knowledge of the basic defect of CF has increased enormously. Many new drugs and treatment strategies are being introduced in the clinic. Nevertheless, there are a number of unsolved problems in the treatment of malabsorption and malnutrition. In spite of innovative technical and pharmacological improvement of pancreatic enzyme preparations maldigestion is still a problem. Better enzymes and coatings are needed. The integrated action of enzymatic digestion, intestinal motility and absorption is not under control. The role of malnutrition in the development of complications and in the outcome of the disease is still under discussion. The importance of a high energy intake is now generally accepted, but the question is how to achieve this. Tube feeding, endoscopic gastrostomy and the use of diets with a high energy content are becoming more popular. In CF the relationship between gastro-oesophageal reflux and lung complications is not well understood, but GER is frequently recognized. In the absence of CF GER is also associated with a number of pulmonary and upper airway diseases. The incidence of liver fibrosis and cholestatic liver disease is increasing with age. The problem is how to identify the patients at risk. The use of choleretic drugs has shown promising results in preliminary studies. Gene therapy in pancreatic and gastrointestinal pathology will be restricted to the liver. The biliary tract could be an interesting target, if patients at risk can be identified. In conclusion, new drugs and new strategies are necessary for the future implementation of the results of new insights in CF.
...
PMID:Present and future treatment modalities for gastrointestinal diseases in cystic fibrosis. 764 42

A child is described with a previously unreported probable trisomy for a segment of the long arm of chromosome 17 responsible for some distinct clinical features. These include craniofacial and skin abnormalities, failure to thrive, partial malrotation of the gut, malabsorption, gastro-oesophageal reflux, neurodevelopmental delay, autonomic disturbance, and cardiac and CNS abnormalities. The coexistence of Klinefelter's syndrome (47,XXY) is of minor significance in relation to this child's phenotype.
...
PMID:Probable de novo 17q duplication (q11.2-->q21.1): a newly recognised chromosomal syndrome in a child with Klinefelter's syndrome. 832 Jul 13

Over a 2.5-year period, 82 consecutive children complaining of recurrent abdominal pain underwent upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. Gastroscopy confirmed pathology in 48 of the children (58.5%). Four of the children, who also had undergone gastroscopy, had other diagnoses (lactose malabsorption, hydronephrosis, yersiniosis), and 30 of the children (36.6%) retained the initial diagnosis of recurrent abdominal pain syndrome. Gastritis was found in 48 of the children, 18 of whom (37.5%) had positive test results for Helicobacter pylori, based on histology and/or culture. Of 16 H. pylori-positive children tested, 12 (75%) also had an elevated concentration of IgG-class antibodies to H. pylori in their sera. Three of the children had duodenal ulcer disease, all of whom were H. pylori positive. Esophagitis was found in eight of the children with gastritis, all of whom were found to have gastroesophageal reflux. Our data suggest that among the children with recurrent abdominal pain syndrome, organic pathology is more common than was previously thought. Altogether 22% of the children with recurrent abdominal pain syndrome were infected with H. pylori.
...
PMID:Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy in recurrent abdominal pain of childhood. 849 55

Recurrent abdominal pain (RAP) syndrome is described by Apley 40 years ago. The definition of condition, still generally accepted, is at least three episodes of abdominal pain over a period of three months, with pain of intensity which affects the behaviour of the child. The prevalence of condition among school children is 10-15%. Apley's classic studies demonstrated organic disease in only 10% of the children. Apley's conclusions have dominated pediatric writing through present era. In recent years, however, a number of reports have appeared in the medical literature that have suggested that careful investigation of children with RAP may reveal previously unsuspected functional or morphologic abnormalities of the gastrointestinal tract. These have included reports of peptic disease and Helicobacter Pylori infection, abnormal antro-duodenal motility, lactase malabsorption, gastro-esophageal reflux. Nevertheless these abnormalities cannot be correlated always with specific complaints. Therefore pathogenetic background is not clarified. Despite greater understanding of these disorders the enigme remains. There is a need for controlled studies in non selected patients.
...
PMID:[Abdominal pain syndrome recurring after 40 years: critical revision]. 868 27


1 2 3 4 Next >>