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)

Nutritional support of patients with HIV or acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) has many similarities to other disease states in that the same nutritional products and techniques are used. Some patients with HIV, and many with AIDS without secondary infection, experience a metabolic milieu similar to patients with cancer cachexia. In providing dietary counselling to the HIV patient, we encounter many of the obstacles that must be overcome to improve nutrition in cancer: anorexia, gastrointestinal discomfort, lethargy, and poor nutrient utilization, which limit the ability for nutritional repletion. When a secondary infection is superimposed on HIV, patients resemble more highly catabolic trauma patients or patients in the intensive care unit (ICU), where, despite aggressive efforts to feed, there is usually a net nitrogen wasting leading to the more rapid development of cachexia. However, even in this setting, feeding will limit substantially net catabolism when compared to total starvation. Because the nutritional needs of HIV patients vary greatly, individual strategies have to be designed as the patient moves through the stages of disease. Patients are generally able to consume adequate nutrition either as regular food or dietary supplements during the latency period of viral replication. Once secondary infections become prevalent, artificial diets administered by tube or by vein may be required during the period of active secondary infections, with dietary supplements often helpful during more quiescent periods. Patients with HIV are among the most challenging for clinicians providing nutritional support. Knowledge from treatment of patients with other diseases may be useful, but more data must be gathered on the unique aspects of aetiology and treatment of the anorexia, malabsorption, and ultimate wasting associated with AIDS.
...
PMID:Nutrition support and the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). 811 86

Several factors contribute to malnutrition during HIV infection. These factors can be grouped into three categories: hypermetabolism, inadequate intake, and malabsorption. This article presents a brief overview of these categories and offers suggestions to help the home healthcare nurse manage nutritional interferences. Useful resources are also included.
...
PMID:Nutrition interventions for the HIV positive client. 819 93

The HIV wasting syndrome and other HIV-associated weight loss is a major problem in HIV-infected patients. The available data strongly suggest that wasting is associated with decreased survival. It may also further impair immune function. A variety of etiologies probably contribute to this wasting, including hypermetabolism, alterations in metabolism, lessened oral intake, malabsorption, cytokine effects, and endocrine dysfunction. The relative contributions of each of these etiologies to wasting probably varies considerably from patient to patient. Successful treatment calls for identification of possible etiologies of wasting in the individual patient with AIDS. Further treatment may include treating underlying conditions and controlling such symptoms as diarrhea, nausea, or fever. Nutritional support, including both parenteral and enteral nutrition, has shown some promise of efficacy, and a variety of drugs appears to be helpful. Future treatment to reverse wasting may include the use of several of these agents in combination. Currently, there is much that clinicians can do to evaluate and treat the HIV wasting syndrome, with significant potential benefits to their patients.
...
PMID:The HIV wasting syndrome: a review. 820 46

The management of MDR-TB requires that the clinician become familiar with the "second-line" antimycobacterial agents. These drugs are generally less potent and frequently more toxic than isoniazid and rifampin. Because they are less active, innovative dosing schedules may allow us to take advantage of the few strengths that they possess. This approach will require further research into the dose-response relationships for each agent. Based on our current knowledge of these drugs, practical guidelines for their use have been described. These guidelines include the gradual escalation of the oral doses of PAS, cycloserine, and ethionamide over several days, and the intravenous administration of streptomycin and capreomycin. Both ciprofloxacin and ofloxacin may be used for the treatment of MDR-TB, but data from clinical trials are currently lacking. Finally, because patients with AIDS appear to develop antimycobacterial drug malabsorption over the course of their HIV infection, therapeutic drug monitoring can be used to verify drug absorption in the individual patient. This approach may improve therapy for that patient and prevent the selection of additional drug resistance.
...
PMID:Pharmacology of the antimycobacterial drugs. 823 10

In the past several years, microsporidia have become recognized as another important group of opportunistic infections of immunocompromised patients, especially those with AIDS. Enteric infections with the noncultivatable microsporidian parasite Enterocytozoon bieneusi have been diagnosed from AIDS patients with chronic diarrhea, malabsorption, and wasting. The incidence of infection and mechanism of transmission of these organisms in humans is unknown. Several recent tests for human pathogens have been developed using rRNA genes as diagnostic probes. Using the polymerase chain reaction and conserved regions of the small subunit rRNA (SSU-rRNA) gene, the SSU-rRNA gene of E. bieneusi was successfully cloned and subsequently sequenced. Amplification of E. bieneusi rRNA could be demonstrated from intestinal biopsies from HIV-1-infected patients infected with E. bieneusi but not from intestinal biopsies from noninfected patients. This cloned SSU-rRNA gene was used to develop improved probes for detection of E. bieneusi in tissue of infected patients.
...
PMID:Small subunit rRNA sequence of Enterocytozoon bieneusi and its potential diagnostic role with use of the polymerase chain reaction. 824 49

After the development of monophasic combined oral contraceptives (COCs), containing a fixed dose of estrogen and progestogen, biphasic and triphasic COCs were introduced in the 1980s; in these the dose of ethinyl estradiol and progestogen changes during the pill cycle. In the so-called every day pills, the 21 pills of active steroid combination are followed by 7 inactive pills containing starch, iron, or bran. Method failures of OCs are among the lowest ranging from 0.2-1/100 woman-years. User failures can be as high as 6.2/100 women-years. The individual difference in peak plasma levels of estrogens in women taking identical OCs can be 10-fold. Conditions that affect the bioavailability of contraceptive steroids are: 1) drug interaction (vitamin C, drugs that induce liver enzymes, and antibiotics); 2) vomiting; 3) vegetarianism; 4) missing pills; and 5) malabsorption. Metabolic effects of COCs pertain to carbohydrate metabolism, lipid metabolism, hemostasis, and vitamins. Prescribing of COCs involves counseling clients about contraindications to COCs, starting routines, and the pill-free interval, as well as follow-up and monitoring, the problem of missing pills, and selection criteria for OC use. Medical conditions in which COC use requires special consideration are sickle cell disease, trophoblastic disease, HIV disease, gallstones, epilepsy, valvular heart disease, oligomenorrhea/amenorrhea, inflammatory bowel disease, and surgery. Side effects of COCs may include depression, nausea, vomiting, headaches, urinary tract infection, and lower genital tract infections. 6 months after stopping the OC 1% of users become amenorrheic. Many of the common causes of amenorrhea, such as weight loss amenorrhea and polycystic ovarian disease, may be treated with the COC until the couple desires to have a baby. The new progestogens desogestrel, norgestimate, and gestodene are highly selective compared to first and second generation progestogens.
...
PMID:Combined oral contraceptives: acceptability and effective use. 832 4

To assess the prevalence of intestinal protozoans in French HIV-infected patients, stool samples, duodenojejunal biopsies, and/or colorectal biopsies from 81 patients were studied for parasites, viruses, and bacteria. Pathogens were found in 70.6% of AIDS patients with diarrhea or malabsorption. The respective prevalence of protozoa in AIDS patients with diarrhea was Cryptosporidium sp.: 37.3%, Blastocystis hominis: 13.7%, Giardia intestinalis: 5.8%, Isospora belli: 2%, Enterocytozoon bieneusi: 2%. Microsporidia were noted in one patient with severe malabsorption but no diarrhea. Other pathogens included cytomegalovirus in 27.4% and Mycobacterium avium in 5.8%. Patients with identified pathogens were more immunosuppressed and more severely malnourished than those with unexplained diarrhea. Multiple pathogens were found in 13 of 81 patients (16%). Twenty-six of 66 identified pathogens (40%) were diagnosed only on biopsy specimens. Chronic diarrhea in HIV patients could be explained in the vast majority by appropriate gastrointestinal investigations. Cryptosporidia played a major role, while microsporidia appeared to be less common.
...
PMID:Prevalence of intestinal protozoans in French patients infected with HIV. 834 Aug 92

Enterocytozoon bieneusi is a microsporidian parasite found only in the enterocytes of the small bowel of HIV positive patients, producing chronic diarrhea and malabsorption. Since January 1990, we have seen the 13 first Mediterranean cases, diagnosed on duodenal pinch biopsy samples. Diarrhea was the major symptom in all instances, and E. bieneusi was the sole identified pathogen in 6 cases. The diagnosis was made on HES or Giemsa-stained paraffin sections and on Giemsa-stained smears (9 cases). In 3 cases, the parasite was also found on ileal biopsies, but was never encountered in the colonic mucosa. In all patients, transmission electron microscopy of the duodenal mucosa was used, and it confirmed the diagnosis of intestinal microsporidiosis. No instance with negative optic examination had evidence of an infection by E. bieneusi with electron microscopy. Due to the small size of the spores, routine fecal parasitological diagnosis is still a difficult procedure, but it is possible that greater experience may avoid many of today's invasive investigations. Cytologic and histologic routine examination of paraffin sections of the distal duodenal or ileal mucosae is a reliable method to diagnose intestinal microsporidiosis in HIV-positive patients with diarrhea.
...
PMID:Pathological features of intestinal microsporidiosis in HIV positive patients. A report of 13 new cases. 835 Dec 38

Intestinal function is poorly defined in patients with HIV infection. Absorptive capacity and intestinal permeability were assessed using 3-O-methyl-D-glucose, D-xylose, L-rhamnose, and lactulose in 88 HIV infected patients and the findings were correlated with the degree of immunosuppression (CD4 counts), diarrhoea, wasting, intestinal pathogen status, and histomorphometric analysis of jejunal biopsy samples. Malabsorption of 3-O-methyl-D-glucose and D-xylose was prevalent in all groups of patients with AIDS but not in asymptomatic, well patients with HIV. Malabsorption correlated significantly (r = 0.34-0.56, p < 0.005) with the degree of immune suppression and with body mass index. Increased intestinal permeability was found in all subgroups of patients. The changes in absorption-permeability were of comparable severity to those found in patients with untreated coeliac disease. Jejunal histology, however, showed only mild changes in the villus height/crypt depth ratio as compared with subtotal villus atrophy in coeliac disease. Malabsorption and increased intestinal permeability are common in AIDS patients. Malabsorption, which has nutritional implications, relates more to immune suppression than jejunal morphological changes.
...
PMID:Intestinal absorptive capacity, intestinal permeability and jejunal histology in HIV and their relation to diarrhoea. 854 36

Interest in imported tropical diseases has increased with the rising number of travellers to the tropics. This is especially true in the case of tropical gastroenterologic disorders. The causative organisms of chronic diarrhoea are different from those causing acute diarrhoea. Bacteria are relatively unusual; parasites, e.g. Entamoeba histolytica or Giardia lamblia or an opportunistic parasitic infestation associated with an HIV infection are more likely. Furthermore, non-infectious causes, such as postinfective tropical malabsorption, lactase deficiency or coeliac disease have to be considered. Today, elderly people often undertake a journey to the tropics; in these cases the diarrhoea may be associated not only with an increased susceptibility to tropical bowel infections but also with causes previously present, such as diverticulosis, carcinoma or inflammatory bowel disease. The classification of chronic diarrhoea following a visit to the tropics is essentially the same as that for acute diarrhoea: diarrhoea with and without fever and with and without blood. In addition, malabsorption is an important feature of chronic diarrhoea.
...
PMID:'The tropics in our bathroom': chronic diarrhoea after return from the tropics. 857 32


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>