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)

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

Lipid metabolism was evaluated in patients with chronic enteritis, celiac disease, general variable immunodeficiency (GVI), short-bowel syndrome. In chronic enteritis with malabsorption syndrome degree I and II changes in metabolism were characterized by hyperlipidemia due to high lipid fractions, mainly triglycerides; in malabsorption syndrome degree III (celiac disease, general variable immunodeficiency, short-bowel syndrome) by a drop of serum total lipids, phospholipids, cholesterol, beta-lipoproteins, free fatty acids, elevated concentrations of triglycerides. Changes in fatty acid composition of blood serum in patients with malabsorption syndrome degree III manifested by derangement of polyunsaturated fatty acids ratio. Arachidonic acid concentration was reduced in 100% of cases, linolenic acid in 45%. In all the patients with celiac disease and malabsorption syndrome degree III there was hypoactivity of lipolytic blood enzymes lipase and tributyrinase.
...
PMID:[Disorders of lipid metabolism in patients with chronic diseases of the small intestine]. 228 16

Prevention of vascular disease and acute pancreatitis is the goal of hyperlipidemia treatment. The risk of coronary heart disease (CHD) increases with increasing plasma cholesterol levels because low-density lipoprotein (LDL), the major carrier of cholesterol in the plasma, is atherogenic. High-density lipoprotein (HDL), especially the HDL2 subfraction, protects against CHD. Hypertriglyceridemia, although not an independent risk factor for CHD, is generally accompanied by low HDL cholesterol (HDLch), which may predispose to CHD. Reducing plasma LDL and raising HDL levels are thus goals in preventing CHD. Serum LDL levels may be lowered by reducing saturated fat and cholesterol intake; weight loss may decrease LDL but is more effective in lowering plasma triglycerides and raising HDLch. The percent of total calories from polyunsaturated, monounsaturated, and saturated fats should be less than 10%, up to 10-15%, and less than 10%, respectively. High cholesterol intake increases the flux of cholesterol, which may be harmful to arterial walls, but beyond a certain point does not increase plasma cholesterol levels. Some diets change the composition rather than the level of LDL and apoproteins. Weight reduction and maintenance are the most effective dietary measures to lower plasma triglycerides; omega-3 fatty acids (fish oils) have shown promise in reducing triglyceride but not cholesterol levels. Substitution of starch for sugar lowered triglyceride levels toward normal in hypertriglyceridemia patients. Fasting triglyceride levels rise in all individuals fed high-carbohydrate diets, but the high levels persist in hypertriglyceridemia patients. Weight loss, cessation of cigarette smoking, increased physical activity, good control of diabetes, and moderate alcohol use all raise HDLch levels. Vitamin E deficiency causes neurological sequelae in children with severe malabsorption problems due to abetalipoproteinemia or cholestatic liver disease.
...
PMID:Nutritional management of plasma lipid disorders. 255 90

Carbohydrate foods that are slowly digested appear beneficial in the management of diabetes and hyperlipidemia. This study determined the effect of endogenous and added phytic acid as well as Ca on the in vitro rate of starch digestion and in vivo blood glucose response to navy bean flour, prepared as unleavened bread. Removal of phytic acid from and addition of Ca to navy bean flour increased the starch digestion in vitro and raised the glycemic response in vivo while readdition of phytic acid to dephytinized flour produced the opposite effect. Carbohydrate malabsorption assessed by breath H2 measurement related negatively to glycemic response but the changes observed were much lower than the changes in glycemic response. This study confirmed the role of both added and endogenous phytic acid in slowing the in vitro rate of starch digestibility and in vivo glycemic response to legumes and the ability of Ca to modify this effect.
...
PMID:Phytic acid and calcium affect the in vitro rate of navy bean starch digestion and blood glucose response in humans. 363 Sep 65

Vitamins are a group of organic compounds occurring naturally in food and are necessary for good health. Lack of a vitamin may lead to a specific deficiency syndrome, which may be primary (due to inadequate diet) or secondary (due to malabsorption or to increased metabolic need), and it is rational to use high-dose vitamin supplementation in situations where these clinical conditions exist. However, pharmacological doses of vitamins are claimed to be of value in a wide variety of conditions which have no, or only a superficial, resemblance to the classic vitamin deficiency syndromes. The enormous literature on which these claims are based consists mainly of uncontrolled clinical trials or anecdotal reports. Only a few studies have made use of the techniques of randomisation and double-blinding. Evidence from such studies reveals a beneficial therapeutic effect of vitamin E in intermittent claudication and fibrocystic breast disease and of vitamin C in pressure sores, but the use of vitamin A in acne vulgaris, vitamin E in angina pectoris, hyperlipidaemia and enhancement of athletic capacity, of vitamin C in advanced cancer, and niacin in schizophrenia has been rejected. Evidence is conflicting or inconclusive as to the use of vitamin C in the common cold, asthma and enhancement of athletic capacity, of pantothenic acid in osteoarthritis, and folic acid (folacin) in neural tube defects. Most of the vitamins have been reported to cause adverse effects when ingested in excessive doses. It is therefore worthwhile to consider the risk-benefit ratio before embarking upon the use of high-dose vitamin supplementation for disorders were proof of efficacy is lacking.
...
PMID:Vitamin therapy in the absence of obvious deficiency. What is the evidence? 623 Feb 19

This review spans almost 20 years during which the author's initial interest in the hypolipidaemia of patients with steatorrhoea eventually led him to treat hyperlipidaemia by deliberately inducing malabsorption of cholesterol and bile acids. Before discussing malabsorption, however, it is necessary to first consider the normal physiology of fat absorption and metabolism. This process can be divided into various phases as summarised below: The intraluminal phase, involves lipolysis and micellar solubilisation of dietary fat; The mucosal phase, involves uptake of micellar lipids and their subsequent re-esterification; The lymphatic phase, involves chylomicron formation and secretion into lymph; and The catabolic phase, which involves the peripheral hydrolysis of chylomicrons, the uptake of remnant particles by the liver and the subsequent recycling and exchange of lipids and apoproteins among the various plasma lipoproteins.
...
PMID:Fat absorption and metabolism. 674 2

A review of the literature on the medical and nutritional use of medium-chain triglycerides (MCTs) since 1970 is presented with additional discussions on the various modifications and applications of the MCTs in the synthesis of certain structured lipids. The metabolism of MCTs in the liver and extrahepatic tissues is discussed along with further documentation of the use of MCTs in malabsorption and hyperlipidemia cases. Recent applications of MCTs and modified MCTs in hyperalimentation, deficiency in the carnitine system, epilepsy, obesity, and other special areas of application are cited. The use of medium-chain monodiglycerides for dissolving cholesterol gallstones is presented. The contraindications for the use of MCTs in ketosis, acidosis, and cirrhosis are also discussed. Suggestions for use of MCTs in a variety of medical and nutritional applications are presented.
...
PMID:Medium-chain triglycerides: an update. 681 31

Glucose Tolerance Factor (GTF) is synthesized in vivo from absorbed dietary chromium, and acts as a physiological enhancer of insulin activity, binding to insulin and potentiating its action about three-fold. Since GTF is well absorbed orally, the development of sufficiently concentrated and stable supplementary sources of this agent may enable convenient and physiologically appropriate pharmacological modulation of insulin activity. A review of the numerous physiological actions of insulin suggests a number of therapeutic applications for GTF, in such diverse ailments as diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, reactive hypoglycemia, obesity, cancer, protein malnutrition or malabsorption, endogenous depression, Parkinsonism, hypertension and cardiac arrhythmias. GTF supplementation may also have value in preventive medicine.
...
PMID:The therapeutic potential of glucose tolerance factor. 700 27

Ocular signs and symptoms provide clinical clues to many of the more common metabolic and nutritional disorders seen in older adults. Diabetes mellitus can affect all parts of the eye and orbit. Complications include refractive visual loss, macular edema, retinopathy, increased risk of fungal infection, and diplopia. In patients with gout, urate crystals may precipitate in the eye and cause conjunctivitis, uveitis, or scleritis. Other problems are seen with Wilson's disease, hyperlipidemia, and albinism. Nutritional disorders usually arise from malabsorption, gastrointestinal surgery, and alcohol abuse. Deficiencies in vitamins A, B1 (thiamine), B12, and C may be manifest in the eye.
...
PMID:Clues in the eye: ocular signs of metabolic and nutritional disorders. 760 60

Sitosterolemia is a genetic disorder characterized by sitosterol accumulation in plasma and clinically accelerated atherosclerosis. Under a condition of metabolic control with a 30% fat, low-sitosterol diet, we compared the effects of monotherapy and dual-drug treatment with lovastatin and cholestyramine on plasma sterol parameters and endogenous cholesterol synthesis in a homozygous sitosterolemic patient with concomitant heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia (FH), her obligate heterozygous father, and hyperlipidemic control subjects. We found that for both the sitosterolemic homozygote and heterozygote, cholestyramine plus lovastatin dual therapy proved not to be superior to either drug treatment alone. In the homozygous patient, cholestyramine accounted for the decrease of plasma sterol (ie, lovastatin was ineffective), whereas in the heterozygote, lovastatin represented the margin of difference (ie, low-dose cholestyramine was relatively ineffective). Thus, the best treatment option for this homozygote child and her heterozygote father appears to be monotherapy with cholestyramine and lovastatin, respectively. Stimulation by bile acid malabsorption produced a dramatic decrease of plasma sterols in the homozygote, without increasing endogenous cholesterol synthesis, but this therapy was ineffective in the heterozygote. Decreasing endogenous cholesterol synthesis with lovastatin was effective in the heterozygote, but ineffective in the homozygote. In suspected sitosterolemia, a poor sterol response to lovastatin and a dramatic response to cholestyramine may differentiate homozygous from heterozygous and other familial forms of hyperlipidemia.
...
PMID:Sitosterolemia: opposing effects of cholestyramine and lovastatin on plasma sterol levels in a homozygous girl and her heterozygous father. 863 39


1 2 3 Next >>