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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Patients with Crohn's disease are at increased risk of developing disturbances in bone and mineral metabolism because of several factors, including the cytokine-mediated nature of the
inflammatory bowel disease
, the
intestinal malabsorption
resulting from disease activity or from extensive intestinal resection and the use of glucucorticoids to control disease activity. Inability to achieve peak bone mass when the disease starts in childhood, malnutrition, immobilization, low BMI, smoking and hypogonadism may also play a contributing role in the pathogenesis of bone loss. The relationship between long-term use of glucocorticoids for any disease indication and increased risk for osteoporosis and fractures is well established. However, the relationship between Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis and bone loss remains controversial. Depending on the population studied the prevalence of osteoporosis has thus been variably reported to range from 12 to 42% in patients with
inflammatory bowel disease
(
IBD
). In
IBD
most studies demonstrate a negative correlation between bone mineral density (BMD) and glucocorticoid use, but not all authors agree on the relationship between long-term glucocorticoid use and continuing bone loss. Whereas prospective studies do suggest sustained bone loss at both trabecular and cortical sites in long-term glucocorticoid users with
inflammatory bowel disease
, a decrease in bone mass is also observed in patients with active Crohn's disease not using glucocorticoids, and bone loss is not universally observed in patients with Crohn's disease using orally or rectally administered glucocorticoids. Data on vertebral fractures are scarce and there is no agreement about the risk of non-vertebral fractures in patients with Crohn's disease, although it has been suggested that non-vertebral fracture risk may be increased by up to 60% in patients with
IBD
. A recent publication reports an increased risk of hip fractures in Crohn's disease related to current and cumulative corticosteroid use and use of opiates, although these fractures could not be related to the severity of osteoporosis. The issue of the magnitude of the problem of osteoporosis has become particularly relevant in Crohn's disease, since the ability of therapeutic interventions to beneficially influence skeletal morbidity has been clearly established in patients with osteoporosis, whether post-menopausal women, men or glucocorticoid users. The main question that arises is whether all patients with Crohn's disease should be treated with bone protective agents on the assumption that they all have the potential to develop osteoporosis or whether the use of these agents should be restricted to patients clearly at risk of osteoporosis and fractures, providing these can be identified. We recommend, based on the available literature and our own experience, that all patients with Crohn's disease should be screened for osteoporosis by means of a bone mineral density measurement in addition to full correction of any potential calcium and vitamin D deficiency, to allow timely therapeutic intervention of the patient at risk while sparing the vast majority unnecessary medical treatment.
...
PMID:Skeletal morbidity in inflammatory bowel disease. 1678 23
The redox homeostasis of patients with
inflammatory bowel disease
is not balanced because of malnutrition and
malabsorption
. The seriousness of this illness often hinders the intake and use of bioactive agents. We have just a small amount of knowledge about how patients can get access to these important materials. The authors' aim was to edit a questionnaire, which can estimate, with large precision, the amount of fruit and vegetable consumption among a random-chosen group of
IBD
patients. We also thought that the measuring of tea, fruit-juice and wine consumption is also important in order to see whether the intake of these can help the intake of natural polyphenol, vitamin and trace elements. For this study 50
IBD
patients (25 male, 25 female, 35-67 years) and 50 healthy people (35 male, 15 female, 25-47 years) were asked. During the completion of the questionnaire in 8 cases (5 male, 3 female) the provided data could not be accepted, because of inaccuracy. During this study, it became obvious that the intake of polyphenols was not enough if we focus on the average daily consumption of fruits and vegetables. Red wine cannot be considered efficient for replacing polyphenols, because more than the half of patients doesn't drink it at all, or drink it once or twice a month. From the aspect of drinking tea or eating fruits, the situation is much better. The participants' (92 people) consumption of vegetables and fruits is reduced to a small variety, which is not beneficial. Mostly used plants often caused different disorders, and that is why a controlled recommendation of polyphenol, vitamin, trace element and fiber would be favorable.
...
PMID:[Surveys of the consumption of nutritional antioxidants in inflammatory bowel diseases]. 1685 10
There is increasing evidence that the magnitude and potential of intestinal nutrient absorption (sugars, fatty acids, cholesterol and triglycerides) and intestinal defense function are regulated by metabolic learning phenomena, and are influenced by dietary energy content and exercise. Metabolic overload syndromes, mainly obesity, and chronic
malabsorption
disorders such as
inflammatory bowel disease
and celiac disease have been defined as extreme phenotypes. Metabolic learning processes depend on developmental and transcriptional control systems of intestinal epithelial cell differentiation. The physiological differentiation zone of enterocytes is linked to the beta-catenin system, apolipoprotein apoA-IV and the master transcription factors Cdx2, HNF1alpha, and GATA4. In addition to these developmental regulatory transcription factors, nuclear receptors including RXR, LXR, PPAR, PXR, and CAR have been implicated in the generation of more absorptive enterocytes with a more differentiated phenotype on the one hand, and dedifferentiated cells with reduced capacity of detoxification and defense causing loss of junction control and barrier defects on the other. Large-scale analysis of gene expression profiles and identification of key pathways and master regulatory transcription factors will help dissect the role of nutritional and environmental factors as well as pharmacological intervention on mucosal homeostasis and disease, with potential applications for diagnosis and therapy.
...
PMID:Metabolic learning in the intestine: adaptation to nutrition and luminal factors. 1693 81
Crohns disease is an
inflammatory bowel disease
that can have a significant impact on the health of those afflicted. The etiology of the disease is unknown, but genetic, environmental, dietary, and immunological factors are thought to be involved. Multiple nutrients can become depleted during active disease due to inadequate intake or
malabsorption
. Preventing these deficiencies is paramount in the care of those suffering from Crohns disease. Often the traditional treatments (medications) have limited effectiveness and negative side effects that inhibit their use. Enteral nutrition has promising therapeutic benefits, but its use is often limited to the pediatric population due to poor patient acceptability. Omega-3 fatty acids have been investigated for their anti-inflammatory properties as an alternative to traditional care. This article reviews the etiology of Crohns disease, nutritional deficiencies, traditional treatments, and the use of omega-3 fatty acids in the prevention of Crohns recurrence. The results from clinical trials have been conflicting, but a new fish oil preparation that limits the side effects of traditional fish oil therapy shows promise as an adjunctive treatment for Crohns disease. Continued research is needed to validate these findings.
...
PMID:Omega-3 fatty acids as adjunctive therapy in Crohns disease. 1697 65
Vitamin D is a hormone responsible for calcium homeostasis and essential for bone mineralization throughout the lifespan. Recent studies revealed a high prevalence of hypovitaminosis D among healthy adults and children, especially in the northern hemisphere, and a link between this condition and suboptimal bone health. Moreover, maintenance of what are today considered optimal vitamin D stores has not been achieved throughout the year with currently recommended daily intake for vitamin D. The prevalence of hypovitaminosis D is even higher among adults with
inflammatory bowel disease
(
IBD
), a situation that may be caused by
malabsorption
and gastrointestinal losses through an inflamed intestine, among other factors. In children with
IBD
, existing reports of vitamin D status are scarce. The relationship between vitamin D status and bone health, although well-established in healthy adults and children, has been controversial among adults and children with
IBD
, and the reasons for this have not been investigated to date. Studies in animal models of colitis and in vitro human studies support a role of vitamin D in the regulation of the immune system of the gut and the potential of vitamin D and its derivatives as therapeutic adjuncts in the treatment of
IBD
. This role of vitamin D has not been investigated with translational studies to date. Currently, there are no guidelines for monitoring vitamin D status, treating hypovitaminosis D, and maintaining optimal vitamin D stores in patients with
IBD
. These tasks may prove particularly difficult because of
malabsorption
and gastrointestinal losses that are associated with
IBD
.
...
PMID:Report on the vitamin D status of adult and pediatric patients with inflammatory bowel disease and its significance for bone health and disease. 1711 91
Malabsorption
is an important clinical problem both in visitors to the tropics and in native residents of tropical countries. Infections of the small intestine are the most important cause of tropical
malabsorption
. Protozoal infections cause
malabsorption
in immunocompetent hosts, but do so more commonly in the setting of immune deficiency. Helminth infections occasionally cause
malabsorption
or protein-losing enteropathy. Intestinal tuberculosis, chronic pancreatitis and small-bowel bacterial overgrowth are important causes of tropical
malabsorption
. In recent years,
inflammatory bowel disease
and coeliac disease have become major causes of
malabsorption
in the tropics. Sporadic tropical sprue is still an important cause of
malabsorption
in adults and in children in South Asia. Investigations to exclude specific infective, immunological or inflammatory causes are important before considering tropical sprue as a diagnosis. This article briefly reviews the management of tropical sprue and presents an algorithm for its investigation and management.
...
PMID:Tropical malabsorption. 1714 98
Enteroendocrine cell dysgenesis was observed in 3 patients with intestinal failure of unknown cause. Enteroendocrine cell dysgenesis is a congenitally acquired life-threatening malabsorptive condition with a unique clinical phenotype paired with a histologically identifiable disease pattern. Two cases were first presented at the Ninth International Small Bowel Transplantation Symposium, Brussels 2005, and were subsequently published (N Engl J Med 2006;355:270). We now present the histopathologic and immunohistochemical findings of the gastric antrum, small bowel, and colon in greater detail. The clinical phenotype of the patients was unusual in that the affected patients demonstrated profound
malabsorption
of all nutrients, except water, from birth. The small intestine in each patient demonstrated almost no abnormality, except a near absence of endocrine cells in the mucosa. The colon appeared similarly affected. Known causes of congenital
malabsorption
, inflammatory, and infectious causes of diarrhea were excluded. The defect is secondary to point mutations in NEUROG3, which result in an arrest of endocrine cell development in the small intestine and colon. This work describes the pathologic characterization of enteroendocrine cell dysgenesis using routine techniques. The pattern of injury is distinct from other histopathologically assessed congenital malabsorptive conditions such as microvillus inclusion disease, tufting enteropathy, and abetalipoproteinemia. It is also easily distinguished from inflammatory conditions such as food allergy, gluten-sensitive enteropathy, autoimmune enteropathy, IPEX (immune dysfunction, polyendocrinopathy, enteropathy, and X-linked inheritance), and
inflammatory bowel disease
. The histopathology of disease is similar to what has been found transiently in a single patient with autoimmune polyglandular syndrome type I.
...
PMID:Enteroendocrine cell dysgenesis and malabsorption, a histopathologic and immunohistochemical characterization. 1725 90
Inflammatory bowel diseases
(
IBD
) including Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) have a major impact on the health of individuals and populations. Accurate diagnosis of
inflammatory bowel disease
(
IBD
) at an early stage, and correct differentiation between Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), is important for optimum treatment and prognosis. We present here the first characterization of fecal extracts obtained from patients with CD and UC by employing a noninvasive metabonomics approach, which combines high resolution 1H NMR spectroscopy and multivariate pattern recognition techniques. The fecal extracts of both CD and UC patients were characterized by reduced levels of butyrate, acetate, methylamine, and trimethylamine in comparison with a control population, suggesting changes in the gut microbial community. Also, elevated quantities of amino acids were present in the feces from both disease groups, implying
malabsorption
caused by the inflammatory disease or an element of protein losing enteropathy. Metabolic differences in fecal profiles were more marked in the CD group in comparison with the control group, indicating that the inflammation caused by CD is more extensive in comparison with UC and involves the whole intestine. Furthermore, glycerol resonances were a dominant feature of fecal spectra from patients with CD but were present in much lower intensity in the control and UC groups. This work illustrates the potential of metabonomics to generate novel noninvasive diagnostics for gastrointestinal diseases and may further our understanding of disease mechanisms.
...
PMID:Rapid and noninvasive metabonomic characterization of inflammatory bowel disease. 1726 11
The total visualization of the intestinal surface through wireless capsule endoscopy has furnished new insights for the diagnosis of intestinal diseases. The length, difficulty of access and particular morphology of this region makes a correct diagnosis of gastrointestinal diseases associated with bleeding possible only in 5% of cases. Our study was aimed at assessing the clinical impact and diagnostic outcomes of wireless capsule endoscopy through analysis of the first 50 cases observed in our Endoscopy and Coloproctology Unit. Fifty patients aged 23-85 years (mean age: 43.5) were selected for wireless endoscopy. The main indications were patients with a suspected or established diagnosis of
inflammatory bowel disease
or
malabsorption
, abdominal pain, chronic diarrhoea and obscure bleeding. Patients with a clinical or radiological diagnosis of gastrointestinal stenosis, Zencker's diverticula, or colonic diverticulosis were excluded from the study. In 2 out of 8 patients with abdominal pain, erosions of the intestinal wall were detected, while in the only patient with gastrointestinal bleeding a neoplastic lesion of the right colon was accidentally diagnosed. As far as
inflammatory bowel disease
is concerned, in all the cases of established diagnosis of ulcerative colitis no small bowel lesions were visible at wireless endoscopy, while all the cases with silent Crohn's disease of the terminal ileum were confirmed. No cases of neoplastic lesions of the small bowel were recorded in our series either in celiac-disease patients or in patients with familial intestinal polyposis. In celiac-disease patients (N = 24) wireless capsule endoscopy allowed accurate definition of the extent of the mucosal damage. On the basis of our preliminary experience wireless capsule endoscopy would appear to warrant an important role in the management of patients with small bowel diseases, supplementing information obtained with other diagnostic techniques.
...
PMID:[The role of capsule endoscopy in the study of intestinal diseases. Critical analysis and observation of the first 50 cases]. 1736 33
Twenty-five percent of
inflammatory bowel disease
(
IBD
) diagnoses present in childhood, with Crohn's disease (CD) being the most common type. Many children have poor nutrition status at presentation of the disease, which may worsen during the clinical course, with a significant number of children having impaired linear growth. The cause of this poor nutrition status is complex, and contributing factors include inadequate intake,
malabsorption
, altered energy demands, and losses through stool, particularly in colitis. The principal aim of medical management is to induce disease remission, with minimal side effects, thereby enabling normal growth and development. This must include active consideration of the nutrition needs of such children and how they may be best met. However, our understanding of the manner in which the disease process affects the energy demands of children with CD or how poor nutrition, in turn, may affect the disease course is limited. This may constrain the efficacy and effectiveness of standard therapeutic approaches to care. This review explores the many factors of relevance in the delivery of nutrition support to children with
inflammatory bowel disease
, and explores the role of exclusive enteral nutrition as a corticosteroid-sparing strategy to induce remission in children with active Crohn's disease.
...
PMID:Nutrition issues in pediatric Crohn's disease. 1737 95
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