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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The incidence and degree of incomplete lactose absorption was investigated in breast fed infants and children up to two years of age during acute gastroenteritis (GE). Lactose absorption was assessed in 50 patients by means of the hydrogen breath test (HBT), approximately 5.5 days after the admission to hospital. HBT detected incomplete lactose absorption of marked (lactose
malabsorption
) and probably mild degree in 8 and 6 patients respectively. Incomplete lactose absorption appeared to be transient in all 5 patients retested after discharge. HBT failed to identify 8 cases of
lactose intolerance
which were detected by investigation of the stools. In 31 breast fed controls of a similar age range incomplete lactose absorption of only mild degree was probably present in 2 and
lactose intolerance
in 1, which too was only detected by investigation of stools. During acute GE the use of HBT is appropriate to detect milder forms of incomplete lactose absorption than
lactose intolerance
. For the detection of
lactose intolerance
the measurement of pH and reducing substances in the stools remains the method of choice. The findings are in favour of the continuation of breast feeding during acute GE.
...
PMID:Incomplete lactose absorption from breast milk during acute gastroenteritis. 395 71
Lactose malabsorption
during childhood was studied in 110 Jewish children in Israel, using the lactose hydrogen breath test. Sixty-eight subjects (61.8%) were lactose malabsorbers, 41 (60.3%) of whom were lactose-intolerant with symptoms evidenced during or following the tests, whereas 27 (39.7%) were symptom-free (tolerant malabsorbers). In the youngest age-group (4 months to 3 years), no lactose
malabsorption
was detected, whereas in the higher age-groups the prevalence of lactose
malabsorption
increased with age. The percentages of lactose
malabsorption
in the age-groups 3 to 6, 6 to 12 and 12 to 16 years were 56.5, 65.2 and 75.0%, respectively. The percentages of lactose-intolerant subjects also increased in the same age-group, to 26.5, 39.1 and 65.0%. There were no significant differences in lactose
malabsorption
and tolerance between the various ethnic groups tested. The peak values of breath hydrogen were higher in lactose-intolerant than in lactose-tolerant malabsorbers.
...
PMID:Lactose malabsorption in Israeli children. 397 55
Using breath hydrogen analysis after an oral lactose load (2 g/kg; maximum 50 g), we investigated the prevalence of lactose
malabsorption
in 61 healthy Italian children aged 6-13 years. We also examined the relationship between symptoms and small bowel transit time and the degree of sugar
malabsorption
. Three of 61 subjects produced no H2 after both lactose and lactulose load and thus were eliminated at the outset.
Lactose malabsorption
was defined as excretion of greater than 20 ppm H2.
Lactose intolerance
was classified as mild (colicky pain, flatulence, abdominal distension, borborygmi) or severe (diarrhea). The frequency of lactose
malabsorption
in the children aged 6-8 years (group I) was 25%; in the children aged 8-11 years (group II), it was 35%, and in the children aged 11-13 years (group III) 56%. The differences in frequency between the first and the third groups were significant (p = 0.05). Three of 20 (15%) in group I, two of 20 (10%) in group II, and three of 18 (17%) in group III were classified not only as lactose malabsorbing, but also as lactose intolerant, with symptoms during and after the test. We found no difference in the small bowel transit times or in the quantities of malabsorbed lactose in symptomatic and asymptomatic malabsorbing subjects. Other factors that may play a role in symptom production are discussed.
...
PMID:Lactose absorption and malabsorption in healthy Italian children: do the quantity of malabsorbed sugar and the small bowel transit time play roles in symptom production? 398 73
Lactose malabsorption
is not a cause of diarrhea during phototherapy. Jaundiced neonates under phototherapy develop diarrhea or loose stools during the treatment. These phenomena were attributed to an induced lactase deficiency caused by bilirubin breakdown products. We investigated lactose
malabsorption
in 59 neonates--29 normals and 30 jaundiced under phototherapy. Five-hour hydrogen breath tests were performed. Preprandial and postprandial (at 30, 60, 120, 180, 240, and 300 min) expired air samples were analyzed for hydrogen. Ten controls and five jaundiced neonates had positive hydrogen breath tests. Eighteen controls and 16 neonates under phototherapy had preprandial hydrogen (concentrations above 5 ppm). In our hands, lactase deficiency and lactose
malabsorption
were not induced by phototherapy. Lactase deficiency is therefore not the cause of diarrhea associated with phototherapy.
...
PMID:Lactose malabsorption is not a cause of diarrhea during phototherapy. 398 20
Breath hydrogen tests were carried out on 157 children either because they had chronic diarrhea or because they were on disaccharide-free diets.
Lactose malabsorption
was common in patients with postgastroenteritis syndrome (43%), and sucrose
malabsorption
was readily detected in patients with congenital sucrase-isomaltase deficiency. Secondary sucrose
malabsorption
and small bowel bacterial overgrowth were also detected. In predicting clinical response to dietary change, the breath hydrogen test, as we perform it, was clearly the most specific and sensitive and had a predictive accuracy of 96%. Duodenal biopsy results obtained from 48 of the children gave a 23% incidence of misleading disaccharidase results (16.7% falsely normal, 6.3% falsely abnormal), but biopsy remains vital in the diagnosis of congenital sucrase-isomaltase deficiency. False negative breath hydrogen results were obtained on occasions (4%) but in most instances were related to recent antimicrobial therapy or failure of the breath test mechanics (e.g., vomiting, length of sampling).
...
PMID:Value of breath hydrogen analysis in management of diarrheal illness in childhood: comparison with duodenal biopsy. 402 May 71
Diarrhea is often seen during phototherapy in jaundiced infants.
Lactose malabsorption
and reduced gut transit time (GTT) are some of the proposed explanations. However, the etiology of the diarrhea is still controversial. We investigated GTT and lactose absorption during phototherapy using the H2 breath test. Breath H2 was measured every 10 min for 150 min after feeding of jaundiced infants with and without phototherapy, and in controls. There were 12 newborns in each group. The time of increase of H2 excretion over 10 ppm was taken as the transit time.
Lactose malabsorption
was estimated by integrating the area under the excess H2 curve. No difference was found in GTT, lactose absorption, peak breath H2 and the time of the peak between phototherapy-treated infants and jaundiced and nonjaundiced infants. The results did not support the presence of lactose
malabsorption
during phototherapy and the decreased total GTT reported in the literature was not due to shortened small intestinal transit time.
...
PMID:Small intestine transit time and lactose absorption during phototherapy. 404
A rapid breath hydrogen analyzer to detect lactose
malabsorption
is described. After ingestion of a lactose solution the patient expires into a mouthpiece attached to a hydrogen sensor at 30-min intervals for 3 1/2 h. The hydrogen of the expired air causes a voltage change that can be transformed into ppm from a calibration curve. A tolerance test with a load of 100 g lactose was performed in 43 consecutive patients with various gastrointestinal disturbances, referred to the laboratory for the commonly used lactose tolerance test based on plasma glucose measurements. Eleven patients developed symptoms of
lactose intolerance
during the test. Biopsy specimens from the distal duodenum or proximal jejunum showed partial villous atrophy in one, in whom celiac disease with
lactose intolerance
was diagnosed; the other 10 had normal specimens. In nine of them
lactose intolerance
was diagnosed and confirmed by observation for months on a lactose-poor diet. The 10th patient (H.P.L.) did not improve on such a diet. He also showed pronounced symptoms of intolerance during a test with monosaccharides (glucose + galactose). His intestinal disease remained undiagnosed. The 11 patients with symptoms of intolerance and 3 patients without symptoms during the lactose load showed a flat plasma glucose curve after drinking the lactose solution--that is, a maximum rise of the glucose concentration of 1.5 mmol/l. One of the symptom-free patients dropped out and could not be observed, another did not improve on a lactose-poor diet, and the third noticed a favorable effect of the diet on stool consistency but not on other abdominal symptoms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Hydrogen concentration in expired air analyzed with a new hydrogen sensor, plasma glucose rise, and symptoms of lactose intolerance after oral administration of 100 gram lactose. 404 33
Drug-nutrient interactions and their adverse outcomes have previously been identified by observation, investigation, and literature reports. Knowing the attributes of the drugs, availability of knowledge base management systems for microcomputer use can facilitate prediction of the mechanism and the effects of drug-nutrient interactions. Examples used to illustrate this approach are prediction of
lactose intolerance
in drug-induced
malabsorption
, and prediction of the mechanism responsible for drug-induced flush reactions. In the future we see that there may be many opportunities to use this system further in the investigation of complex drug-nutrient interactions.
...
PMID:Prediction of the cause, effects, and prevention of drug-nutrient interactions using attributes and attribute values. 406 26
Lactose absorption capacity was examined in 641 apparently healthy adolescents and adults (447 males and 194 females with an average age of 22.9 years and an age range of 16-46 years) using a field version of the lactose tolerance test with breath hydrogen determination. In the total sample, 89 lactose absorbers and 552 lactose malabsorbers were identified.
Lactose malabsorption
was most frequent in a subgroup of Han (Chinese) from northeastern China (229 of 248 subjects, 92.3%). Among 198 Mongols from Inner Mongolia, there were 174 lactose malabsorbers (87.9%). The frequency of lactose
malabsorption
was lowest in a group of Kazakhs, traditional herders from the northwestern region of Xinjiang (149 of 195 subjects, 76.4%). Reported symptoms of
lactose intolerance
were significantly more frequent in lactose malabsorbers. The findings in northern Han are similar to the reported lactose
malabsorption
frequency in southern (mainly overseas) Chinese, and correspond with the absence of animal milk from traditional Chinese diets. The relatively low prevalence of lactose
malabsorption
among the Kazakhs suggests that lactose persistence may be frequent in herding pastoralist populations of southwest Asia.
...
PMID:Prevalence of primary adult lactose malabsorption in three populations of northern China. 623 67
It has been suggested that lactose
malabsorption
is an important factor in producing the diarrhoea of acute rotavirus infection. Accordingly, the lactose tolerance of gnotobiotic newborn lambs, infected with lamb rotavirus, has been investigated by clinical studies and tissue enzyme assays. Although lactase activity is low in affected areas of the small intestine, rotavirus infected lambs are not lactose intolerant as assessed by the measurement of reducing substances in the faeces, or by the clinical effects and blood glucose levels after a 5.8 mmol (2 g)/kg lactose load on the second day post-infection.
Lactose intolerance
could be demonstrated by using extremely high (29.2 mmol (10 g)/kg) doses of lactose, three or four times the normal dietary lactose intake. These experiments suggest that lactose-containing feeds (such as maternal milk) are not necessarily contraindicated in patients or animals with rotavirus diarrhoea.
...
PMID:Lactose tolerance in lambs with rotavirus diarrhoea. 626 May 97
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