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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (malabsorption)
7,319 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Seventeen patients were operated on with intestinal shunts for morbid obesity, in eight a biliointestinal bypass (BI) was constructed and in the rest a conventional jejunoileal (JI)-shunt. The reduction in weight was similar in both groups, and so was malabsorption of fat, but the BI-group had significantly less bowel motions with less watery diarrhoea. Bile acid malabsorption was measured both chemically by estimating the total amount of faecal bile acids excreted, as well as indirectly by using a 75Se-labelled synthetic bile acid (SeHCAT). Both techniques revealed a substantial loss of bile acid after both types of operation, but patients with BI bypass surgery had significantly lower elimination time of the bile acid than those with JI-shunts. There was a significant negative correlation between SeHCAT retention and total faecal bile acids. However, some patients with low SeHCAT retention had normal or even reduced output of faecal bile acids. Estimation of faecal bile acids may display false negative results when the bile acid pool is decreased. The SeHCAT-test seems to be a better technique for measuring bile acid losses. The study suggests that BI bypass surgery for obesity seems to be advantageous over the JI shunt in reducing the postoperative loss of bile acids and choleretic diarrhoea, without influencing the weight loss.
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PMID:Bile acid malabsorption after intestinal bypass surgery for obesity. A comparison between jejunoileal shunt and biliointestinal bypass. 231 16

Horizontal gastroplasty has been performed on 100 pathologically obese patients over the last nine years. In our series, the mean age was 39.3 +/- 8.2 years and the mean body weight was 120.8 +/- 19.6 kg. One year after surgery the average weight loss was 29.7 kg which corresponds to a reduction of 24.6% of the preoperative weight (BMI:-24%). After three years, the body weight stabilised, reaching a total weight reduction of 30.5% (BMI:-28.7%), corresponding to 36.8 kg. The incidence of complications directly related to surgery was generally acceptable. The absence of specific malabsorption problems, the low incidence of severe complications and the satisfactory weight loss induced and maintained make, in our opinion, horizontal gastroplasty one of the most suitable and effective interventions in the long-term management of morbid obesity.
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PMID:[Horizontal gastroplasty in surgery for morbid obesity: an unjustified condemnation?]. 237 98

In 1980 Scopinaro described biliopancreatic bypass for the treatment of obesity. This procedure was aimed at selective malabsorption. The authors used Scopinaro's procedure in 33 patients, but in 17 they modified it by doing selective vagotomy with closure of the duodenum in continuity instead of a subtotal gastrectomy. Eighteen months after the operation, 88% of the patients had what the authors considered was a good to excellent result, that is a loss of more than 25% of the patient's initial weight. Morbidity of many kinds was encountered but most was self-limiting or easily corrected by medical means. From their experience the authors conclude that biliopancreatic bypass as a procedure for the treatment of morbid obesity should continue to be performed and evaluated.
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PMID:Clinical experience with biliopancreatic bypass and gastrectomy or selective vagotomy for morbid obesity. 309 50

Calcium-binding protein (CaBP) (molecular weight, 10,000) was measured in small-intestinal biopsy specimens from 36 patients with malabsorption syndromes: short-bowel syndrome (n = 13), untreated coeliac disease (n = 4), coeliac disease in remission (n = 7), patients with intestinal bypass owing to morbid obesity (n = 5), and in patients with chronic diarrhoea of unknown cause (n = 7). Twelve patients with no signs of malabsorption who had the irritable bowel syndrome were used as controls. Patients with small-bowel resections showed reduced concentrations of CaBP (p less than 0.01) and low intestinal calcium absorption (p less than 0.05). Small amounts of CaBP were found in intestinal specimens from patients with coeliac disease in remission (p less than 0.01), and CaBP was almost undetectable in patients with a newly diagnosed coeliac disease and avillous jejunal biopsy findings (p less than 0.001). Patients with chronic diarrhoea and patients with an intestinal bypass had CaBP concentrations comparable to those of the control group. A direct correlation was found between CaBP and the fractional calcium absorption in all patients (p less than 0.05). CaBP may therefore be considered an indicator of the efficiency of the small intestine to absorb calcium.
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PMID:Measurement of the 10,000-molecular weight calcium-binding protein in small-intestinal biopsy specimens from patients with malabsorption syndromes. 322 98

Morbid obesity is a disease of modern society. Surgery is indicated when there is no endocrinopathy, medical treatment failed and Body Mass index (W/H2) is more than 40 (III degree obesity of Garrow). Many different methods were suggested in connection with the type of obesity, the associated diseases and the psychical state of the patient. Jejuno-ileal by-pass intend to produce a generic malabsorption syndrome. Personal experience is however good, possibly due to the blind loop jejunostomy that we always prepare as a conclusion of the operation and which gives an excellent support for the early post-operative time.
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PMID:[Surgical treatment of obesity]. 365 20

The results of jejunoileal bypass for morbid obesity were studied in 192 operated patients. Mean weight loss was 39.3% of initial weight and 80.5% of overweight. Medical benefits (such as improved glucose tolerance, lowered blood pressure, healed Pickwick syndrome, etc.) were maintained during the follow-up (average five years). The most feared complication of the jejunoileal bypass is severe hepatic failure, which appeared in 2.3% of the cases, only after the end-to-end jejunoileal bypass, and never more than 12 months after surgery. Most patients had satisfactory and lasting results due to a careful and assiduous postoperative follow-up, and to the strict co-operation between the medical staff and the patient. Medical therapy in the preoperative period was useful to control the weight gain by administration of a hypocaloric definite diet. In the postoperative period, we usually got benefits for the bypass induced intestinal malabsorption by administration of supportive vitamins and electrolytes. To prevent liver diseases we often found intestinal-specific antibiotics, aminoacidic solutions, hyperproteical diet and anti-steatosis agents helpful.
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PMID:Surgical therapy for morbid obesity. 373 61

Jejuno-ileal bypass surgery for morbid obesity results in small bowel malabsorption. This may produce various nutritional or mineral deficiencies. A patient who became hypothyroid following bypass surgery required a larger than normal dose of thyroxine, presumably because of impaired absorption. In such patients it is particularly important to measure serum thyrotrophin concentrations in assessing the replacement dose of thyroxine.
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PMID:Thyroxine malabsorption following intestinal bypass surgery. 375 32

The mucosal concentrations of seven regulatory peptides and the density properties and integrity of their storage granules have been studied in mucosal biopsies from the human jejunum in eight gastrointestinal disease states and compared with normal controls. In diseases with associated mucosal inflammation (coeliac disease, Crohn's disease with jejunal involvement, postinfective tropical malabsorption, and common variable immunodeficiency) there was a selective increase in fragility of the gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP) and somatostatin storage granules. The gastrin, motilin, enteroglucagon, secretin, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide granules had normal properties in these conditions. In diseases in which diarrhoea occurred in the absence of changes in jejunal mucosal histology (irritable bowel syndrome, pancreatic insufficiency, jejuno-ileal bypass for morbid obesity, and purgative abuse) there were no abnormalities of the storage granules. Increased mucosal concentrations of all peptides except vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) were found in coeliac disease and selective increases of VIP found in Crohn's disease, motilin in the irritable bowel syndrome and gastrin and GIP in pancreatic insufficiency. It is suggested that the storage granule abnormalities in the diseases with abnormal mucosal histology are secondary to the inflammatory changes.
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PMID:Gastrointestinal regulatory peptide storage granule abnormalities in jejunal mucosal diseases. 614 62

A patient underwent end-to-side jejunoileostomy for morbid obesity, and 3 years later an end-to-end jejunoileostomy with ileotransversostomy was performed. Nine years later she presented with night blindness, severe diarrhea and mild jaundice and was found to have malabsorption with vitamin A and K deficiencies as well as asymptomatic liver cirrhosis. Her shunt was removed, and a gastric partition was performed. The night blindness and abnormal prothrombin time were corrected by the administration of vitamins A and K. This case demonstrates that complications may appear many years after jejunoileal bypass surgery, and therefore, the patients should remain under strict medical supervision indefinitely.
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PMID:Night blindness and liver cirrhosis as late complications of jejunoileal bypass surgery for morbid obesity. 633 98

Intestinal pseudo-obstruction (IP) is an uncommon disorder of gut motility which must be differentiated from mechanical intestinal obstruction. We have seen 11 such patients over the last 5 years. Characteristic symptoms, shared by mechanical obstruction, include abdominal distention and pain, nausea, and vomiting. Radiologic studies reveal dilated loops of bowel with air fluid levels. In most patients a major differentiating feature from obstruction may be the presence of diarrhea rather than obstipation. Steatorrhea is secondary to an overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria in the motionless dilated loops of bowel. IP has been associated with various disorders: in our series two patients had scleroderma, one multiple small bowel diverticula, one systemic amyloidosis, one celiac disease, and one spinal cord injury; in only two patients was the disorder considered "idiopathic." Three patients had previously undergone a jejuno--ileal bypass for morbid obesity. During the acute episode, the patients were treated symptomatically with decompression by nasogastric or rectal tube with fluid and electrolyte replacement. Malabsorption treated with broad spectrum antibiotics reversing the steatorrhea but not episodes of pseudo-obstruction. Magnesium deficiency was present in seven patients and its correction resulted in amelioration of the symptom complex. In two patients episodes of pseudo-obstruction were markedly reduced by metoclopramide which was not effective in two others.
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PMID:Chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction. 679 59


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