Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (malabsorption)
7,319 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two patients with eosinophilic gastroenteritis are described. The predominant eosinophilic infiltration of the mucosal layer of the upper gastrointestinal tract resulted in severe protein-losing enteropathy and peripheral eosinophilia in one patient and a malabsorption syndrome due to saccharose and lactose intolerance in another patient. There was a wide range of abdominal symptoms, depending on the site and extent of the disease. The diagnosis was based upon typical biopsy findings. There was a marked lack of any biochemical abnormality. The course of the disease was chronic and relapsing. Symptoms were not controlled with corticosteroids alone; only after the addition of disodium chromoglycate per os was prolonged disease control achieved.
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PMID:Eosinophilic gastroenteritis--a disease with a wide clinical spectrum. 837 80

Intestinal involvement in toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) has been identified only rarely. This report describes a case of TEN with ileal manifestations characterized by a profuse diarrhea with malabsorption, protein-losing enteropathy, and radiologically by multiple stenosis. After healing of the cutaneous lesions, total parenteral nutrition was initiated, resulting in a decreased diarrhea. However, after one month of total parenteral nutrition, malabsorption and protein-losing enteropathy continued and the radiological lesions were still present with an aspect consistent with a sclerotic process. A surgical resection of the pathological ileal segment was performed with end-to-end anastomosis. Pathological examination of the resected segment showed a necrosis of the ileal mucosa with a pattern similar to that of the epidermal necrosis. No sclerosis was observed. It seems that a prolonged total parenteral nutrition could have induced a complete healing of intestinal lesions. This case report is the first clinical, radiological, and histological study of an ileal involvement in TEN.
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PMID:Ileal involvement in toxic epidermal necrolysis (Lyell syndrome). 840 19

Intestinal lymphangiectasia is a disorder of the lymphatics of the gastrointestinal system that usually manifests itself with protein-losing enteropathy, malabsorption, and ascites. We report an adult patient with this disorder with an unusual presentation simulating an acute abdomen.
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PMID:Intestinal lymphangiectasia: ultrasound evaluation of a case simulating appendicitis. 843 89

Although rarely, several conditions may cause malabsorption through lymphatic obstruction. Primary lymphangiectasia, a genetically determined disease characterized by diarrhoea, steatorrhoea and protein-losing enteropathy, is one of these conditions. The Authors report their experience in three cases of small bowel lymphangiectasia occurring in adults and discuss diagnostic and therapeutic problems of the disease.
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PMID:[Intestinal lymphangiectasis in adults]. 875 53

Two adult cases of extranodal malignant lymphoma diffusely involving the intestinal wall are reported. Lymphoblastic lymphoma in case 1 (68-year-old male) and small lymphocytic lymphoma in case 2 (48-year-old male) were initially manifested as protein-losing enteropathy or malabsorption syndrome. In case 1, the patient died of massive ascites and intestinal bleeding 10 months after presentation. Autopsy revealed diffuse and extensive lymphomatous involvement of the small and large intestine, peritoneum and liver. The patient in case 2, showing low-grade diffuse lymphomatous invasion throughout the small bowel mucosa without involving other organs, is currently being followed up. Surface marker studies revealed previously undescribed phenotypes, such as CD4/CD8 double-positive blastoid T cells in case 1, and CD8-positive suppressor/killer T cells in case 2. T-cell receptor alpha/beta was expressed on the lymphoma cells in both cases. Epstein-Barr virus infection was not evident. The gut-associated nature of the T-lymphoma cells, possibly of extrathymic origin, is discussed.
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PMID:T-cell lymphomas diffusely involving the intestine: report of two rare cases. 876 87

Diarrhea and malabsorption are common findings in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). The pathogenesis and consequences of malabsorption in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection are similar to those found in non-HIV-related conditions, and are related to both direct intestinal damage and alterations in the coordination of the body's response to feeding. The pathogenesis of malabsorption is multifactorial and includes primary enterocyte injury with partial villus atrophy and crypt hyperplasia, ileal dysfunction with bile salt wasting and fat malabsorption, and exudative enteropathy. Clinical studies show that intestinal cryptosporidiosis leads to excess fecal losses of about 20% for protein and fat. The consequences of malabsorption include decreased appetite; "enterogastrone" effects including dry mouth, decreased gastric acid secretion, decreased rate of gastric emptying, and slowed intestinal transit; anemia resulting from iron, folate, or vitamin B12 malabsorption; and metabolic effects including osteomalacia, gallstones, renal stones, and hypocholesterolemia. Few studies of nutritional therapy have been applied specifically to AIDS patients with malabsorption. Total parenteral nutrition promotes weight gain, although the response to this therapy depends on the underlying clinical problem, with body cell mass repletion noted in patients with malabsorption but predominantly fat gain in patients with systemic infections. Nutritional stabilization also was noted in response to oral administration of a semielemental diet.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus-related wasting: malabsorption syndromes. 962 87

A severe nutritional deficiency status is described in a 22-year-old patient with Crohn's disease. The clinical picture on admission was dominated by an episode of gastrointestinal bleeding secondary to clotting disturbances (vitamin K deficiency) and severe cachexia due to a protein energy malnutrition. The mechanisms of severe nutritional disturbances in Crohn's disease are multifactorial. In this patient, lymphatic leakage into the intestinal lumen was a major contributing factor in the pathogenesis of protein-losing enteropathy, fat malabsorption, and lymphocytopenia. The authors were able to demonstrate this intestinal lymph loss by nuclear imaging.
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PMID:Lymph loss in the bowel and severe nutritional disturbances in Crohn's disease. 1050 57

Diarrhoea is a relatively frequent adverse event, accounting for about 7% of all drug adverse effects. More than 700 drugs have been implicated in causing diarrhoea; those most frequently involved are antimicrobials, laxatives, magnesium-containing antacids, lactose- or sorbitol-containing products, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, prostaglandins, colchicine, antineoplastics, antiarrhythmic drugs and cholinergic agents. Certain new drugs are likely to induce diarrhoea because of their pharmacodynamic properties; examples include anthraquinone-related agents, alpha-glucosidase inhibitors, lipase inhibitors and cholinesterase inhibitors. Antimicrobials are responsible for 25% of drug-induced diarrhoea. The disease spectrum of antimicrobial-associated diarrhoea ranges from benign diarrhoea to pseudomembranous colitis. Several pathophysiological mechanisms are involved in drug-induced diarrhoea: osmotic diarrhoea, secretory diarrhoea, shortened transit time, exudative diarrhoea and protein-losing enteropathy, and malabsorption or maldigestion of fat and carbohydrates. Often 2 or more mechanisms are present simultaneously. In clinical practice, 2 major types of diarrhoea are seen: acute diarrhoea, which usually appears during the first few days of treatment, and chronic diarrhoea, lasting more than 3 or 4 weeks and which can appear a long time after the start of drug therapy. Both can be severe and poorly tolerated. In a patient presenting with diarrhoea, the medical history is very important, especially the drug history, as it can suggest a diagnosis of drug-induced diarrhoea and thereby avoid multiple diagnostic tests. The clinical examination should cover severity criteria such as fever, rectal emission of blood and mucus, dehydration and bodyweight loss. Establishing a relationship between drug consumption and diarrhoea or colitis can be difficult when the time elapsed between the start of the drug and the onset of symptoms is long, sometimes up to several months or years.
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PMID:Drug-induced diarrhoea. 1064 76

Malabsorption is a well-known complication of infection with Giardia lamblia. However, selective protein-losing enteropathy is rare. We report a child with anasarca due to hypoalbuminemia as a result of gastrointestinal protein loss. Investigations established giardiasis as the etiology. The child returned to normal health after treatment with metronidazole.
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PMID:Intestinal giardiasis: an unusual cause for hypoproteinemia. 1065 92

We describe a rare case of cytotoxic gastrointestinal T-cell lymphoma with protein-losing enteropathy. Initial examination revealed the coexistence of T-cell lymphoma and tuberculosis in the mesenteric lymph node and liver. Despite anti-tuberculosis and anti-cancer treatment, the patient experienced chronic diarrhea and malabsorption and died approximately 3 years after onset. Autopsy specimens revealed medium-sized lymphoma cells, with a phenotype of CD3+, CD4-, CD7+, CD8+, CD30-, CD56-, CD103 (HML-1)-, TIA-1+, and granzyme B+, proliferating primarily and consistently in the mucosa of the entire bowel tract from esophagus to rectum. Interestingly, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-encoded small nuclear RNAs were detected in the tumors by in situ hybridization. Southern blot analysis revealed monoclonal proliferation in the EBV-infected T cells. Although the present case can possibly be categorized as an intestinal T-cell lymphoma according to the Revised European-American Lymphoma Classification, the case showed a unique clinical course and distribution of lymphoma cells. We present here an interesting case of gastrointestinal cytotoxic T-cell lymphoma and examine the possible association with infectious agents.
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PMID:Cytotoxic T-cell lymphoma diffusely involving the entire gastrointestinal tract associated with Epstein-Barr virus and tubercle bacilli infection. 1090 59


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