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

The authors have investigated intestinal absorption of folic acid by jejunal perfusion with a triple lumen tube in five subjects with regional enteritis. The subjects' intestinal disabilities ranged from terminal ileitis to short bowel syndrome. Two had steatorrhea and two had low serum folate levels. Absorption of pteroylglutamic acid was normal in all five. This suggests that folic acid deficiency, common in this disorder, is largely caused by malnutrition, not malabsorption.
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PMID:Folic acid absorption in regional enteritis. 0 8

Zinc is an essential trace element whose malabsorption in early childhood may result in a skin disorder known as acrodermatitis enteropathica. Cutaneous lesions typical of acrodermatitis enteropathica have been described during total parenteral nutrition on zinc-deficient intravenous solutions in both adults and children. This condition has been named the "acute zinc depletion syndrome." A case is described in which a patient, despite a zinc intake of double the daily requirement, manifested the acute zinc depletion syndrome during therapy with combined liquid diet plus parenteral hyperalimentation. Predisposing factors in this individual included a short bowel syndrome and a large oral load of calcium lactate. Zinc metabolism is reviewed with attention to alterations in disease and during hyperalimentation. The clinical manifestations, predisposing factors, therapy and prevention of the acute zinc depletion syndrome are discussed.
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PMID:Acute zinc depletion syndrome during parenteral hyperalimentation. 11 98

More patients with extensive resection of the small bowel--secondary to regional enteritis, mesenteric infarction, cancer, etc.--are surviving perioperative treatment. To avoid nutrition-caused malabsorption and to maintain body composition, intravenous nutrition is initiated with a silastic atrial catheter in the immediate postoperative period. The patients are trained in "home hyperalimentation" procedures designed to allow normal nutrition to be maintained during the months required for bowel adaptation to occur. Because bowel adaptation to the absorption and transport of foodstuffs is in part dependent on the intraluminal presence of foodstuffs, elemental and regular diets are ingested during the period of intravenous support which may last for years. By using combined oral and intravenous nutrition, approximately 20 per cent of patients with short bowel syndrome eventually can take sufficient oral nutrients to sustain life.
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PMID:Role of parenteral nutrition in patients with short bowel syndrome. 11 3

The case history of a hypoparathyroid female with short bowel syndrome and long-standing therapy-resistant symptomatic hypocalcemia is reported. During treatment with massive doses of the potent vitamin D analog, 1 alpha-hydroxyvitamin D3(1 alpha(OH)D3), normocalcemia was re-established and clinical symptoms of hypocalcemia were relieved. Furthermore, significant improvement of t of intestinal calcium absorption and bone mineral content was observed after three months of treatment with 1 alpha(OH)D3. The data suggest that 1 alpha(OH)D3 may be of therapeutical value in patients with hypoparathyroidism and intestinal malabsorption.
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PMID:1 alpha-hydroxyvitamin D3 treatment of therapy-resistant symptomatic hypocalcemia in a hypoparathyroid patient with intestinal malabsorption. 47 89

143 patients (70 patients with Crohn's disease, 11 with ulcerative colitis, 40 with an intestinal by-pass operation, 9 with non-tropical sprue, 10 with short bowel syndrome, and 3 with other gastrointestinal disease) were studied during a metabolic regime including a fixed oral supply of 70 g fat, 800 mg calcium, and 200 mg oxalate. Faecal fat, 47Ca-absorption, 14C-oxalate absorption, and renal oxalate excretion were measured, and in the majority of patients a 14C-glyco-cholic acid breath test was also performed. 14Ca-absorption was practically identical (r = 0.92), whether determined by whole-body counting or from the accumulation of absorbed 47Ca in the skeleton of the underarm. 14C-oxalate absorption and renal oxalate excretion agreed well (r = 0.85). Steatorrhoea correlated weakly with renal oxalate excretion (r = 0.63, p less than 0.001), whereas no correlation was present between faecal fat and calcium absorption or between oxalate and calcium absorption under the constant conditions prevailing during the study. It is recommended that a "trifixed" regime with absorption studies of fat, calcium, and oxalate be undertaken previous to therapy that aims at a reduction of steatorrhoea or hyperoxaluria or an improvement of calcium absorption in chronic malabsorption syndromes, not least because therapy of these categories of patients most often continues for years.
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PMID:Standardized ("trifixed") diet in the study of chronic malabsorption syndromes. 67 51

Evidence is presented that many of the enteric and systemic manifestations after jejunoileal bypass can be related to an inflammatory process within the bypassed small bowel rather than to the surgically induced sequelae of a short bowel syndrome with malabsorption. Invasion of the excluded segment by fecal flora was associated with a histologically demonstrable inflammatory response of the mucosa. The disorder was of variable severity and duration and occurred in the majority of 28 bypass patients. Progression to a clinical syndrome resembling an acute abdomen occurred in about 15% of the patients. Small bowel ileus and, in some patients, obstruction of the colon were suggested by physical signs and x-ray findings. Surgical exploration in such instances demonstrated an inflammaotry process of the excluded small bowel loops with severe distention of this segment and of the colon, but not organic obstruction. Pneumatosis cystoides intestinalis was a sequal in two patients. Exudative protein loss was documented in the severe cases. Most of the systemic sequelae are comparable to those seen with inflammatory diseases of the bowel such as Crohn's disease. Fever, excessive weight and lean tissue loss, and the involvement of skin, blood vessels, joints and possibly, the liver suggest an immune response as a common factor in the pathogenesis. The clinical improvement with antibiotics such as metronidazole or with restitution of normal bowel continuity indicates that the bacterial flora in the excluded small bowel segment or its byproducts are causally related to the systemic complications. Hyperoxaluria may be primarily the sequela of steatorrhea and not of the inflammatory process.
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PMID:Bypass enteropathy: an inflammatory process in the excluded segment with systemic complications. 83 42

Following massive small bowel resection malnutrition occurs as a result of impaired digestion and malabsorption. Of the numerous methods of operation suggested to improve intestinal absorption only the reversal of intestinal segments seems to be promising. Since so far this method was used clinically only in single cases, the method was studied experimentally in 50 minipigs (divided in 4 groups: 90 p.c.-small bowel resection without reversal, with primary or secondary reversal, and normal controls). The reversed segments 5 or 10 cm in length were inserted in the middle or at the end of the remaining jejunum or ileum. In comparison with the animals without intestinal reversal the animals with reversed segments showed a significant increase of intestinal transit time and of absorptive capacity, a nearly normal weight development and a considerably better adaptation of the remaining small bowel. In contrast to that the animals without reversal showed after an average of 3 months extreme cachexia. These encouraging experimental results with reversed segments in short bowel syndrome justifies in our opinion the application of this therapeutic principle in humans.
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PMID:[Reversal of intestinal segments for therapy of malabsorption after small bowel resection. Experiments on animals (author's transl)]. 85 35

Malabsorption of bile salts plays a major role in the pathogenesis of diarrhea after resection of the ileum, but the diarrhea usually improves with the passage of time. To test the hypothesis that this improvement may occur as a result of increased absorptive capacity for bile salts in the jejunal remnant, everted sacs of jejunal remnants were prepared 3 months after ileectomy. The mean serosal to mucosal concentration ratio of taurocholate found in the experimental jejunal sacs was increased approximately 70 percent over the mean ratios of normal and sham-resected jejunal preparations (p smaller than 0.05). This change may be a manifestation of cellular adaptation in transport function, suggesting that the scope of intestinal adaptation in short gut syndrome goes beyond morphological hypertrophy and hyperplasia.
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PMID:Jejunal absorption of bile salts after resection of the ileum. 112 95

The use of somatostatin to manage diarrhea associated with the short gut syndrome is impractical because of its need to be given by continuous infusion and a rebound effect on stool output with cessation of therapy. Octreotide has been used more successfully to control stool and electrolyte losses in patients with shortened gastrointestinal tracts. In published series and studies, all subjects appear to decrease stool losses, but clinical benefit for long-term use is not achieved for all patients. In the patients who do respond, the need for parenteral nutrition and intravenous hydration has been decreased or eliminated. The optimal dose is unclear, but many patients respond to 50-micrograms injections twice daily. Several investigations noted no additional beneficial effects with escalating dosages. Adverse effects include impairment of fat absorption, which may offset the therapeutic benefits of octreotide. The patients with the greatest response appear to have the least fat malabsorption. Other adverse effects noted when using octreotide for control of the short gut syndrome include pain associated with subcutaneous injection and abdominal complaints. Other potential concerns include the effect on gallstone formation in this high-risk population and intestinal adaptation.
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PMID:Somatostatin and its analogs in the short bowel syndrome. 136 86

Massive small bowel resection causes short bowel syndrome, manifested by signs and symptoms of malabsorption and by short digestion and transient times. A case of the syndrome is presented, in which an infant had massive bowel resection with interposition of the colon performed for volvulus. The signs of volvulus appeared only a few hours after birth.
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PMID:[Interposition of colon for short bowel syndrome]. 155 20


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