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)

Newborns suffering from short bowel syndrome (SBS) after massive intestinal resection have numerous infectious complications, which may be due to immunoincompetence from the loss of gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT). This study examines the ontogeny of GALT in the rat with SBS. A total of 36 3-week-old rats were divided into two groups: I, sham operated (C, n = 16); and II (SBS, n = 20), with a 50% resection of small intestine with jejunoileostomy. At 4, 5, 6, and 10 weeks of age the animals were sacrificed and the GALT was assessed by video analysis and immunoperoxidase monoclonal antibodies, OX8 (CD8), W-3/25 (CD4), and MARA-2 (IgA). The data were expressed as positive staining lymphocytes per 10(4) microns2 (mean +/- SD). table; see text In the sham group there was an increase in all lymphocyte subsets over time. In the SBS group there was a rapid fall in OX8 and W-3/25 T-lymphocytes by 10 weeks, with no increase in IgA plasma cells at 6 and 10 weeks. This study demonstrates that in the massive bowel resection in the suckling rat decreases the T- and B-lymphocyte populations in the GALT. This lack of development may underlie the associated infectious complications and malabsorption in SBS.
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PMID:The ontogeny of the gut-associated lymphoid tissue in short bowel syndrome. 233 23

Nutritional support, whether enteral or parenteral, is an important part of the treatment of IBD. Inadequate oral intake, malabsorption, and increased gastrointestinal losses all contribute to malnutrition. Weight loss, cachexia, abnormal body composition, and multiple micronutrient deficiencies are common. Acute repletion of body weight and correction of specific nutrient deficiencies improve the patients' sense of well-being and decrease morbidity, especially in the perioperative period. If a short period of bowel rest (10 to 14 days) is part of the medical therapy of acute exacerbations of IBD, TPN should be administered to prevent further nutritional deficiencies. Chronic undernutrition, and growth failure in children, usually are best treated by intensive enteral supplementation. Prolonged bowel rest and TPN (4 to 6 weeks) have not been shown to improve outcome but may be appropriate in carefully selected patients. Long-term home TPN may be necessary for patients who have short gut syndrome. The mainstay of treatment for IBD is medical therapy including corticosteroids. Timely and appropriate surgery is equally important and should not be considered a last resort. Careful nutritional management is essential but is adjunctive rather than primary therapy.
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PMID:Nutrition and inflammatory bowel disease. 250 55

Nutritional rehabilitation of malnourished children with growth arrest is generally associated with a catch-up of growth but the occurrence of this compensatory phenomenon in adulthood is not well recognized. We investigated a case of maturation and growth acceleration secondary to nutritional intervention in a 22-y-old patient. After treatment for a rhabdomyosarcoma of the bladder at age 7 y, the patient developed severe malabsorption secondary to radiation enteritis and short bowel syndrome. As a result of profound malnutrition, growth and maturation were severely impaired. Initiation of home total parenteral nutrition at age 22 y led to an increase in height, substantial weight gain, advancement of bone age, and sexual maturation evidenced by appearance of secondary sex characteristics and normalization of hormone concentrations. The development of signs of puberty and a growth spurt appearing at this late age clearly show the potential for maturation and growth once malnutrition is corrected.
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PMID:TPN-induced catch-up of growth in a 22-y-old male with radiation enteritis. 251 3

On the basis of personal experience and the latest reports in the literature on the treatment of short bowel syndrome, the clinical and therapeutic aspects of the malabsorption syndrome arising after removal of long segments of the small intestine are analysed with emphasis on the salient features and particularly the critical phase constituted by the transfer from parenteral to enteral and oral nutrition whose importance for the maintenance of life is objectively confirmed by the adaptive response of the remaining small bowel (compensatory hypertrophy).
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PMID:[Treatment of short bowel syndrome]. 251 34

The effect of a long acting somatostatin analogue SMS 201-995 on stomal effluents in patients with severe short bowel syndrome was investigated in a double blind placebo controlled balance study. Six patients, five with Crohn's disease and one with radiation enteropathy were studied. Five patients had a jejunostomy and one an ileostomy. The patients had a normal food intake, but because of severe malabsorption had received home parenteral nutrition for several years. Faecal mass was reduced (p less than 0.005) and intestinal net sodium absorption was increased (p less than 0.005) by intravenous infusion of SMS 25 micrograms/h. Net absorption of potassium, calcium, magnesium phosphate, zinc, nitrogen and fat was not influenced. Subcutaneous injections of 50 micrograms SMS every 12 hours had a similar effect on net intestinal absorption of sodium and water. Four patients continued with a five to six months open follow up study when subcutaneous SMS in the same dose was administered by the patients at home. The effect on faecal sodium loss persisted, but in one patient faecal mass gradually increased and finally exceeded pretreatment values. SMS may decrease net absorption of water and sodium following reduced secretion of digestive juices rather than by increasing absorptive capacity. SMS may be useful as an antidiarrhoeal drug in patients with high output jejuno- or ileostomies, but in patients who need permanent parenteral nutrition the effect is too small to significantly alter management.
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PMID:Effect of a long acting somatostatin analogue SMS 201-995 on jejunostomy effluents in patients with severe short bowel syndrome. 231 26

Effects of jejunal infusion of a saline solution, a protein meal, and a mixed protein and carbohydrate meal on biliopancreatic secretions were compared in six healthy volunteers. Protein infusion stimulated biliopancreatic secretions whereas carbohydrate infusion inhibited these secretions compared with saline infusion. The roles of lipid, carbohydrate, and caloric load on the inhibition of pancreatic secretions by jejunal infusion of nutrients was investigated in six other healthy volunteers. Carbohydrate, lipid, and the mixed meal inhibited pancreatic secretions whereas the carbohydrate solution was the only one that inhibited biliary secretion. These studies indicate that the mechanism of jejunal brake seems mainly related to the jejunal caloric load. In malabsorption or in the short bowel syndrome, a high caloric load or unabsorbed nutrients in the jejunum further inhibits pancreatic secretion, contributing to the loss of nutrients from the intestinal tract.
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PMID:Inhibitory effect of high caloric load of carbohydrates or lipids on human pancreatic secretions: a jejunal brake. 275 10

To determine the frequency of gastric acid hypersecretion in infants with chronic malabsorption due to short bowel syndrome, acid secretory function was determined in 23 infants with malabsorption 2-22 months following small bowel resection and in a control group of 14 chronically ill, age- and weight-matched infants who did not undergo bowel resection. The prevalence of basal acid hypersecretion (defined as acid output 2 SD above the mean for the control group) was 17% (4 of 23). Basal gastric acid hypersecretion was associated with two factors: massive small bowel resection and initiation of enteral feeding. Basal acid hypersecretion was present on the initial study in 3 of 7 infants with less than one-third of the small bowel remaining, but in only 1 of 16 with more than one-third intact (p less than 0.05). Hypergastrinemia was present in 3 of 6 infants following massive bowel resection, but in only 1 of 15 with more than one-third intact (p less than 0.05), but hypergastrinemia was not consistently associated with hypersecretion. In each of six previously unfed infants, a trial of enteral feeding resulted in increased basal and maximal acid output. Three infants developed basal acid hypersecretion during initiation of enteral feeding. There was no evidence of pentagastrin-stimulated maximal acid hypersecretion in any of the infants.
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PMID:Gastric acid hypersecretion in short bowel syndrome in infants: association with extent of resection and enteral feeding. 308 80

One hundred and sixty three children who received total parenteral nutrition (TPN), including 7 cases of short bowel syndrome, were studied to evaluate the role of TPN in the management of infants with extremely short bowel. Three of the seven were died of sepsis related with central venous catheter (CV catheter) during the period of malabsorption when TPN was necessary. Two children of other diseases were died of catheter sepsis, 5 out of 163 in total, making the mortality late of TPN 3%. Incidence of CV catheter related complications was significantly less frequent in Broviac catheter when compared with conventional Silastic catheter (p less than 0.01). Another significant complication of TPN in cases of short bowel syndrome was hepatic dysfunction. Cholestatic liver dysfunction seemed to be cleared when enteral feeding was started even with TPN going on. Oral feeding should be started in the early postoperative period with concomitant TPN covering the fluid loss. A case of copper deficiency with high output jejunostomy and a case of urolithiasis with hyperoxaluria complicated with short bowel were reported.
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PMID:[Long-term TPN for short bowel syndrome]. 314 68

Despite the recent advent of total parenteral nutrition (TPN), the long-term survival of the patients with short gut syndrome is not satisfactory with complications of catheter-related sepsis and cholestasis. The causes of short gut syndrome in pediatric surgery are multiple intestinal atresias, necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), and midgut volvulus. For the multiple atresias, multiple anastomosis without resection has been successfully undertaken to avoid developing short gut syndrome for the last 17 years. For the massive involvement of the intestines due to NEC or volvulus, high jejunostomy and peritoneal drainage with TPN support have been tried for the last two patients and successfully weaned from the TPN within two months after closure of jejunostomy. However, in case 2 malabsorption has been persistent presumably due to a severe degree of mucosal damage occurring in the remaining intestines. Whether this eventually gets back to the normal or not is unknown. For the patients with short gut syndrome, small bowel reversal procedure was successfully done and now doing well 10 years after surgery. This paper reports details of these 3 cases.
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PMID:[Surgical managements of massive involvement of small bowel and of short gut syndrome]. 322 90

We examined the absorptive capacity and the nutritional condition of 14 infants with short bowel syndrome, whose residual small intestine was 90 cm or less. Their age ranged from 1 year to 18 years. Examined items were body weight, height, serum albumin, total cholesterol, triglyceride, fat soluble vitamins, trace elements and rapid turn over protein as markers of the nutritional condition. Fecal fat, fecal bile acid, d-xylose absorption test, sugar-, amino acid-evoked potential difference in the small intestine and disaccharidase activity of the mucosa were examined as markers of the absorptive capacity. Our results showed that the body weight was below the normal range in the patients with small intestine of less than 50 cm. Most nutritional markers were within normal range, however, cholesterol and vitamin D were low in the patients with fat malabsorption, especially in patients with less than 50 cm of small intestine. Fecal bile acid was higher than the normal range in all the patients. Potential difference was in normal range or slightly lower than normal in all the patients. We concluded that infants with less than 50 cm of small intestine had malabsorption of sugar, protein and fat. Therefore, prolonged nutrient support, especially fat, is necessary.
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PMID:[Nutritional condition and absorptive capacity of 14 infants with short bowel syndrome]. 322 92


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