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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The intraluminal fate of orally administered radioactive vitamin B12 has been studied in control subjects with normal vitamin B12 absorption and those with vitamin B12
malabsorption
due to
tropical sprue
. In control subjects 1 to 21% of the dose was bound to sedimentable material and 37 to 75% was bound to immunoreactive intrinsic factor. In subjects with vitamin B12
malabsorption
due to
tropical sprue
, the results were identical with the control subjects. Bacteriological studies showed a statistically significant correlation between both the number of flora in the jejunum and the number of bacteroides in both the jejunum and ileum and vitamin B12
malabsorption
. In patients with
tropical sprue
who have normal intrinsic factor secretion, the vitamin B12 absorptive defect is not due to binding of the vitamin to bacteria or to alteration to the intrinsic factor vitamin B12 complex in the intestinal lumen. The lesion appears to be one of the mucosal cell receptors or of the cells themselves, possibly caused by bacterial toxins.
...
PMID:Vitamin B12 absorption--a study of intraluminal events in control subjects and patients with tropical sprue. 0 57
Non-specific ileojejunitis, characterised by mild to moderate structural changes in the intestinal mucosa and often associated with asymptomatic
malabsorption
, is known to occur in the tropics and in countries with hot climates. This acquired condition is probably related to environmental factors, and some consider it to be a subclinical form of
tropical sprue
. Changes in the intestinal mucosa typical of non-specific ileojejunitis were found in 10 indigenous Indians as well as 5 people of Latin stock living in the Southern Peruvian sierra, where
tropical sprue
has not as yet been demonstrated and which has a temperate climate.
...
PMID:Non-specific ileojejunitis in Arequipa, Peru. 7 18
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.
...
PMID:Standardized ("trifixed") diet in the study of chronic malabsorption syndromes. 67 51
The time of breath hydrogen appearance (T) after oral lactulose was determined in 98 patients in London who had been to the tropics. Fifty-six controls from three different ethnic groups had no evidence of gastrointestinal disease; 23 had tropical
malabsorption
, which was severe in 10; and 19 had chronic diarrhoea without
malabsorption
. Mean T was significantly delayed in patients with tropical
malabsorption
compared with controls, indicating that their mouth-caecum transit rate was abnormally slow. In six patients with tropical
malabsorption
who were reinvestigated after treatment a fall in the value for T seemed to parallel clinical improvement. Three patients with diarrhoea due to chronic colonic disease had delayed T. Patients with tropical
malabsorption
have bacterial colonisation of the small intestine, which is important in the pathogenesis of the disease. Bacterial overgrowth, which sometimes occurs after infective diarrhoea in the tropics and gives rise to
tropical sprue
, is a result of stasis.
...
PMID:Delayed small-intestinal transit in tropical malabsorption. 67 84
Pteroylglutamic acid (PGA) absorption was assessed in ten untreated
tropical sprue
(TS) and eight control subjects utilizing a marker perfusion technique. Physiologic concentrations of the vitamin (25 ng/ml) dissolved in iso-osmotic solutions containing either mannitol of glucose at a concentration of 55.6 mM were perfused on each subject on two consecutive days. A statistically significant difference in PGA absorption between TS and control subjects was obtained only when glucose was present in the perfusate. Thus, unequivocal
malabsorption
of PGA is demonstrable in all subjects with TS when more refined techniques than the ones applied heretofore are utilized.
...
PMID:Pteroylglutamic acid malabsorption in tropical sprue. 80 48
A group of subjects had common features of megaloblastic anemia due to vitamin B12 deficiency, normal or high serum folate, and evidence of
intestinal malabsorption
. They were all former residents of the Caribbean area now living in New York City. Despite similar symptoms and diagnostic studies, two subjects were found to have pernicious anemia and three to have
tropical sprue
. Achlorhydria, serum anti-intrinsic factor antibody, the severity of small intestinal abnormalities, and posttherapy Schilling tests were helpful differential factors. These subjects illustrate the problems that may be encountered in differentiating
tropical sprue
and pernicious anemia.
...
PMID:Anemia and intestinal dysfunction in former residents of the Caribbean. 83 16
The respective roles of reduced dietary intake and
malabsorption
in the pathogenesis of weight loss in persons with chronic
tropical sprue
have been evaluated . Dietary intake was found to be significantly (P less than 0.001) less in a group of 45 patients with
tropical sprue
, all of whom had anorexia due to deficiency of folate and/or vitamin B12, than in a group of 51 healthy Puerto Ricans. Weight loss was equally prominent in those patients with
tropical sprue
who had normal absorption of fat and protein as in those who had excessive fecal loss and reduced absorption of these nutrients. Treatment of five sprue patients with folic acid or vitamin B12 for 2 weeks resulted in improved appetite and increased in dietary intake with weight gain in the absence of significant improvement in intestinal absorption. Treatment with oral tetracycline for a similar period of time in five other patients was not associated with vitamin repletion, return of appetite or weight gain. These observations indicate that reduced dietary intake resulting from anorexia caused by vitamin deficiency is a significant, and sometimes the most important, factor in the pathogenesis of weight loss in persons with chronic
tropical sprue
.
...
PMID:Factors responsible for weight loss in tropical sprue. 91 Jul 46
The existence of
tropical sprue
in Africa is controversial. In this paper we present 31 cases seen in Rhodesia over a 15 month period. They have the clinical features, small intestinal morphology,
malabsorption
pattern, and treatment response of
tropical sprue
. Other causes of
malabsorption
, and primary malnutrition, have been excluded. The severity of the clinical state and
intestinal malabsorption
distinguish these patients from those we have described with tropical enteropathy. The previous work on
tropical sprue
in Africa is reviewed and it is apparent that, when it has been adequately looked for, it has been found. It is clear that the question of
tropical sprue
in Africa must be re-examined and that it existence may have hitherto been concealed by the assumption that primary malnutrition is responsible for the high prevalence of deficiency states.
...
PMID:Endemic tropical sprue in Rhodesia. 100 77
Tropical enteropathy
, which may be related to
tropical sprue
, has been described in many developing countries including parts of Africa. The jejunal changes of enteropathy are seen in Rhodesians of all social and racial categories. Xylose excretion, however, is related to socioeconomic status, but not race. Upper socioeconomic Africans and Europeans excrete significantly more xylose than lower socioeconomic Africans. Vitamin B12 and fat absorption are normal, suggesting predominant involvement of the proximal small intestine.
Tropical enteropathy
in Rhodesia is similar to that seen in Nigeria but is associated with less
malabsorption
than is found in the Caribbean, the Indian subcontinent, and South East Asia. The possible aetiological factors are discussed. It is postulated that the lighter exposure of upper class Africans and Europeans to repeated gastrointestinal infections may accound for their superior xylose absorption compared with Africans of low socioeconomic circumstances. It is further suggested that the milder enteropathy seen in Africa may be explained by a lower prevalence of acute gastroenteritis than in experienced elsewhere in the tropics.
...
PMID:Tropical enteropathy in Rhodesia. 100 78
IgA heavy chain disease (alpha chain disease) was detected in a 46 year old South American (Colombian) of mixed Spanish and Indian (Mestizo) descent. The clinical course was characterized by severe
malabsorption
, initially thought to be a variant of
tropical sprue
. Jejunal mucosal biopsy revealed marked villous atrophy with heavy infiltration of the lamina propria by a single monotonous cell type which, by light microscopy, had the appearance of either a large, abnormal plasma cell or a small histiocyte. Electron microscopy of the biopsy specimen demonstrated the presence of abnormal plasma cells, lymphatic distention and abnormalities of surface epithelial cells. At autopsy a 6 by 3 cm mass was found in the right para-aortic area along with many firm 2 cm mesenteric and para-aortic lymph nodes. Histologic examination revealed the presence of a monotonous cell type similar to that found in the jejunal mucosal biopsy specimen.
...
PMID:IgA heavy chain disease. A case detected in the western hemisphere. 111 76
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