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

Fecal excretion of labeled bile acid (14C-24-cholic acid) was distinctly increased in two infants with protracted diarrhea, whereas four patients with steatorrhea due to pancreatic or mucosal abnormalities and five patients with mild chronic diarrhea had no excess fecal loss of bile acid. The loss of 14C-24-cholic acid in our patients with intractable diarrhea was similar to that observed in four infants who had undergone ileal resection. The ratio of mean 24-hour excretion of bile acid to that of a non-absorbable marker, polyethylene glycol, confirmed the malabsorption of bile acid in the patients with intractable diarrhea or ileal resection. These results differ significantly (p less than 0.05) from excretion ratios obtained in patients with either steatorrhea or chronic diarrhea. The extent of the loss of bile acid was not significantly related to the rate of fecal fat excretion. There was no direct correlation of fecal weight with the rate of bile acid excretion. Ileal function, as further assessed by the Schilling test with exogenous intrinsic factor, was grossly abnormal in both of the patients with intractable diarrhea.
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PMID:Bile acid malabsorption--a consequence of terminal ileal dysfunction in protracted diarrhea of infancy. 83 Aug 89

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

The simultaneous use of 131I-triolein and 75Se-triether, a nonabsorbable marker, in a single oral dose to estimate fat absorption from incomplete fecal collections was tested in rats with and without induced steatorrhea. The results in normal rats showed that analysis of single stool samples allows a valid estimate of fat absorption as defined by the balance study based on the total fecal recovery of 131I. However, in the few normal rats with poor absorption, the absorption values from successively excreted stools showed a tendency to increase. Similar findings were obtained from biliary fistula rats with marked steatorrhea. No evidence of different intestinal transit rates of test fat and marker was observed in bile-diverted rats, thus suggesting that the observed inconsistency in fat absorption values from different stool specimens reflects intraprandial differences in the absorption of fat. Studies on rats subjected to intestinal ischemia do not support the suggestion of others that separation of fat and triether will occur if a mucosal defect is involved as the cause of fat malabsorption. It is concluded that this dual isotope technique may be of value in the clinical estimation of fat absorption, as it offers important technical advantages over conventional fat balance studies.
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PMID:Estimation of fat absorption from single fecal specimens using 131I-triolein and 75Se-triether. A study in rats with and without induced steatorrhea. 83 88

Meal-stimulated duodenal bile acid concentrations were measured in 38 control subjects and in 138 patients with various gastrointestinal diseases with or without fat malabsorption. In controls, the duodenal bile acid concentrations were normally distributed after Iogarithmic transformation, with a mean of 10.8 mM/1 (range: 5.4-21.5 mM/1). In general, the lower normal limit, 5.4 mM/1, discriminated well between patients with or without steatorrhea in whom other causes of fat malabsorption had been ruled out. The combination of intraluminal bile acid deficiency and steatorrhea was most often encountered in patientswit h hepatic disease, ileal disorders, and in the stagnant loop syndrome. Measurements of duodenal bile acid concentrations may serve to detect disorders of bile acid metabolism and thereby elucidate the pathogenesis of fat malabsorption syndromes.
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PMID:Duodenal bile acid concentrations in fat malabsorption syndromes. 83 64

This study was undertaken because of reports of a marked increase in fecal bile acid excretion by children with cystic fibrosis. We attempted to confirm this finding by performing [1-14C]cholylglycine breath tests and by measuring fecal bile acid and fat excretion in patients with cystic fibrosis and acquired pancreatic insufficiency. Studies were done when patients were taking pancreatic enzymes (Cotazym) and also without medication. 14CO2 excretion in breath was normal in patients with acquired pancreatic insufficiency and even lower in cystic fibrosis, both with and without Cotazym therapy. Fecal bile acid excretion was slightly elevated in both groups without Cotazym and became normal with Cotazym in patients with acquired pancreatic insufficiency. Steatorrhea was present in both patient groups and improved during Cotazym therapy. Bile acid malabsorption in cystic fibrosis and acquired pancreatic insufficiency is minimal and probably not clinically important.
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PMID:Minimal bile acid malabsorption and normal bile acid breath tests in cystic fibrosis and acquired pancreatic insufficiency. 83 20

The postoperative blind-loop syndrome can occur after side-to-side, end-to side or by-pass anastomoses of the gut and presents clinically as malabsorption syndrome. Pathogenetically, stasis or slowing of the bowel movements will cause a rapid increase of pathogenic bacteria in the small intestine. Malabsorption is characterized by 3 symptoms: Loss of weight, anemia, steatorrhoea. The method of choice for therapy is to perform a new, end-to-end, anastomosis of the intestine in order to re-establish a physiological situation. During the last 6 years 14 patients with malabsorption syndromes of varying degrees were operated upon: 6 had pure small intestinal anastomoses, 7 anastomoses between the small and large intestine and 1 patient had a side-to-side sigmoidal anastomosis. In all patients the side-to-side or by-pass anastomoses could be reversed.
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PMID:[The blind-loop syndrome after side-to-side anastomoses of the gut (author's transl)]. 85 33

Sixty-three unselected cases of giardiasis, with no evidence of other systemic disease, were screened for evidence of steatorrhoea. No patient had any evidence of protein-energy malnutrition. Seventeen (27%) of the cases had steatorrhoea; three (17-8%) of the 17 patients having steatorrhoea also had D-xylose malabsorption. Vitamin B12 absorption was normal in all. Bacterial culture and qualitative analysis of bile salt in jejunal fluid was carried out in all the 17 cases having steatorrhoea as well as 13 cases with normal absorptive parameters (eight cases of irritable bowel syndrome and five cases of giardia infection) who served as controls. All the patients showing bacterial overgrowth had free bile acids in their duodenal aspirate. Free bile acids could also be detected in jejunal aspirates of five of the seven patients having no bacterial overgrowth. Two control cases of giardia infection with normal small bowel function and sterile duodenal aspirate showed evidence of bile salt deconjugation. The significance of these findings is discussed in relation to the pathogenesis of steatorrhoea in patients with giardiasis. The possible role of giardia in bile salt deconjugation is suggested.
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PMID:Mechanism of malabsorption in giardiasis: a study of bacterial flora and bile salt deconjugation in upper jejunum. 85 75

The vitamin B12 and bile acid metabolism was studied in 20 patients in whom a standardized Bricker procedure without irradiation was performed. No significant vitamin B12 malabsorption, steatorrhea, fecal bile acid loss or bile acid deconjugation was found. Therefore, no long-term adverse metabolic consequences of segmental preterminal ileal resection are to be expected in these patients.
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PMID:Vitamin B12 and bile acid metabolism in patients with partial iieal resection. 86 39

Malabsorption studies were performed on five Iranian patients with primary small intestinal lymphoma. The effect of oral tetracycline (1.0 g daily) was also studied in three of the above subjects. The results of breath tests (utilizing glycine-1-14C-cholic acid) were abnormal in all five subjects before the antibiotic treatment. Oral tetracycline had a striking effect towards normalizing the results of breath tests. Schilling tests (with intrinsic factor) improve in two patients and steatorrhea improved in all and there was significant weight gain. The antibiotic had no apparent effect on D-xylose or folate absorption tests. It is concluded that bacterial overgrowth in the small intestinal lumen is an important contributory factor to the malabsorption syndrome of this disease.
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PMID:Role of bacterial overgrowth in the malabsorption syndrome of primary small intestinal lymphoma in Iran. 87 55

Malabsorption was present in 29 of 40 symptomatic patients with giardiasis. Twenty-three had impaired D-xylose absorption; in 20 vitamin B12 absorption was low, and 15 patients had steatorrhoea. More severe malabsorption was associated with more marked histological abnormalities. Metronidazole, 2-0 g as a single daily dose on three successive days, produced a parasitological cure rate of 91%. In contrast, the standard course of mepacrine, 100 mg thrice daily for 10 days, eradicated the parasite in only 63% of patients. Improvements in absorption and jejunal morphology followed anti-giardial treatment. Tetracycline in eight patients failed to eradicate the parasite, intestinal absorption was unaltered, and histological appearances of the jejunal mucosa often deteriorated.
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PMID:Giardiasis: clinical and therapeutic aspects. 87 19


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