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)

Although secondary vitamin E deficiency causes a reversible neurologic disorder in children with chronic cholestasis, the effect of this deficiency state on other organ systems is unknown. We studied the effects of vitamin E therapy on selected gastrointestinal and hepatic functions in five children with chronic cholestasis and well-documented biochemical and neurologic evidence of vitamin E deficiency. After 2 to 3 years of oral or parenteral vitamin E therapy, there was no improvement in fecal fat losses, severity of vitamin E malabsorption (as measured by an oral vitamin E tolerance test) or total serum fatty acid concentrations. Serial analyses of liver function blood tests demonstrated a marked decline in fasting serum cholylglycine concentrations during 18 to 31 months of vitamin E therapy, while other liver function tests showed no consistent changes. We conclude that vitamin E deficiency does not appear to alter intestinal absorption of fat or vitamin E; however, vitamin E deficiency may further impair already compromised hepatic function during pathologic conditions such as cholestasis.
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PMID:Correction of vitamin E deficiency in children with chronic cholestasis. II. Effect on gastrointestinal and hepatic function. 379 2

A 30-year-old woman was thought to have Friedreich's disease because of progressive ataxia, dysarthria, and titubation from age 3 years. Her diet was normal, and there were neither symptoms nor laboratory evidence of liver disease or fat malabsorption. Serum vitamin E content and the ratio of serum vitamin E to total serum lipid were very low, but serum vitamin A, cholylglycine, and lipid levels were normal, as was an oral vitamin E tolerance test. Muscle biopsy showed the lysosomal inclusions of vitamin E deficiency. Mitochondria had normal oxidative phosphorylation using polarographic assays. The cause of her vitamin E deficiency was unknown.
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PMID:Friedreich's disease: V. Variant form with vitamin E deficiency and normal fat absorption. 379 40

We studied a 19-year-old man with vitamin E deficiency without intestinal fat malabsorption. In addition to recognized neurologic complications of vitamin E deficiency, he had dystonic posturing and bradykinesia.
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PMID:Isolated deficiency of vitamin E with progressive neurologic deterioration. 382 55

A well-defined degenerative neurological condition has been associated with cholestatic liver disease in children. This syndrome, heralded by gait and limb ataxia, areflexia, and proprioceptive and vibratory sensory loss, has also been observed in abetalipoproteinemia (Bassen-Kornzweig syndrome), cystic fibrosis, and intestinal malabsorption states. A significant body of evidence suggests that vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol) deficiency is in large part responsible for this condition. In this article, a patient manifesting this syndrome is reported, and the current status of the vitamin E deficiency state is reviewed.
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PMID:Neurologic complications of vitamin E deficiency: case report and review of the literature. 391 52

A 72-year-old man had severe malabsorption, progressive retinopathy, and spinocerebellar degeneration 32 years after gastric surgery, blind loop formation, and intestinal bacterial overgrowth. Clinical and pathologic features were typical of vitamin E deficiency; vitamin E was nearly undetectable in serum and profoundly low in adipose tissue. Vitamin E blood levels initially improved on treatment with antibiotics; after additional vitamin E supplementation, there was clinical improvement.
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PMID:Blind loop syndrome, vitamin E malabsorption, and spinocerebellar degeneration. 397 92

We studied a 47-year-old man with spinocerebellar degeneration and malabsorption due to celiac enteropathy; the serum vitamin E level was normal. The neurologic disorder initially deteriorated despite improvement of small bowel histology on a gluten-free diet and vitamin E therapy, but later stabilized. The etiology of the neurologic disorder in adult celiac disease has not been identified and does not appear to be vitamin E deficiency.
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PMID:Celiac disease and spinocerebellar degeneration with normal vitamin E status. 402 55

Fifteen years after onset of a malabsorption syndrome, a 49-year-old man had sensory and oculomotor disorder with marked vitamin E deficiency. After 6 months of treatment with high parenteral doses of vitamin E, the neurologic signs slowly receded, but the patient died of gastrointestinal hemorrhage. Autopsy and sural nerve biopsy showed the changes in both central and peripheral nerves; these changes are considered characteristic of vitamin E deficiency.
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PMID:Neurologic disorder of vitamin E deficiency in acquired intestinal malabsorption. 650 27

Several authors have recently reported a neurological disorder associated with chronic vitamin E deficiency in man. Except in one patient, this deficiency has always been secondary to an underlying disease resulting in lipid malabsorption. We report a second case of such a neurological syndrome in a patient in whom vitamin E deficiency was an isolated finding. The clinical picture in our patient was characterized by a diffuse muscle weakness most prominent distally and in the lower limbs, generalized areflexia, a decrease in proprioception and vibration sense and slight limb and gait ataxia. His condition improved on alpha tocopherol therapy so that it is very likely that vitamin E deficiency is responsible for his neurological deficit. Since in our patient as well as in several other reported cases this condition has been treatable, it is important that this syndrome be recognized in children presenting a suggestive clinical picture even if they do not have lipid malabsorption.
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PMID:A progressive neurological syndrome associated with an isolated vitamin E deficiency. 650 2

A 27-year-old woman who had undergone extensive small bowel resection at age 14 months developed kyphoscoliosis, ocular palsies, constricted visual fields, retinitis pigmentosa, progressive ataxia, muscular weakness, nearly absent vibration and impaired position sense, areflexia, extensor plantar responses, and macrocytic anemia. Her condition closely resembled Bassen-Kornzweig disease, but lipoprotein electrophoresis was normal. Mild fat malabsorption, lactic acidosis, and severe deficiency of vitamins A and E and carotene were documented. Serum B12 and folic acid levels were normal. During vitamin A and E therapy sufficient to elevate serum levels to the normal range, there was improvement of visual fields and visual acuity in dim light, lactic acidosis, and red cell volume. Progression of symptoms was halted during vitamin replacement therapy, and her gait improved. This syndrome is the human counterpart to vitamin E deficiency in experimental animals.
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PMID:Small bowel resection with vitamin E deficiency and progressive spinocerebellar syndrome. 654 Mar 84

Evidence that vitamin E is important for normal neurological function in humans is presented. First, in abetalipoproteinaemia early therapy with vitamin E delays and may prevent the development of the neurological complications, and in patients with established lesions treatment can arrest or reverse the neuropathy. Second, in other chronic disorders of fat absorption with severe vitamin E deficiency, neurological manifestations which are very similar to those described in untreated abetalipoproteinaemia can be improved by vitamin E. Vitamin E supplementation is therefore advisable for all patients with chronic fat malabsorption who have low serum vitamin E concentration. Serum vitamin E concentrations should also be measured in patients with spinocerebellar disorders, whatever the aetiology.
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PMID:Vitamin E and neurological function: abetalipoproteinaemia and other disorders of fat absorption. 655 2


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