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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Oral iron and zinc tolerance tests were performed in 12 patients between 8 and 21 years of age, with
iron deficiency anemia
and geophagia. Decreased iron and zinc absorption were detected respectively in patients against the elevated absorption curves in control subjects. Iron and zinc
malabsorption
may be an additional feature of the syndrome characterized by geophagia,
iron deficiency anemia
, hepatosplenomegaly, hypogonadism and dwarfism observed in Turkey and Iran.
...
PMID:Decreased iron and zinc absorption in Turkish children with iron deficiency and geophagia. 9 53
Significant changes on a standard barium follow-through examination in celiac disease have been determined by comparison with functional changes (irritable bowel syndrome),
malabsorption
without a villous lesion (chronic pancreatitis), and a villous abnormality without
malabsorption
(dermatitis herpetiformis). Patients with
iron deficiency anemia
formed the control group. Slight jejunal dilatation (26-30 mm) was found in 15% of the celiacs and 17% of the irritable bowel patients. Dilatation in excess of 30 mm and/or effacement of jejunal fold pattern occurred only with an abnormal jejunal biopsy, in 54% of the celiacs and 33% of the dermatitis herpetiformis patients. Patients with
malabsorption
by itself and 46% of the celiacs could not be distinguished from those with irritable bowel syndrome. The concept of a
malabsorption
pattern is considered invalid, and the diagnosis of celiac disease can be reliably established only by peroral jejunal biopsy.
...
PMID:Relevance of the barium follow-through examination in the diagnosis of adult celiac disease. 55 35
The case of a six year and ten months old girl with an
iron deficiency anemia
of long duration is reported. The lack of iron was associated with folic acid deficiency, which disguished the hematologic pattern, presenting a normocromic and aniso-poiquilocytic anemia. Long duration of iron deficiency allowed for evaluation of the iron deficiency effects on weight and height growth which were diminished as well as on the functioning and morphology of the gastrointestinal system, showing
malabsorption syndrome
which improve with iron supply.
...
PMID:[Iron deficiency anemia in childhood. A case with associated deficiency of folic acid (author's transl)]. 93 74
From 1968 to 1975 532 intestinal suction biopsies were obtained in 371 children and adolescents using the paediatric Watson capsule. The youngest patient was 2 months old; a 9 months old infant has the lowest body weight of 3 520 g. Mucosal specimens were mainly taken from the upper jejunum. The whole procedure mostly required not more than 30 minutes. No serious complications were seen. Due to technical troubles several attempts were ineffective; the rate of successful biopsies was 89%. The paediatric Watson capsule proved to be easy to handle, mostly reliable, and therefore very suitable for intestinal biopsy in childhood. The dissecting microscope and histological findings were classified into four groups: normal mucosa, slight, moderate and severe mucosal lesions. Severe lesions were almost only demonstrated in patients with coeliac disease: in the active phase, in the early phase of remission under gluten free diet and during gluten loading or normal diet respectively, furthermore in an infant with protracted diarrhoea and in a child with agammaglobulinemia. A flat mucosa is not pathognomonic for coeliac disease but a constant morphological attribute and conclusive for diagnosis. Moderate mucosal lesions were seen in the remission of coeliac disease or during gluten loading and in some cases with protracted diarrhoea of infancy and with chronic
malabsorption
of unknown origin, furthermore in a child with immunoglobulin deficiency and in another one with
iron deficiency anemia
. The examination with the dissecting microscope can be performed very easily and makes obvious a very exact diagnostic information which is completed by the histological examination.
...
PMID:[Intestinal suction biopsy in childhood of experiences during 1968-1975 (author's transl)]. 98 26
Diagnosis is often overlooked because symptoms develop slowly and insidiously and many patients don't complain about them. Then too, the giddiness, apathy, confusion, clumsiness, and similar problems may be considered simply signs of "old age."
Iron deficiency anemia
is the most common type in old people. It's usually due to gastrointestinal bleeding, but there may be a second, less obvious cause. The classic picture of low serum iron, high total iron-binding capacity, and low iron-binding saturation is sometimes distorted. Usually, many studies are needed to confirm the suspicion of a vitamin B12 or folic acid deficiency. A raised mean corpuscular volume in itself signals the need for further investigation. In patients with macrocytosis, the bone marrow must be examined. Tests for
intestinal malabsorption
must be considered too. Repeated blood tests are essential in patients being treated for any type of anemia. Iron deficiency may hide evidence of folate or B12 deficiency. And iron therapy may lessen bleeding from colonic cancer, delaying diagnosis until it's too late to operate.
...
PMID:Anemia--a common but never a normal concomitant of aging. 108 61
Trying to find out the clinical elements that define the precise indication ofr a jejunal biopsy, 28 children with several pathological conditions were studied. They were 12 cases of kwashiorkor, 11 cases with chronic diarrhea, two cases of chronic pancreatitis, 2 cases with
ferropenic anemia
resistant to the oral treatment with iron and one case of chilous ascitis. It is concluded that only in those cases in which the biopsy is the precise medium for diagnosis is where it would be indicated, such as intestinal lymphangiectasis or in those cases with signs or evidence of
malabsorption
without diarrhea. The chronic diarrhea per se does not seem to be a formal indication for biopsy.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic value of jejunal biopsy]. 113 14
Sideropenic anemia
is a common long-term complication of surgical bilio-pancreatic bypass for morbid obesity, and is frequently resistant to oral iron therapy. To study the pathogenesis of this phenomenon we investigated 7 such patients clinically and biologically, with special emphasis on iron absorption. Our results show that sideropenia, consistently present and frequently complicated by anemia, is due to deficient iron absorption and that this
malabsorption
is non-selective. Replacement therapy, when indicated, should therefore use the parenteral route.
...
PMID:[Biliopancreatic bypass and disorders of iron absorption]. 175 51
A group of 11 children with
iron deficiency anemia
were studied with respect to intestinal structure and function. In six cases there were histological abnormalities of intestinal mucosa in varying degrees consisting of villous damage, increased activity in the crypts, increased lymphoplasmocytic infiltration and changes in the surface epithelium. Ultrastructurally, microvilli lesions, mitochondrial changes and an increase in lysosomes were observed. Relative
malabsorption
of iron and d-xylose
malabsorption
were present in a minority of patients. Functional and structural changes were correlated. Our results suggest that these changes are due to impairment of cell metabolism.
...
PMID:Intestinal effects of iron deficiency anemia in children. 184 86
Among 10 children with giardiasis, eight had iron deficiency;
iron deficiency anemia
was the main complaint in three. Evaluation of iron absorption by the oral iron load test demonstrated a subnormal response (i.e., increase in serum iron levels of less than 100 micrograms/dl) in all eight patients with iron deficiency. In contrast, in two iron-sufficient patients with giardiasis the response to an oral iron load was normal. Xylose absorption was abnormal in five of the 10 patients. After metronidazole dosing, iron absorption became normal in seven patients but remained abnormal in one patient, who also had IgA deficiency. Xylose absorption became normal in all five patients who underwent a second test, but remained abnormal in the patient with IgA deficiency. Concomitant morphologic-studies of jejunal biopsy material from these patients revealed moderate changes in the intestinal mucosa of two patients. We conclude that
malabsorption
of iron is a complication of giardiasis.
...
PMID:Iron malabsorption in giardiasis. 400 42
We have developed a polyacrylamide gradient gel electrophoretic method to quantitate apo-, mono-, and diferric transferrin based upon differences in their molecular size. Purified transferrin saturated to different extents (3% to 98%) with iron showed proportions of the three forms as predicted from an approximately random distribution of iron between the two metal-binding sites. The iron distributions in sera of 14 normal individuals similarly correlated with the predicted values. In contrast, 22 of 43 patients with diseases associated with abnormalities in iron or transferrin metabolism had a disproportionate increase in monoferric transferrin. This abnormality occurred in seven of nine patients who had received bone marrow transplants, seven of 14 with chronic liver disease, and eight of nine menstruating women with probable
iron deficiency anemia
. Interestingly, 11 patients with
malabsorption
or chronic renal disease had normal iron distributions. The finding of abnormal distributions of iron on transferrin suggests that gradient gel analysis may be a useful tool for studying the physiologic mechanisms controlling iron utilization.
...
PMID:Quantitation of apo-, mono-, and diferric transferrin by polyacrylamide gradient gel electrophoresis in patients with disorders of iron metabolism. 406 29
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