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)

Human intestinal nematodes, all of which can be acquired in the continental United States, can cause a variety of ills including iron deficiency anemia, surgical emergencies, eosinophilic pneumonia, malabsorption, dysentery, myositis, and death. The severity of illness is related to the number of parasites acquired exogenously or the ability of the parasite to multiply within the host. Diagnosis of clinically significant infection can usually be made by stool examination, and appropriate treatment requires an understanding of the life-span and pathogenic potential of the parasite.
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PMID:Human intestinal nematodiasis in the United States. 503 12

Patients with subnormal serum vitamin B12 concentrations were tested for absorption of protein bound vitamin B12 and compared with controls. Absorption of the protein bound vitamin appeared to decrease with increasing age in healthy subjects. Differences between the result of this test and the result of the Schilling test in patients who had undergone gastric surgery were confirmed; such differences were also seen in some patients who had iron deficiency anaemia, an excessive alcohol intake, or folate deficiency. Defective absorption was also found in six patients with an adequate dietary intake of vitamin B12, normal Schilling test results, low serum vitamin concentrations, and tissue changes responding to treatment with vitamin B12. Malabsorption of the vitamin from protein bound sources, which is not detected by the Schilling test, may produce vitamin B12 deficiency of clinical importance.
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PMID:Malabsorption of protein bound vitamin B12. 642 28

We treated a patient with a jejunal diverticulum with a rare complication of iron deficiency anemia. The anemia was improved following resection of the diverticulum. It was revealed that the iron deficiency anemia was due to the malabsorption caused by the jejunal diverticulum.
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PMID:Iron deficiency anemia caused by a giant jejunal diverticulum. 643 Nov 63

A brief summary of the research carried out on the problem of geophagia is reported in this paper. Geophagia was a common finding among Turkish children and women in villages, associated with severe iron deficiency anemia in addition to zinc depletion. The syndrome characterized by geophagia, iron deficiency anemia, growth retardation, hypogonadism and zinc deficiency has been observed in both sexes in Turkey for several decades. Zinc deficiency has been also shown by our group in this syndrome. The decreased concentrations of zinc in serum, plasma, RBC, hair and urine were measured by atomic absorption spectrophotometer. Oral iron (both inorganic and radioactive iron) and zinc absorption tests were carried out with and without clay and revealed decreased iron and zinc absorption in some cases with prolonged geophagia. Therefore, malabsorption of iron and zinc was considered to be an additional and/or a new finding in the syndrome. Furthermore, Turkish clay most probably inhibits zinc absorption in a way similar to its inhibition of iron absorption. It was worthy of observation that some Turkish patients with this syndrome had a thalassemia-like appearance with similar skull-bone changes. Finally, growth retardation and delayed puberty were shown to be corrected by oral zinc treatment for 6-month terms. Linear growth and sexual maturation were found to be greater in the zinc-treated group than in the controls.
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PMID:Geophagia in Turkey: iron and zinc deficiency, iron and zinc absorption studies and response to treatment with zinc in geophagia cases. 665 8

Three siblings had iron deficiency anemia without evidence of reduced iron intake or gastrointestinal blood loss. They failed to respond to oral iron therapy, and malabsorption of oral medicinal iron was demonstrated in two of the children. All three had a partial but incomplete hematologic response to intramuscular iron dextran treatment. There was no evidence for other well-defined causes of hypochromic microcytic anemia or for a generalized disorder of intestinal absorption. These three patients appear to have a familial disorder characterized by impaired iron absorption and utilization, similar to that observed in the mk/mk mouse.
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PMID:Malabsorption and defective utilization of iron in three siblings. 722 50

A metabolic and physiological assessment was carried out in 14 patients who had undergone restorative proctocolectomy with ileal reservoir more than six months previously. The haemoglobin was normal in all but one and plasma electrolytes and serum albumin, calcium, phosphorus, and red cell folate estimations were normal in all. Five patients had low serum iron levels of whom one had an iron deficiency anaemia. The 24 hour faecal fat output was normal in all patients and there was no case of vitamin B12 malabsorption as judged by the Schilling test, although four patients had marginally low values. These were not associated with increased bacterial counts in the faeces within the reservoir and there was no evidence to support a diagnosis of stagnant loop syndrome. Inflammation of the reservoir mucosa was, however, associated with higher counts of aerobic bacteria than in cases where inflammation was absent. Subtotal villous atrophy or inflammation was seen in biopsies of the reservoir in six patients. The mean faecal output per 24 hours was 659 +/- 259 g and the mean reservoir volume was 330 +/- 78 ml. Mean resting anal canal pressure was significantly lower in patients with a mucous leakage per anum than in those without, while manometry of the reservoir showed no alteration of pressure over a period of one hour before and after a meal. A positive rectosphincteric reflex was observed in nine patients.
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PMID:Restorative proctocolectomy with ileal reservoir: a pathophysiological assessment. 726 23

A 45-year-old woman reported the development of thigh pain followed within a year by proximal muscle weakness. Clinical findings included short stature, prominent kyphoscoliosis, proximal weakness, and brisk reflexes. Recognition of an increased level of serum alkaline phosphatase and hypophosphatemia led to the diagnosis of osteomalacia. Identification of iron deficiency anemia and hypocholesterolemia implicated previously unrecognized gluten-sensitive enteropathy with associated vitamin D malabsorption as the cause of the osteomalacia. Adherence to a gluten-free diet and treatment with vitamin D2 resulted in weight gain, resolution of pain, and improvement in strength within 3 months. Painful proximal weakness and hyperreflexia may be the initial and primary manifestations of osteomalacia, a readily treatable cause of muscle and bone disease.
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PMID:Osteomalacic myopathy. 787 Jan 21

Twenty-six Ascaris-infected children and 21 control children (10 of whom had iron-deficiency anaemia) were subjected to haematological and oral iron absorption tests. The levels of oral iron absorption by the infected children and by the healthy controls were similar, whereas the level of absorption by the children with iron deficiency anaemia was relatively high. It therefore appears that Ascaris infection does not lead to iron malabsorption and iron deficiency anaemia in children.
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PMID:Effects of ascaris infection on iron absorption in children. 831 72

In the last 5 years we observed four cases of oligosymptomatic celiac disease. All patients presented isolated manifestations of malabsorption, but we did not find the typical symptoms of celiac disease, like diarrhea or steatorrhea. Three patients showed an iron deficiency anemia refractory to therapy and one patient a distinct osteomalacia with spontaneous bone fractures. In all these cases we were able to point out the typical microscopic feature and tissue antibodies of the celiac disease. Treating the patients with a gluten-free diet, the symptoms disappeared. These observations demonstrate the importance of the small bowel biopsy in cases of causative unknown isolated manifestations of malabsorption, which possibly belong to the celiac disease.
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PMID:[Oligosymptomatic sprue--report of 4 cases]. 841 71

Iron deficiency anaemia may be due to occult bleeding into the gut. However, although clinical investigations may show a high frequency of gastrointestinal tract disease in these patients, the cause-effect relationship between the lesions detected and anaemia remain uncertain. This study aimed to establish whether lesions detected by endoscopy or imaging of the gastrointestinal tract in patients with unexplained iron deficiency anaemia are bleeding continuously. Routine clinical tests were performed in 42 patients with unexplained iron deficiency anaemia referred to this unit. Whole gut lavage and assay of haemoglobin in the gut perfusate were also performed. The main outcome measures were clinical diagnoses (by imaging and endoscopy of the upper gastrointestinal tract and colon); the concentration of haemoglobin in whole gut lavage fluid; and the calculated gastrointestinal blood loss per day. There were 73 clinical, dietary, or iatrogenic factors of possible aetiological importance in the 42 patients--poor diet (10), gross gastrointestinal abnormality (34 in 28 patients), malabsorption (14), coagulation problems (6), and NSAID use (9). The gut lavage test showed, however, that at the time the test was performed, only eight patients were losing more than 2 ml blood daily into the gut, including all four with colonic cancer, one with diffuse gastric vascular ectasia, and one with severe ulcerative oesophagitis. It is concluded that occult gastrointestinal bleeding sufficient to cause anaemia was evident in only 19% of 42 patients. There was a high frequency of other potential causes of iron deficiency in the remainder, suggesting that most of the gastrointestinal diseases and lesions detected in them were probably coincidental. Factors other than blood loss should be considered and treated in patients referred for anaemia assessment.
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PMID:Use of whole gut perfusion to investigate gastrointestinal blood loss in patients with iron deficiency anaemia. 856 38


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