Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
While the rate of
malnutrition
is relatively modest in alcoholic patients without alcoholic liver disease, the rate of
malnutrition
is virtually 100% in patients with alcoholic hepatitis and/or alcoholic cirrhosis. The reasons for
malnutrition
in the alcoholic hepatitis patient include various factors such as anorexia, poor diet,
malabsorption
, and altered metabolic state. When the patient is hospitalized, the
malnutrition
frequently worsens because of fasting for tests, continued anorexia, and complications such as gastrointestinal bleeding. Patients with severe acute hepatitis appear to be both hypermetabolic and hypercatabolic, whereas data are much more conflicting concerning patients with more stable liver disease. Most studies suggest that patients with alcoholic liver disease require at least 60 g of protein per day to maintain positive nitrogen balance. Consistent alterations in plasma amino acid profiles occur in alcoholic liver disease, and specialized nutritional formulations have been devised to correct this amino acid profile with the intent of improving overall nutritional status, hepatic encephalopathy, and mortality. The effects of nutritional support (including use of specialized products) on outcome, on acute hepatic encephalopathy, and on chronic or latent portal systemic encephalopathy are reviewed.
...
PMID:Nutrition and alcoholic liver disease. 190 86
Wernicke encephalopathy and Korsakoff psychosis are two facets of the same disease with well-determined cerebral lesions caused by thiamine deficiency. The disease occurs mainly in alcoholics, but other conditions (
malabsorption
or severe
malnutrition
) also predispose to the risk of Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome. The incidence in Denmark is unknown. In the period 1.1.1979-31.12.1988, 24 patients (18 men and six women) were discharged from Rigshospitalet with the diagnosis Wernicke encephalopathy or Korsakoff psychosis. This represents about 0.05% of all admissions in the period. Eighteen out of the 24 cases (75%) were admitted in the past three years (1986-88). The mean age was 55 years. Twenty patients admitted alcohol abuse. The presenting symptoms and the patients' complaints showed great variety and were often related to other alcoholic complications, which could mask the disease. The classic symptom combination: eye movement abnormalities- ataxia and disorders of consciousness were found in seven patients (29%). Sixteen patients had disorders of consciousness or orientation. All the patients were treated with thiamine. The eye-movement disorder has recovered in eight out of ten known cases (80%), nystagmus--in six out of seven cases (86%) while ataxia, disorders of orientation and confabulation recovered in about 50% of cases. The average duration of hospitalisation was 50 days. Altogether nine patients died during the observation period. The condition is most probably underdiagnosed and the traditional diagnostic criteria are considered too rigid. The diagnosis should be considered in alcoholics who present even only one of the classical symptoms and in patients with alcohol dementia. Thiamine should be given on wide indications.
...
PMID:[Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome at the Rikshospitalet in 1979-1988. A retrospective study]. 192 15
Intestinal malabsorption
is a recognized cause of
malnutrition
in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus. However, the relationships among human immunodeficiency virus infection, morphological changes in the intestine, and development of
intestinal malabsorption
are not well established. Nine patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus underwent tests of intestinal absorption and jejunal biopsies for morphometric measurements, enzyme assays, and virus detection by in situ hybridization. Steatorrhea and low lactase activities were found in more than 85% of the patients. All biopsy specimens were abnormal with reversal of the ratio of villus length to crypt depth in seven and enlarged enterocyte nuclear size in nine. Human immunodeficiency virus was detected in five jejunal biopsy specimens, within villus enterocytes of one patient who had the most severe
malabsorption
of the group and in four other biopsy specimens in mononuclear infiltrating cells of the lamina propria. These results suggest that human immunodeficiency virus infection of the small intestinal mucosa is an early event that is associated with altered enterocyte differentiation and function.
...
PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus infection of enterocytes and mononuclear cells in human jejunal mucosa. 201 58
Intestinal Ca2+
malabsorption
has been described in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs), but the molecular basis for this defect is unknown. In this study, we measured intestinal alkaline phosphatase and vitamin D-dependent Ca(2+)-binding protein (calbindin-D9k), two proteins implicated in the active pathway of intestinal Ca2+ absorption. Both proteins were measured in the small intestines of SHRs and their normotensive controls, Wistar-Kyoto rats, before, during, and after development of hypertension (4, 9, 14, 18, and 28 wk of age). At all ages, alkaline phosphatase activity in duodenum (0-6 cm) was decreased by 30-57% (P less than 0.001) and by 47-75% in the 2nd intestinal segment (6-12 cm) (P less than 0.001-0.05). Calbindin-D9k was decreased similarly. The decreases of calbindin were statistically significant (P less than 0.001-0.05) in the duodena at 4, 14, 18, and 28 wk (9-30% decreases) and in the 2nd segment at 4, 14, and 18 wk (38-69% decreases; P less than 0.001-0.005). Decreased calbindin in SHRs was documented in animals from two suppliers. The deficiencies of calbindin-D9k and alkaline phosphatase could not be attributed to
malnutrition
or to a generalized brush-border defect as indicated by body weights and the intestinal marker enzyme sucrase. Although calbindin-D9k was decreased in young SHRs, the serum 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol [1,25(OH)2D3] was increased by 59 and 129% in 4- and 9-wk-old SHRs (P less than 0.001), respectively; by contrast, serum 1,25(OH)2D3 was unchanged or decreased in older SHRs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Intestinal vitamin D-dependent calbindin-D9k and alkaline phosphatase in spontaneously hypertensive rats. 203 38
A young obese female with acute pancreatitis complicated by pseudocyst formation and intermittent gastric outlet obstruction, who had been maintained on high-calorie enteral feeds, developed a sudden onset of confusion and ophthalmoplegia associated with papilloedema and retinal haemorrhages. A possible diagnosis of Wernicke's encephalopathy (WE) was made, and the patient was treated with parenteral thiamine. Clinical resolution was complete. Any patient with suspicious or unusual neurological symptoms and signs associated with possible
malnutrition
, hyperemesis or
malabsorption
should be given intravenous thiamine without delay to avoid the potential morbidity and mortality associated with undiagnosed WE.
...
PMID:Wernicke's encephalopathy in association with complicated acute pancreatitis and morbid obesity. 210 39
Cases of
malnutrition
-related diabetes mellitus conforming to the description of the protein deficient pancreatic diabetes type in Ethiopian patients were compared with Type 1 (insulin-dependent) and Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetic. Fourteen of 39
malnutrition
-related diabetes mellitus patients had fat
malabsorption
compared with only two of ten Type 1 diabetic patients and one of nine control subjects. Xylose absorption was normal favouring a pancreatic cause for the
malabsorption
. Plasma C-peptide during oral glucose tolerance test was significantly lower than that in Type 2 diabetic patients and normal control subjects (p less than 0.01 to 0.001) and was also consistently but not significantly higher than in Type 1 diabetic patients. Glucagon secretion patterns were similar in
malnutrition
-related and Type 1 diabetic patients. Of 23 new
malnutrition
-related diabetic patients treated with glibenclamide after nutritional rehabilitation and insulin treatment, only three responded, 14 were unresponsive but remained ketosis free for over eight days while another six developed ketoacidosis or significant ketonuria within two to six days during the trial. Sixteen unselected Type 1 diabetic patients who discontinued their insulin therapy all developed frank ketoacidosis after a mean of 5.5 days. The similarity of the
malnutrition
-related and Type 1 diabetes mellitus in age of onset, insulin requirement for diabetic control and appearance of ketosis-proneness in some cases, together with the similarity of C-peptide and glucagon secretion patterns suggest that the protein deficient pancreatic diabetes variant of
malnutrition
-related diabetes mellitus may be Type 1 diabetes mellitus modified by the background of
malnutrition
rather than an aetiologically separate entity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The clinical and hormonal (C-peptide and glucagon) profile and liability to ketoacidosis during nutritional rehabilitation in Ethiopian patients with malnutrition-related diabetes mellitus. 211
Home parenteral nutrition has prevented
malnutrition
in patients who cannot maintain adequate nutrition by enteral feedings alone. The risk of bone and mineral abnormalities in these patients is significant for several reasons. Pre-existing skeletal disease can occur from factors known to affect the population at large as well as from
malnutrition
,
malabsorption
, and corticosteroid use related to the underlying disease process. Long-term use of infused nutrients and potential toxins can further alter bone turnover. Hypercalciuria is frequently present during HPN, yet its etiology is poorly defined. Parenteral nutrition admixture concentrations of calcium, phosphorus, protein, sodium, and dextrose may all play a role. Any development of acidosis can certainly aggravate hypercalciuria, which may be an indirect marker of abnormal bone turnover. Although increased protein intake can promote the development of acidosis-induced calciuresis, infused phosphorus and acetate can help reduce calcium excretion. Parenteral nutrition contamination by aluminum can cause a spectrum of osteomalacic bone disease similar to aluminum-associated changes seen in renal failure patients. Even with recent attempts to remove aluminum from the parenteral admixture, low-turnover bone disease can still occur. At present, HPN-related bone disease is a poorly understood entity because of its multifaceted nature. Patients receiving long-term parenteral nutrition should be considered to have an increased risk for the development of metabolic bone disease. Early monitoring for and treatment of bone disease should be considered in all patients receiving HPN.
...
PMID:Long-term parenteral nutrition and metabolic bone disease. 211 69
Until now, recommendations for nutrition therapy of HIV-infected subjects can only be regarded as preliminary, because of the lack of scientific results regarding the interactions between HIV-infection and nutrition. HIV-infected patients have a high risk to become malnourished during the course of the disease, as a consequence of multiple pathogenetic factors--similar to the nutritional problems of tumor patients. At the moment, the following procedure is recommended in order to treat or prevent HIV-associated
malnutrition
: The nutritional status and history should be assessed in each HIV-positive subject as early as possible. Independent of the actual nutritional status, each patient should obtain a nutrition education. A continuous nutrition therapy becomes necessary in the case of evident or imminent
malnutrition
. Nutrients should be applied by oral access as long as possible. But especially for patients with opportunistic infections of the GI-tract accompanied by
malabsorption
, total parenteral nutrition may be the only effective way of nutrition.
...
PMID:[Malnutrition--a clinically relevant problem in HIV-1 infection?]. 211 23
Malnutrition
occurs commonly in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). The efficacy of nutritional support is unknown. A prospective, longitudinal study was conducted to determine the effect of prolonged total parenteral nutrition on body composition in 12 AIDS patients. Five patients were malnourished because of problems with food intake or absorption, while seven had systemic infections, with or without a
malabsorption syndrome
. The AIDS patients gained body weight and body fat content in response to total parenteral nutrition, while mean body cell mass, estimated as total body potassium content, was unchanged. However, all five patients with altered intake or absorption had significant repletion of body cell mass which was significantly different from the patients with systemic infections. Calorie and nitrogen intake did not differ between the two groups. It is concluded that body mass repletion is possible in AIDS patients in whom
malabsorption
is the major pathogenetic factor in producing
malnutrition
and is less successful in patients with serious ongoing systemic diseases. Thus, the response to nutritional support is dependent on the particular clinical circumstances.
...
PMID:Effect of home total parenteral nutrition on body composition in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 212 17
Malnutrition
is a frequent problem in persons infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. The origin of
malnutrition
in patients with AIDS may be multifactorial. The primary mechanisms include disorders of food intake, alterations in intermediary metabolism, and nutrient
malabsorption
. Attention to the problems of
malnutrition
in patients with AIDS is of paramount importance because the timing of death in these patients may be more closely related to degree of body cell mass depletion than to any specific underlying infection. Nutritional support can improve nutritional status in selected patients, and repletion of body cell mass may be associated with functional improvement. Early assessment, attention to nutritional requirements, and prompt intervention can minimize wasting and replete body cell mass. This article examines the evidence for
malnutrition
in patients with AIDS, reviews the studies of nutritional support, and presents an approach to the management of
malnutrition
in AIDS.
...
PMID:Malnutrition in patients with AIDS. 212 39
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>