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)

The histopathology and clinical presentation of 19 cases of primary gastrointestinal lymphoma is described. Our patients are similar to others in the Middle East but have a lower incidence of diarrhoea and malabsorption. All revealed a widespread chronic inflammatory background. Four patients with primary gastric lymphoma had endoscopic biopsies from the duodenum; these biopsies were completely free from tumour but showed a moderate to severe diffuse lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate. Electron microscopy shows that tumour cells penetrate basement membranes and invade the epithelium which becomes thin and attenuated. Substances which inhibit lymphocyte tropism might be useful in preventing intestinal ulceration. The MALT concept has been found useful in classification of the tumours. Two patients with unusual mesenteric node histology are described and it is thought that the appearances may indicate a substantial capacity for differentiation in the group of tumours.
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PMID:Pathology and clinical features of gastro-intestinal lymphoma in Saudi Arabia. 192 5

Gastrointestinal lymphomas are almost exclusively of a non-Hodgkin's type. The Western form is characterized by a higher incidence of stomach location (50%), a MALT type (mucosa associated lymphoid tissue) (40%), a B-cell type (90%), and a high grade (55%). Chronic infection with Helicobacter pylori is an important risk factor. Mediterranean lymphomas form a particular clinical and pathological entity with diffuse involvement of the small bowel and are frequently being associated with a chronic malabsorption disorder. Eradication of Helicobacter pylori in early gastric lymphomas, and the use of tetracyclines in early Mediterranean lymphomas, have been shown to induce durable remissions. For more advanced gastric lymphomas, treatment usually consists of anthracyclin-based chemotherapy followed by involved field radiotherapy. Surgery is usually reserved for complications such as perforation or bleeding, or in some selected cases for salvage after failure of non-surgical therapy. For intestinal lymphomas, surgical resection whenever feasible, followed by anthracyclin-based chemotherapy is the most common treatment. Radiotherapy is usually reserved for consolidation in some clinical situations. The most commonly found prognostic factors are stage, grade, and tumor bulk. Treatment results vary with the presence of adverse prognostic factors and the used treatment combination. In general, patients with favorable disease receiving combined therapy have a 5-year relapse free survival (RFS) approaching 90%, whereas those with unfavorable disease have a RFS of 40-50%.
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PMID:[Radiotherapy for gastrointestinal lymphomas: indications and techniques]. 1023 Mar 73

There are a number of clinical syndromes associated with chronic diarrhea, malabsorption, and lymphoplasmacytic proliferation of the small intestine. In Middle-Eastern and Mediterranean countries immunoproliferative small intestinal disease is endemic, whereas in other parts of the world (including Northwestern Europe and North America) celiac sprue, and other sprue-like syndromes refractory to dietary gluten withdrawal, predominate. All of these syndromes appear to involve chronic stimulation of intestinal mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue and are associated with a heightened risk of malignant transformation. The clinicopathological features of these diseases, and distinction of the Middle Eastern syndromes from those more common in the Western hemisphere, have been reviewed.
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PMID:Alpha-heavy chain disease, Mediterranean lymphoma, and immunoproliferative small intestinal disease: a review of clinicopathological features, pathogenesis, and differential diagnosis. 1071 Jan 12

Immunoproliferative small intestinal disease (IPSID) was recently added to the growing list of infectious pathogen-associated human lymphomas. Molecular and immunohistochemical studies demonstrated an association with Campylobacter jejuni. IPSID is a variant of the B-cell lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT), which involves mainly the proximal small intestine resulting in malabsorption, diarrhea, and abdominal pain. Geographically, IPSID is most prevalent in the Middle East and Africa. IPSID lymphomas reveal excessive plasma cell differentiation and produce truncated alpha heavy chain proteins lacking the light chains as well as the first constant domain. The corresponding mRNA lacks the variable heavy chain (V(H)) and the constant heavy chain 1 (C(H)1) sequences and contains deletions as well as insertions of unknown origin. The encoding gene sequence reveals a deletion of V region and parts of C(H)1 domain. Cytogenetic studies demonstrated clonal rearrangements involving predominantly the heavy and light chain genes, including t(9;14) translocation involving the PAX5 gene. Early-stage IPSID responds to antibiotics (30%-70% complete remission). Most untreated IPSID patients progress to lymphoplasmacytic and immunoblastic lymphoma invading the intestinal wall and mesenteric lymph nodes, and may metastasize to a distant organ. IPSID lymphoma shares clinical, morphologic, and molecular features with MALT lymphoma, lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma, and plasma cell neoplasms.
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PMID:Immunoproliferative small intestinal disease (IPSID): a model for mature B-cell neoplasms. 1554 84

Small bowel lymphomas of the extranodal type occur in the young and are characteristically associated with malabsorption syndrome. We present the case of an elderly in whom there was no malabsorption and the duodenal tumor was a gastric type marginal zone B cell lymphoma also known as gastric mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma. A 73-year-old woman presented to the emergency room with 2 weeks of general weakness, recurrent vomiting containing food particles and abdominal distension. She had been diagnosed with diabetic gastroparesis 4 years prior. CT of the abdomen and pelvis was suggestive of gastric outlet obstruction but no evidence of pancreatic or duodenal mass. Endoscopy and biopsy of the tumor obstructing the distal first part of the duodenum confirmed a gastric marginal MALT lymphoma. The patient's symptoms improved with radiotherapy. Gastric MALT lymphoma, an extranodal lymphoma primarily described in the stomach, can also present in the small bowel and is not associated with malabsorption.
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PMID:Gastric marginal zone B cell lymphoma of the duodenum. 2211 Apr 18

Helicobacter pylori (HP) is a gram-negative flagellated pathogen acid-resistant bacterium; it belongs to the order Campylobacterales that is wide spread all over the world, infecting more than 50% of the world population. HP infection is etiologically associated with non-atrophic and atrophic gastritis, peptic ulcer and with 3 to 6-fold increased relative risk for developing gastric adenocarcinoma and mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MA LT) lymphoma. For this reason HP is recognized by the World Health Organization as a Class I human carcinogen. In the last years a lot of studies clarified the role of this pathogen in nutrition and metabolism; particularly, it has been shown that it is able to induce malabsorption of several nutrients like iron, cobalamin, vitamin C and vitamin E, with strong consequences on nutritional status. Interesting, this bacterium is able to produce different biological effects on hormones like ghrelin and leptin controlling both appetite and growth, mostly depending on the time of acquisition of the infection and of its treatment. In this review, the authors focused their attention on nutritional effects of HP infection and particularly on the role that diet, food, plants and specific nutrients can play in its treatment, considering that HP eradication rates, with standard triple-therapy, have fallen to a low level in the last years.
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PMID:Helicobacter pylori and nutrition: a bidirectional communication. 3075 76