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)

Absorption of dietary energy, nitrogen, carbohydrates and calcium, and retention of nitrogen and calcium were studied in 20 children with protein-energy malnutrition of the edematous type, using metabolic balance techniques and breath H2 analysis, to assess the advisability of using lactose-containing formulas in the rehabilitation of severely malnourished children. Ten patients received for 45 days a diet formula based on cows' milk (intact milk) and 10 similar children received the same formula pretreated with beta-galactosidase to hydrolyze the lactose (hydrolyzed milk). Dietary intakes were gradually increased to reach, on the 8th day, 4 g of protein and 150 kcal/kg. There were no differences between groups with respect to absorption or retention of the index nutrients. Postprandial carbohydrate malabsorption was occasionally observed in two patients with servings of the intact milk formula, and in one with the hydrolyzed milk diet. When the nutritional quality of a diet is assessed, the amount of nutrients that are absorbed and utilized are more important than the small, incompletely absorbed fractions that do not have significant metabolic or clinical implications. Therefore, the use of milk as the protein source for recovery diets is not contraindicated in the routine treatment of PEM.
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PMID:The effect of dietary lactose on the early recovery from protein-energy malnutrition. II. Indices of nutrient absorption. 643 95

To determine the incidence of carbohydrate malabsorption, particularly lactose malabsorption in Basotho children with severe PEM during treatment with a dry skim milk (DSM)-sucrose-oil mixture, 105 children with PEM were submitted to a Hydrogen Breath Test (HBT) after administration of the mixture. Carbohydrate malabsorption occurred more frequently in children with kwashiorkor (28/58) than in those with marasmus (5/33), marasmic kwashiorkor (3/15) and healthy controls (8/34). The positive HBT appeared to be due to lactose malabsorption in at least two thirds of the children with kwashiorkor as it turned negative when the challenge was repeated with a lactosefree mixture. In controls malabsorption of carbohydrate (usually lactose) appeared at the age of 22 months, nearly a year later than in PEM. Diarrhoea occurred in 23 children with PEM and particularly in those with carbohydrate malabsorption. In 20 children Giardia was found in the stools without any observable effect on carbohydrate malabsorption, however. The findings support the cautious use of physiological doses of lactose in the treatment of severe PEM.
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PMID:Carbohydrate malabsorption in children with severe protein energy malnutrition. 644 21

Wasting may not be an inevitable consequence of HIV infection but may be a consequence of multiple nutritional insults that are additive without periods of replenishment in between. Protein energy malnutrition in AIDS patients may be consequential to underlying illness and concomitant to death as a result of that illness or may hasten a patient's demise, that is, starvation with fatal loss of body cell mass. Mortality is closely related to weight loss. Malnutrition may be a result of decreased intake, malabsorption, altered metabolism, or any combination of the three. Nutritional strategies to prevent PEM include appetite stimulation, early nutritional supplementation with oral supplements, and the diagnosis and treatment of malabsorption and underlying infections. More aggressive measures such as gastrostomy or jejunostomy tube placement and total parenteral feedings are still being evaluated. Nutritional supplementation to enhance the immune system or manipulate metabolism may be adjunctive to the above strategies. Early intervention and attention to nutritional status may have long-term benefits to patients with this disease.
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PMID:Nutritional aspects of HIV infection. 808 74