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)
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
The meaning of a low serum cobalamin level when the classic findings of pernicious anemia are lacking is undergoing reevaluation. We therefore studied the neurologic status of 11 patients who had low cobalamin levels without definite hematologic evidence of deficiency. Neurologic evaluation included pattern-shift visual and median and posterior tibial nerve somatosensory evoked potentials. None of the patients had megaloblastic changes in the blood or bone marrow, although 7 of the 11 had subtle cellular cobalamin disturbances demonstrated by an abnormal deoxyuridine suppression test result. Seven patients had normal Schilling test results and 2 had borderline results; however, 2 of the 5 patients tested further had food-cobalamin
malabsorption
, while a third had prepernicious anemia. The patients displayed a variety of neurologic problems, including
dementia
, depression, myelopathy, neuropathy, and seizure disorder; 1 patient was neurologically normal by clinical criteria. Evoked potential abnormalities were demonstrable in 8 of the 9 patients with subtle cobalamin deficiency, and in at least 5 cases the disturbance was central. In contrast, both patients whose low serum cobalamin levels were found on evaluation to be spurious had normal evoked potentials. Evoked potential abnormalities improved in the one patient retested after cobalamin therapy. These findings demonstrate that neurologic deficits occur not only in classic cobalamin deficiency but also in subtle or atypical cobalamin deficiency states in which anemia is absent and Schilling test results are normal. Electrophysiologic evidence of neurologic impairment is often present, even in patients without obvious clinical neurologic abnormalities.
...
PMID:Neurologic and evoked potential abnormalities in subtle cobalamin deficiency states, including deficiency without anemia and with normal absorption of free cobalamin. 239 29
A previously healthy 67-yr-old man presented with progressive
dementia
over an 11-mo period. Evaluation revealed evidence of
malabsorption
. Jejunal biopsy established the diagnosis of Whipple's disease. No other etiology for the patient's
dementia
was uncovered. Treatment with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole resulted in rapid elimination of Whipple's bacilli from the jejunum and complete reversal of the patient's
dementia
over a 6-mo period. Significant levels of trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole were easily quantitated in the cerebrospinal fluid during therapy. There is increasing recognition of progressive neurologic disease in patients with Whipple's disease who were treated with tetracycline. The reversal of presumed central nervous system disease in this case suggests that drugs that penetrate the blood-brain barrier might be preferable for the initial treatment of Whipple's disease.
...
PMID:Reversal of dementia associated with Whipple's disease by trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, drugs that penetrate the blood-brain barrier. 619 55
Whipple's disease is an inflammatory illness primarily afflicting middle-aged men. Although originally seen as a disease of
intestinal malabsorption
, it may affect any body system causing numerous signs and symptoms. These are due to infiltration of macrophages containing sickleform particles which stain PAS-positive. Definitive diagnosis is made by biopsy, and treatment is with broad-spectrum antibiotics. There seems to be an infectious component to the disease although defective immunologic responses may be implicated. Exact etiology is unknown. Although a rare illness, there has recently been increased recognition of this disease. Neurological involvement occurs with dissemination of lesions to the nervous system. Symptoms are quite varied but most often include
dementia
. As is apparent from the patient history, early diagnosis and treatment is imperative. Even without symptoms, there should probably be treatment for central nervous system involvement since neurological manifestations are often fatal. The case study presented illustrates a multisystem illness. The neurological presentation includes peripheral neuropathy, cranial nerve involvement, brainstem dysfunction, endocrine disturbance, thalamic or pituitary symptoms, and changes in cerebral function. Nursing measures reinforce the importance of the role of primary nursing for patient care and the necessity of comprehensive nursing care plans. Management problems were alleviated by providing consistency and continuous orientation, by involving the patient and his family in the plan of care, and by establishing a safe and consistent environment. Nursing process can improve and enhance patient responses, family coping ability, and the quality of care given. A "difficult" patient can help to expand nursing knowledge as well as promote personal growth and satisfaction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Neurological involvement with Whipple's disease. 620 14
A 57-year-old woman developed
dementia
and peripheral neuropathy 16 years after a partial gastrectomy (Billroth II). Serum cobalamin was 198 pmol/l (reference interval 150-550), and the vitamin B12 absorption test (Schilling) showed decreased absorption (1.7% without and 2.2% with intrinsic factor). In spite of 20 months' therapy with vitamin B12, the neurological symptoms progressed. Folate deficiency was suggested by a very low erythrocyte folate and a slightly abnormal FIGLU test. There were no other signs of general
malabsorption
. A few months' treatment with folic acid significantly improved the massive neurological manifestations which were verified neurophysiologically as well as histologically. A common role of vitamin B12 and folate in the development of neuropathy is suggested.
...
PMID:Reversible dementia and neuropathy associated with folate deficiency 16 years after partial gastrectomy. 625 53
Cobalamin levels are frequently low in patients with
dementia
, but it is unclear if they represent definable deficiency and what the mechanisms are. Therefore, patients being evaluated for
dementia
who had low cobalamin levels but no obvious evidence of deficiency were studied hematologically, neurologically and with metabolic tests and were re-evaluated after cobalamin treatment. Abnormalities suggestive of or diagnostic for deficiency were documented in most of the 16 demented and nondemented patients. Metabolic results: 50% of patients tested had abnormal deoxyuridine suppression and 44% had increased serum methylmalonic acid and/or homocysteine levels; these test results correlated with each other. Neurologic results: 73% of patients had clinical abnormalities, primarily mild neuropathies, not attributable to other causes, 75% had electroencephalographic abnormalities, 77% had abnormal visual evoked potentials and 33% had abnormal somatosensory potentials. Metabolic and neurologic dysfunction were present together or absent together in all but 2 cases. Cobalamin therapy improved 50-100% of the various types of abnormalities, although it did not improve cognitive function in the 13 demented patients. Food-cobalamin
malabsorption
was found in 60% of the patients. Despite the absence of megaloblastic anemia and rarity of traditional
malabsorption
of free cobalamin, low cobalamin levels in demented patients frequently represent mild cobalamin deficiency and are often associated with food-cobalamin
malabsorption
. Perhaps most importantly, this is accompanied not only by metabolic changes but by evidence of mild neurologic dysfunction. Their frequent reversibility by cobalamin confirms that these defects indeed arise from cobalamin deficiency. Although the long-standing
dementia
does not improve, treating such patients with cobalamin has other concrete benefits.
...
PMID:The frequently low cobalamin levels in dementia usually signify treatable metabolic, neurologic and electrophysiologic abnormalities. 778 70
In the civilized world the traditional causes of pellagra such as hunger, malnutrition are disappeared, but the disease has not disappeared after all. In the well developed countries the current etiologic causes are the following: alcoholism, psychiatric disorders, diseases causing cachexy,
malabsorption
and some drugs. In the case reported by the authors the malnutrition, accompanying the chronic alcoholism was the cause of the diarrhoea,
dementia
and dermatitis. The correct diagnosis was established after four years of repeated psychiatrical and medical treatment.
...
PMID:[Pellagra--a forgotten disease]. 834 32
Goldberger discovered human pellagra was a non-infectious disease, affecting mostly the small and the timid in overcrowded institutions. Symptoms were diarrhoea, dermatitis and
dementia
. The staff and older children escaped the disease. They ate the meat and left the small and timid with the gravy. The 'Goldberger syndrome' is observed during competitive feeding of livestock, in ketotic animals and in the zinc depleted which are lethargic and pick all day at their feed. The pellagra preventative factor was later found to be nicotinic acid, derived from the amino acid tryptophan. Deficiencies of copper, magnesium, vitamin B6 (activated by a zinc kinase) inhibit the conversion of tryptophan to nicotinic acid. Stresses, including liver diseases,
malabsorption
, iron overload, porphyria, marasmus, cold stress, pregnancy, lactation, antibiotics and sulfa drugs, all increase dietary needs of nicotinic acid. Elevated free fatty acids and ketone bodies in the blood are associated with ketosis, zinc depletion and the pre-diabetic state. There is a diminished uptake of glucose by the tissues, a condition also found in parturient paresis of dairy cows when elevated hydrocortisone promotes insulin resistance and hyperglycaemia. This defect in insulin response leads to a diabetic-like state. The major predisposing factor in parturient paresis of dairy cows is hypocalcaemia. Gut absorption of dietary calcium may not meet the primary demands of lactation initiation until bone calcium mobilisation is established.
...
PMID:Metabolic disorders of cattle. 839
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-associated
dementia
complex is characterized by difficulties in concentration and memory followed by apathy, social withdrawal and motor dysfunction. Decreased serum vitamin B12 levels occur in up to 20% of patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) and may adversely contribute to the haematologic and neurologic dysfunction which is frequently attributed to the human immunodeficiency virus. We describe a patient with AIDS who presented with an apparent advanced AIDS dementia complex. There was an associated low serum vitamin B12 resulting from
malabsorption
due to low gastric intrinsic factor secretion. Following treatment with vitamin B12 the symptoms resolved over a 2-month period. We believe that the AIDS dementia complex represented a reversible adverse synergistic interaction between the human immunodeficiency virus and vitamin B12 deficiency.
...
PMID:Reversal of apparent AIDS dementia complex following treatment with vitamin B12. 850 20
Vitamin E is one of the most important lipid-soluble antioxidant nutrients. Severe vitamin E deficiency can have a profound effect on the central nervous system. Cystic fibrosis, chronic cholestatic liver disease, abetalipoproteinemia, short bowel syndrome, isolated vitamin E deficiency syndrome and other
malabsorption
syndromes all may cause varying degrees of neurologic deficits due to related vitamin deficiencies. The classic abnormalities in vitamin E deficiency progress from hyporeflexia, ataxia, limitations in upward gaze and strabismus to long-tract defects, profound muscle weakness and visual field constriction. Patients with severe, prolonged deficiency may develop complete blindness,
dementia
and cardiac arrhythmias. Treatment must be tailored to the underlying cause of vitamin E deficiency and may include oral or parenteral vitamin supplementation. The more advanced the deficits, the more limited the response to therapy. Therefore, a good neurologic examination and periodic serum vitamin E levels are essential in patients at risk of vitamin E deficiency.
...
PMID:Neurologic findings in vitamin E deficiency. 901 78
1
2
3
Next >>