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)

Over the past 18 years, our laboratory has been interested in the pathogenesis of energy imbalance caused by a variety of diseases. Our view is that a clear understanding of the various factors causing negative energy balance, which in turn results in malnutrition, is the most effective way of designing preventive and therapeutic nutritional strategies. Thus, in cancer, one of the common factors is anorexia, due either to the primary tumor or to the effects of cancer therapy. Currently there is little evidence of increased resting energy expenditure in children with cancer, except in cases with very high tumor burden. Conversely, there are suggestions of a failure to down-regulate resting energy expenditure in the presence of reduced food intake in patients with cancer. Damage to the gastrointestinal tract, due to the effects either of the tumor or of tumor therapy, may result in maldigestion and/or malabsorption. Thus, as a result of a combination of reduced intake, reduced absorption and increased needs, the child with cancer may become malnourished. Prevention and treatment are dependent on the type of cancer and the pathogenesis of the negative energy balance. In broad terms, we try as far as possible to use external routes. With the advent of percutaneously placed gastrostomies and gastrojejunal tubes, we use these methods increasingly to provide nutritional support. Only in patients whose gastrointestinal tract cannot be used do we turn to i.v. feeding. In these patients, the placement of a central venous line is required, but great care must be taken to avoid infection. Whatever form of nutritional support is used, whether enteral or parenteral, we measure the body composition and energy expenditure in the patient, so that the nutritional therapy can be tailored to the child's specific needs. Using these approaches, we are having significant success in preventing and reversing malnutrition in children with cancer and those undergoing bone-marrow transplantation.
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PMID:Aggressive oral, enteral or parenteral nutrition: prescriptive decisions in children with cancer. 987 84

Small bowel metastases from primary carcinoma of the lung are very uncommon and occur usually in patients with terminal stage disease. These metastases are usually asymptomatic, but may present as perforation, obstruction, malabsorption, or hemorrhage. Hemorrhage as a first presentation of small bowel metastases is extremely rare and is related to very poor patient survival. We describe a case of a 61- year old patient with primary adenocarcinoma of the lung, presenting with melena as the first manifestation of small bowel metastasis. Both primary tumor and metastatic lesions were diagnosed almost simultaneously. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy performed with a colonoscope revealed active bleeding from a metastatic tumor involving the duodenum and the proximal jejunum. Histological examination and immunohistochemical staining of the biopsy specimen strongly supported the diagnosis of metastatic lung adenocarcinoma, suggesting that small bowel metastases from primary carcinoma of the lung occur usually in patients with terminal disease and rarely produce symptoms. Gastrointestinal bleeding from metastatic small intestinal lesions should be included in the differential diagnosis of gastrointestinal blood loss in a patient with a known bronchogenic tumor.
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PMID:Melena: a rare complication of duodenal metastases from primary carcinoma of the lung. 1745 Dec 16

Patients with neuroendocrine tumors (NETs), malignancies of rare but still rising incidence, may be a group at higher risk of vitamin D insufficiency. The gastrointestinal tumor prevalence and somatostatin analog (SSA) therapy may cause vitamin D malabsorption. The aim of this study was to evaluate the serum level of vitamin D in NET patients. A total of 36 NET patients were enrolled into the experimental group and 16 individuals were enrolled into the control group. All patients were further classified into subgroups according to primary tumor localization (gastropancreatic, lung, and other NETs) or therapy (with or without SSA treatment). The concentrations of total 25(OH)D were assayed with Electrochemiluminescence immunoassay (ECLIA). Serum concentration of 25(OH)D in NET patients did not differ significantly from that of the control group. However, the average level of 25(OH)D in both groups met the criteria of vitamin D deficiency. Importantly, SSA therapy did not aggravate vitamin D deficiency. Moreover, the concentration of 25(OH)D in the studied group was not significantly influenced by primary tumor localization, patient age, or season. Vitamin D deficiency is a widespread disorder affecting both NET patients and individuals without other health problems, and SSA and gastrointestinal tumor localization do not exacerbate this condition.
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PMID:Somatostatin Analogs and Tumor Localization Do Not Influence Vitamin D Concentration in Patients with Neuroendocrine Tumors. 2702 57

While small bowel resection is well established as standard of care for curative-intent management of localized and loco-regional small bowel neuroendocrine tumors (SB-NETs), resection of the primary tumor in the setting of metastatic disease is debated. This review addresses the role of primary tumor resection for stage IV well-differentiated grade 1 and 2 SB-NETs. While survival benefits have been reported for primary tumor resection in the setting of metastatic disease, these studies are limited by selection bias and thus controversial. The main clinical benefits of primary tumor resection for stage IV disease involve the prevention of potentially debilitating complications associated with mesenteric fibrosis, including intestinal obstruction, mesenteric ischemia and angina, venous congestion, malabsorption, and malnutrition. Patients with metastases undergoing initial resection of the primary SB-NETs appear to have fewer episodes of care and re-intervention for loco-regional complications than those who do not undergo resection. As recommended by the NANETS and ENETS guidelines, resection of the primary tumor for stage IV SB-NETs should be strongly considered to avoid future loco-regional complications and potentially to improve survival. All patients with stage IV SB-NETs should be assessed by a surgeon experienced in the management of NETs to consider surgical therapies, including resection of the primary tumor despite metastatic disease.
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PMID:Role of Primary Tumor Resection for Metastatic Small Bowel Neuroendocrine Tumors. 3279 81