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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors have investigated intestinal absorption of folic acid by jejunal perfusion with a triple lumen tube in five subjects with
regional enteritis
. The subjects' intestinal disabilities ranged from terminal ileitis to short bowel syndrome. Two had steatorrhea and two had low serum folate levels. Absorption of pteroylglutamic acid was normal in all five. This suggests that folic acid deficiency, common in this disorder, is largely caused by malnutrition, not
malabsorption
.
...
PMID:Folic acid absorption in regional enteritis. 0 8
More patients with extensive resection of the small bowel--secondary to
regional enteritis
, mesenteric infarction, cancer, etc.--are surviving perioperative treatment. To avoid nutrition-caused
malabsorption
and to maintain body composition, intravenous nutrition is initiated with a silastic atrial catheter in the immediate postoperative period. The patients are trained in "home hyperalimentation" procedures designed to allow normal nutrition to be maintained during the months required for bowel adaptation to occur. Because bowel adaptation to the absorption and transport of foodstuffs is in part dependent on the intraluminal presence of foodstuffs, elemental and regular diets are ingested during the period of intravenous support which may last for years. By using combined oral and intravenous nutrition, approximately 20 per cent of patients with short bowel syndrome eventually can take sufficient oral nutrients to sustain life.
...
PMID:Role of parenteral nutrition in patients with short bowel syndrome. 11 3
Chronic
granulomatous enteritis
associated with weight loss and hypoproteinemia was identified in 2 horses. Both horses continued to have normally formed feces.
Malabsorption
of carbohydrate and lipid, with concomitant gastrointestinal protein loss was demonstrated in 1 case. One horse was treated symptomatically and gained 108 kg. In both cases, principal gastrointestinal lesions were partial to total villus atrophy and transmural mononuclear leukocytosis, with lymphocytes and histiocytes predominating. The cause of the condition was not identified in either case.
...
PMID:Chronic enteritis associated with the malabsorption and protein-losing enteropathy in the horse. 62 Nov 80
Growth arrest and delayed onset of puberty often complicate childhood onset Crohn's disease of the small bowel (
granulomatous enteritis
). Nutritional deficits arising from inadequate dietary intake,
malabsorption
, and increased caloric needs may contribute to growth retardation. To assess whether a sustained high caloric and nitrogen intake could reestablish growth, 4 children with extensive Crohn's disease of the small bowel were studied before and after parenteral alimentation which was instituted for symtomatic disease control. Weight gain, positive nitrogen balance, and improved nutritional status were achieved during parenteral alimentation in each patient. In 2 patients weight gain was sustained using oral nutritional supplements, and a substantial increase in linear skeletal growth continued in the ensuing months. One patient entered puberty within 4 months of parenteral alimentation and another had the onset of menarche and the development of secondary sex characteristics 4 months after parenteral alimentation and resection of diseased bowel. Growth may be reestablished in some growth-arrested children if intake is sufficient to establish a sustained positive caloric and nitrogen balance. Nutritional requirements imposed by the demands of growth and active disease and often compounded by the catabolic effects of corticosteroids may be excessive; growth may occur only if these needs are met orally and/or parenterally.
...
PMID:Reversal of growth arrest in adolescents with Crohn's disease after parenteral alimentation. 81 57
The records of a series of 700 patients with inflammatory bowel disease, 498 with Crohn's disease and 202 with ulcerative colitis, have been analyzed to determine the relative incidence and characteristic features of their extra-intestinal manifestations. The group with Crohn's disease included 62 with colitis, 223 with ileocolitis, and 213 with
regional enteritis
. A consideration of the clinical patterns and an understanding of their pathophysiology suggested a subdivision into two main groups: one "colitis related" and one related to the pathophysiology of the small nonspecific third group. Group A, colitis related, comprises joint, skin, mouth, and eye disease. The complications might be immunologically determined, were closely associated with active inflammation, and often responded to medical or surgical treatment of the underlying bowel disease. They occurred in 36% of the entire series of patients: joints were involved in 23%, skin in 15%, and mouth and eye each in 4%. Pyoderma gangrenosum was observed most often in ulcerative colitis and erythema nodosum most often in granulomatous colitis. The incidence of Group A complications was higher in disease involving the colon (42%) than in disease restricted exclusively to the small bowel (23%). There were interrelationships among the various members of Group A, with multiple manifestations occurring in a third of affected patients. Group B, related to small bowel pathophysiology, includes
malabsorption
, gallstones, kidney stones, and non-calculous hydronephrosis and hydroureter. Disorders in this group were generally related to the severity of the disease in the small bowel and tended to persist even in the absence of active inflammation. In contrast to Group A, this group occurred most frequently in small bowel disease, and least in colonic disease.
Malabsorption
was virtually confined to the patients with small bowel disease (10% incidence), while gallstones and renal stones were also both more frequent in Crohn's disease (11% and 9% respectively), the latter usually in association with small bowel resection or ileostomy. Group C, found in a small percentage of patients, consists of nonspecific complications, including osteoporosis (3%), liver disease (5%), peptic ulcer (10%), and amyloidosis (1%).
...
PMID:The extra-intestinal complications of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis: a study of 700 patients. 95 99
A series of 130 consecutive outpatients with recurrent aphthous stomatitis were screened at the oral medicine department, Glasgow Dental Hospital, for deficienciesin vitamin b12, folic acid, and iron. In 23 patients (17.7%) such deficiencies werefound; five were deficient in vitamin B12, seven in folic acid, and 15 in iron. Four had more than one deficiency. Out of 130 controls matched for age and sex 11 (8.5%) were found to have deficiencies. The 23 deficient patients with recurrent aphthaewere treated with specific replacement therapy, and all 130 patients were followed up for at least one year. Of the 23 patients on replacement therapy 15 showed complete remission of ulceration and eight definite improvement. Of the 107 patientswith no deficiency receiving local symptomatic treatment only 33 had a remission or wereimproved. This difference was significant (P less than 0.001). Most patients withproved vitamin B12 or folic acid deficiency improved rapidly on replacement therapy;those with iron deficiency showed a less dramatic response. The 23 deficient patientswere further investigated to determine the cause of their deficiencies and detect the presence of any associated conditions. Four were found to have Addisonian perniciousanaemia. Seven had a
malabsorption syndrome
, which in five proved to be a gluten-induced enteropathy. In addition, there were single patients with idiopathic proctocolitis, diverticular disease of the colon,
regional enterocolitis
, and adenocarcinoma of thecaecum. We suggest that the high incidence of deficiencies found in this series andthe good response to replacement therapy shows the need for haematological screening of such patients.
...
PMID:Recurrent aphthae: treatment with vitamin B12, folic acid, and iron. 114 67
Specificity of the oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) for the diagnosis of small
intestinal malabsorption
in the horse was assessed by comparing the results of OGTT with the results of a histopathological examination of the small intestine in 42 adult horses affected by chronic weight loss. The horses were assigned to three groups on the basis of the results of the test. Five horses were considered to have a normal OGTT absorption result (Group 1); all the horses had a histologically normal small intestine. Twenty-five horses had a partial
malabsorption
result (Group 2) seven of which had normal small intestinal morphology, whereas the remaining 18 had a variety of pathological lesions including lymphosarcoma, villous atrophy,
granulomatous enteritis
and eosinophilic gastroenteritis. Twelve of the 42 horses had a total
malabsorption
result (Group 3), and all had a severe infiltrative lesion in the small intestinal wall (either lymphosarcoma or
granulomatous enteritis
).
...
PMID:Small intestinal malabsorption in the horse: an assessment of the specificity of the oral glucose tolerance test. 195 19
A 24-year-old man with agammaglobulinemia developed a form of chronic inflammatory bowel disease over the past 18 years characterized by recurrent diarrhea,
malabsorption
, and protein-losing enteropathy. In the most recent admission he presented with abdominal cramps and active intestinal bleeding. Radiologic studies showed distal ileal irregularities and strictures that led to two distal intestinal and ileocecal resections. The gross pathologic appearance of these specimens was consistent with
regional enteritis
. Microscopically, healing ulcers, mucosal irregularities, and a prominent lymphocytic infiltrate without plasma cells or granulomas were observed. Immunocytochemical studies revealed a prominent T-helper cell and a modest T-suppressor/cytotoxic lymphocyte population in the lamina propria. Early and late B-cell differentiation markers were not detected in any of the cells. The immunocytologic findings suggest that T-helper lymphocytes proliferated without inhibition to stimulate non-existent B cells. The study confirms the occurrence of a regional enteropathy-like lesion in the total absence of B-cell function.
...
PMID:Regional enteritis-like enteropathy in a patient with agammaglobulinemia: histologic and immunocytologic studies. 296 59
A retrospective study was made of 20 horses with severe and extensive chronic disease of the small intestine. Many of the animals had clinical evidence of
malabsorption
, with progressive loss of weight, hypoalbuminaemia and sometimes anaemia. All but two of the horses were Thoroughbreds. The pathology was diverse. Nine of the cases were alimentary lymphomas (Platt, 1986) and five had lymphocytic and eosinophilic infiltrations in the bowel wall which were considered to be probable reactions to parasitic invasion. One had acute thrombosis associated with partial occlusion of the anterior mesenteric artery by a verminous thrombus, superimposed on granulomatous lesions resulting from earlier ischaemic episodes. Two animals, from one stud, had dense mononuclear infiltration of the intestinal mucosa with villous atropy accompanying an unidentified acid-fast bacillary infection in the mesenteric lymph nodes and other sites. Three horses had granulomatous or lymphogranulomatous infiltration of the small intestine accompanied by marked mucosal and villous atrophy. One of these had multiple abscessation in part of the affected bowel. Only the three latter cases had lesions resembling those of equine
granulomatous enteritis
and the results of this study indicate the rarity of this condition in Thoroughbreds in Britain. The different types of lesion were only distinguishable by histological examination, since their clinical effects and gross pathology were not characteristic.
...
PMID:Chronic inflammatory and lymphoproliferative lesions of the equine small intestine. 381 46
The role of decreased absorption of electrolytes and water by the jejunum in the pathogenesis of diarrhoea was examined in patients with intestinal scleroderma, ileocolitis, gastric hypersecretion, or extensive ileal resection. Absorption of electrolytes and water from a 20-cm segment of jejunum was compared in 10 patients and six healthy volunteers.
Malabsorption
of electrolytes and water by the jejunum may contribute to diarrhoea in scleroderma,
regional enteritis
, and gastric hypersecretion. After ileal resection, jejunal absorption was normal.
...
PMID:Jejunal transport of electrolytes and water in intestinal diseases. 537 98
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