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)

Eleven cases of spontaneous hypoglycaemia in congestive heart failure in adults are reported. There were 5 males and 6 females, aged from 15 to 65 years (mean, 44 years). Blood sugar ranged from 2 to 42 mg/100 ml (mean 21 mg/100 ml). Six patients were in coma on admittance, 1 was confused, and 4 were conscious. The underlying condition was rheumatic valvular heart disease (3), chronic obstructive lung disease (4), cornonary heart disease (3) and cardiomyopathy (1). Five of the 11 patients died. The mechanism of hypoglycaemia is discussed and thought to be a combination of factors such as liver dysfunction, low calorie intake, malabsorption, and increased glusose utilization by ischaemic tissues, including the heart. It is recommended that in patients with congestive heart failure presenting with coma or confusion, blood sugar should be checked for possible hypoglycaemia.
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PMID:Profound spontaneous hypoglycaemia in congestive heart failure. 84 28

Selenium is an essential trace element in humans and animals. Its only established function in humans is the antioxidant activity of glutathione peroxidase, a selenoenzyme. Severe prolonged deficiency may cause a fatal cardiomyopathy. Iatrogenic causes of selenium deficiency include parenteral and enteral nutrition. Low plasma selenium is also found in malabsorption, cystic fibrosis, rheumatoid arthritis, neoplasia, and other varied clinical disorders. Death has resulted from a single massive ingestion of selenium, while chronic excessive intake causes skin, nail, and hair pathology. Extreme geographical variation in population blood and urine selenium levels and a marked age-specific variation in population reference intervals are important factors in understanding selenium nutrition. Nutritional requirements, biological availability, and metabolism are discussed in relation to geographical, age, and method variability. Sampling, processing procedures, and methods for selenium quantitation are reviewed. Selenium content in different biological matrices and reference values for pediatric, adult, and obstetric populations are provided.
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PMID:Selenium: clinical significance and analytical concepts. 269 Aug 56

Selenium (Se) is a metalloid with chemical properties closed to those of sulfur, but they can not substitute for one another in vivo. Se body content reflected soil Se content (13 to 20 mg in North Americans, 3 to 6 in New Zealand residents). The daily intake recommended is 50 to 200 micrograms. In the diet Se occurs in mineral or organic forms, the bioavailability of these latter is better. Se as selenocysteine is incorporated in specific proteins such as glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px). Se is metabolized in H2Se by reductive pathways. H2Se is methylated and methylated compounds are excreted in the urines. The Se urinary excretion represents the principal known process of Se regulation. Se bound to GSH-Px participates to free radical destruction and cellular membrane protection. Its role is complementary of vitamin E effect. Se also seems indispensable to appropriate immune response. It can chelate various metals allowing their detoxication. Se metabolism can be studied by Se assay in serum, whole blood, urine (reference values must be performed for each studied population) and by GSH-Px activity determination in erythrocytes or platelets. Vitamin E assay completes estimation of the antioxidative status of organism. Few Se intoxications have been recognized but Se deficiencies often happen. They can lead to a cardiomyopathy (Keshan disease), increase the risk of cardiovascular diseases or cancer. Se deficiencies are found in chronic renal failure, malnutrition malabsorption, long term parenteral nutrition. At the present time it is not known how Se deficiency interfers with chronic infections which often go with these diseases. A better knowledge of Se requirements and Se role could allow an appropriate supplementation in various diseases.
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PMID:[Selenium: physiologic role and value in human pathology]. 305 85

Seven patients (five male and two female) with chronic renal failure (CRF) treated by periodical haemodialysis presented with swelling and effusion of more than three months' duration in knees (four bilateral), shoulders (two, one of them bilateral), elbow (one), and ankle (one). Four had a carpal tunnel syndrome both clinically and electromyographically (three bilateral). All patients had hyperparathyroidism secondary to their CRF, which was not due to amyloidosis in any of them. The dialysis duration period varied from five to 14 years, with an average of 8.6 years. Amyloid deposits (Congo red positive areas with green birefringence under polarising microscopy) were shown in six of the seven synovial biopsy specimens of the knee, in five of the sediments of the synovial fluids, and in specimens removed during carpal tunnel syndrome surgery. No amyloid was found in the biopsy specimen of abdominal fat of six of the patients. The finding of amyloid only in the synovial membrane and fluid, and carpal tunnel, its absence in abdominal fat, and the lack of other manifestations of generalised amyloidosis (cardiomyopathy, malabsorption syndrome, macroglossia, etc.) and of Bence Jones myeloma (protein immunoelectrophoresis normal) raises the possibility that this is a form of amyloidosis which is peculiar to CRF treated by periodical haemodialysis.
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PMID:Amyloid arthropathy in patients undergoing periodical haemodialysis for chronic renal failure: a new complication. 406 86

An unusual case of Whipple's disease is reported. The diagnosis was difficult as the characteristic digestive sign and symptoms (malabsorption, diarrhea, mucosal infiltration by PAS-positive macrophages) were absent. After a ten-year history of seronegative arthritis, myocardiopathy, with aortic insufficiency, basilar pulmonary infiltrates, enlarged lymph nodes, the patient, a 56 years old man, was referred to us for a severe vegetative and neurological dysfunction: stupor, dysarthria, akinesia, hypertonia, hypothermia and abnormal thirst. A CT-scan showed a low-density area of the right hypothalamus, and PAS-positive macrophages were found in a lymph node, in the CSF and in a cerebral biopsy. The patient then received a classical antibiotic treatment, yet the neurologic dysfunction remained severe. Finally, a trial with rifampicin brought a striking improvement of the patient's condition, which has now lasted for three years.
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PMID:[Hypothalamic form of Whipple's disease. Favorable effect of rifampicin]. 619 50

Myopathy associated with desmin-type intermediate filaments is an uncommon disorder of skeletal and/or cardiac muscle. The present study focuses on a 28-year-old man with generalized muscular atrophy, cardiomyopathy, and intestinal malabsorption and pseudo-obstruction. Abundant sarcoplasmic granular and filamentous aggregates that were ultrastructurally continuous with Z lines or dense bodies and exhibited intense immunostaining for desmin were present throughout the skeletal musculature, myocardium, and smooth muscle of the intestine. Moreover, neurofilament-immunoreactive axonal spheroids were identified in the spinal cord and roots. These widely distributed findings illustrate the multisystemic character of desmin myopathy, which in this instance first adds intestinal smooth muscle involvement to its already known skeletal and cardiac muscle manifestations. The additional presence of neurofilament aggregates in the spinal cord and roots constitutes an extremely rare conjunction of intermediate filament pathology of the neuromuscular system.
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PMID:Desmin myopathy: a multisystem disorder involving skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscle. 767 86

A 2 5/12-year-old Chinese boy was investigated for refractory seizures and psychomotor regression. His birth history was unremarkable. Generalized seizures occurred at 2 weeks of age with hypocalcemia. They recurred at 7 months of age and have become aggravated since. During hospitalization, in addition to hypocalcemia and hypomagnesemia, he was found to have hypoparathyroidism, cardiomyopathy, and brain atrophy. Excessive renal loss of magnesium, general intestinal malabsorption, or inadequate dietary intake of magnesium were excluded. He was successfully treated with oral supplements of 19-25 mmole/day of magnesium. Over a few months, he made a dramatic progress in development. His hypoparathyroidism and cardiomyopathy gradually resolved. However, intermittent seizures and psychomotor retardation persisted up to his present age of 6 3/12 years. At 4 months of age his younger sister also developed seizures and was found to have isolated hypomagnesemia. This was corrected by oral magnesium and followed by resolution of the seizure. She has developed normally up to her present age of 1 10/12 years. Both patients are currently maintained on oral magnesium oxide.
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PMID:Familial primary hypomagnesemia complicated with brain atrophy and cardiomyopathy. 929 31

Selenium deficiency is a rare cause of cardiomyopathy that may be encountered by the forensic pathologist. Selenium deficiency is associated with a cardiomyopathy, myopathy and osteoarthropathy. In Asia and Africa, dietary selenium deficiency is associated with a cardiomyopathy known as Keshan disease and an osteoarthropathy called Kashin-Beck disease. Chronic selenium deficiency may also occur in individuals with malabsorption and long term selenium-deficient parenteral nutrition. Selenium deficiency causes myopathy as a result of the depletion of selenium-associated enzymes which protect cell membranes from damage by free radicals. We present a case of fulminant heart failure in a middle aged woman with a complex medical and surgical history including documented malabsorption and selenium deficiency. Pathological examination of the heart showed features consistent with Keshan disease.
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PMID:Fulminant heart failure due to selenium deficiency cardiomyopathy (Keshan disease). 1184 34

Celiac disease or celiac sprue is predominantly a disease of the small intestine characterized by chronic malabsorption in genetically susceptible individuals who ingest grains containing gluten, such as wheat, barley, and rye. Although previously believed to be uncommon, celiac disease may be present in up to 1% of the general population. Celiac disease is associated frequently with iron deficiency anemia, dermatitis herpetiformis, selective IgA deficiency, thyroid disorders, diabetes mellitus, and various connective tissue disorders but is rarely associated with cardiomyopathy. We describe a patient with celiac disease associated with cardiomyopathy whose cardiac function improved substantially after treatment with a gluten-free diet. Cardiomyopathy associated with celiac disease is a serious and potentially lethal condition. However, with early diagnosis and treatment with a gluten-free diet, cardiomyopathy in patients with celiac disease may be completely reversible.
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PMID:Cardiomyopathy associated with celiac disease. 1588 37

Celiac disease is an intestinal disorder caused by an immunologic response to gluten, which results in diffuse damage to the proximal small intestinal mucosa with malabsorption of nutrients. An association between celiac disease and nonischemic dilated cardiomyopathy has been noted. Cardiomyopathy has been shown to improve in some patients on a gluten-free diet. We report a case of progressively worsening dilated cardiomyopathy in a patient with documented celiac disease.
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PMID:Celiac disease associated with dilated cardiomyopathy. 1973 31


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