Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0024523 (malabsorption)
7,319 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

2 patients, who were treated with clioquinol after radical resection of carcinoma of the rectum and colostomy, developed symmetrical sensorimotor polyneuropathy, mild posterior tract ataxia, bilateral pyramidal tract lesions and optic neuropathy, a clinical picture compatible with subacute myelo-optic-neuropathy (S.M.O.N.). One patient had neurological symptoms after having received 750 g of clioquinol, 3 years after treatment started, and impairment of vision was noted after having received 1200 g. The other patient had neurological symptoms 6 weeks after clioquinol was first given, having received 65 g, the average daily dose being 1.5 g, and vision was impaired after 765 g had been administered. On examination 12 and 14 months after clioquinol had been discontinued, the first patient's vision was slightly improved, but he was otherwise unchanged, while the vision of the other patient was unchanged, but she had otherwise deteriorated slightly neurologically. Electrophysiological examinations confirmed the clinical observations. A multifactor etiology of the syndrome: neurotoxicity of clioquinol, paraneoplastic neuropathy and malabsorption, is discussed.
...
PMID:[Subacute myelo-optic-neuropathy (S.M.O.N.) following treatment with clioquinol (author's transl)]. 5 Oct 51

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

Vitamin B12 malabsorption in the ileum has been postulated as the underlying cause of the Imerslund-Grasbeck syndrome comprising megaloblastic anemia, proteinuria, and multiple neurological abnormalities. A young Saudi child with spasticity, truncal ataxia, cerebral atrophy, megaloblastic anaemia and proteinuria is described. Replacement therapy with parenteral vitamin B12 resulted in the complete resolution of his neurological findings and brain atrophy.
...
PMID:Reversal of severe neurological abnormalities after vitamin B12 replacement in the Imerslund-Grasbeck syndrome. 194 Sep 89

Sibling cases of familial vitamin E deficiency accompanied by ataxia, polyneuropathy and mental retardation were reported. Case 1 was a 37-year-old male who developed progressive gait disturbance, deformity of the feet and head tremor from childhood, after normal delivery and development of early childhood. On physical examination, he had cataract, high arched palate and pes cavus. Neurological examination revealed mental retardation (WAIS 68), scanning speech, muscular atrophy of the face and extremities with predominance in the lower limbs, absent Achilles tendon reflex, disturbance of superficial and deep sensation predominant in distal limbs, and marked gait ataxia. Ataxia was both cerebellar and sensory in nature. Laboratory data of the blood showed no significant abnormalities including blood glucose and vitamin B12 except a markedly low level of serum vitamin E. The brain CT scan revealed severe cerebellar atrophy and marked dilatation of the cisterna magna and the subarachnoid space around the cerebellum. Motor nerve conduction velocity in the leg was decreased. Biopsy specimen from the quadriceps muscle showed neurogenic atrophy. Sural nerve biopsy revealed decrease in large myelinated fibers with axonal degeneration and regeneration. Oral administration of alpha-tocopherol acetate, 600 mg per day, diminished ataxia significantly. Based on lysosomal enzyme activity in leukocytes, clinical and laboratory examination, lipidosis or spinocerebellar degeneration was excluded. Chronic lipid malabsorption or beta lipoprotein deficiency which can cause decrease in vitamin E absorption, was not recognized. On oral loading with 2 g of alpha-tocopherol acetate, the decrease rate of serum vitamin E was normal. Consequently the low vitamin E was considered to have resulted from selective impairment of vitamin E absorption.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Familial idiopathic vitamin E deficiency associated with cerebellar atrophy]. 226 7

Patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) and pancreatic malabsorption frequently have vitamin E deficiency. Affected patients may develop spinocerebellar degeneration with dysarthria, ataxia, proximal weakness, proprioceptive loss and areflexia. Of a highly selected group of 10 patients with vitamin E levels below 5 micrograms/ml (normal 5-20 micrograms/ml), 7 had abnormal neurological examinations, predominantly affecting vibration and joint position perception with some severely affected patients manifesting diminished visual acuity, tremor, ataxia and diffuse weakness. Evoked potential studies showed marked abnormalities in 3 patients, demonstrating deficits in the optic pathways and in the cervical cord dorsal column pathways. Evoked potential studies may supplement careful neurological examination in patients with CF before and after supplementation with vitamin E to evaluate their progression and response to treatment.
...
PMID:Visual and somatosensory evoked potentials in vitamin E deficiency with cystic fibrosis. 245 91

Acanthocytes have a distinct morphology and are not normally found in peripheral blood. They occur in association with at least three neurological syndromes. In abetalipoproteinaemia, a progressive spinocerebellar ataxia and retinopathy occurs secondary to malabsorption of vitamin E. Cases with chorea are often familial, with orofacial dyskinesia and an axonal neuropathy causing areflexia and muscle wasting. Areflexia and a subclinical myopathy also occur in the McLeod syndrome, in which there is abnormal expression of Kell blood group antigens. The exact mechanism of acanthocytosis in each disorder remains uncertain: passive changes in membrane lipids, surface receptor/ligand interactions, and a primary membrane defect are among the possibilities.
...
PMID:Acanthocytosis and neurological impairment--a review. 268 30

D-Lactate-associated encephalopathy is a rare clinical syndrome characterized by dizziness, ataxia, confusion, headaches, memory loss, lethargy, and aggressiveness which may progress to frank but reversible coma. It occurs in patients with profound dysfunction of the short-bowel syndrome and is believed to result from massive carbohydrate malabsorption with resultant over-production of D-lactate and other organic anions by the colonic flora. Extremely elevated serum levels of D-lactate (but not L-lactate) confirm the diagnosis, but currently D-lactate is not clearly established as the putative neurotoxin. We describe a patient who repeatedly developed D-lactate encephalopathy after surgical removal of nearly the entire jejunum and ileum. Markedly elevated D-lactate serum levels were documented during an encephalopathic episode. Potential pathophysiologic mechanisms and the treatment rationale are discussed.
...
PMID:D-lactate-associated encephalopathy after massive small-bowel resection. 276 Apr 34

Since the beginning of this century, the concept of tropical neuromyelopathy (T. N. M.) was progressively elaborated in tropical areas. This disorder is constituted by three main clinical syndromes (e.g.: polyneuropathy, spastic paraplegia, ataxia). Abnormal clinical, electrophysiological and pathological features, observed in all clinical forms argue in favor of a diffuse pathobiological process of the nervous system. The association with positive HTLV-1 serology, has recently induced a great interest for the spastic forms of T. N. M. Tropical spastic paraplegia tend to be individualized. This attitude differs from the global concept of T. N. M. which allows gathering similar clinical syndromes. This T. N. M. group should be kept intact until the discovery of new etiologies. Toxic (manioc, lathyrism) or deficiency (hypovitaminosis, malabsorption) causes are incriminated. Otherwise etiologies are unknown.
...
PMID:[The concept of tropical neuromyelopathy]. 290 Dec 97

A 62-year-old man and his maternal uncle had a selective vitamin E deficiency without generalized fat malabsorption. A progressive neurological disorder comprising ataxia, areflexia, and loss of proprioception developed in their sixth and seventh decades. The vitamin E deficiency is thought to be due to abnormally accelerated utilization, excretion, or degradation of the vitamin. This adult-onset spinocerebellar syndrome is due to vitamin E deficiency not caused by malabsorption.
...
PMID:Adult-onset spinocerebellar syndrome with idiopathic vitamin E deficiency. 347 25

There is increasing evidence that vitamin E is essential for normal neurological function. In abetalipoproteinemia, which is the most severe deficiency state known in man, development of the associated spinocerebellar syndrome can be prevented by early vitamin E therapy. A neurological disorder similar to that seen in abetalipoproteinemia, comprising progressive ataxia, hyporeflexia, and proprioceptive loss, has been described in children and adults with chronic fat malabsorption and vitamin E deficiency. The neuropathological changes in such patients resemble those seen in vitamin E-deficient monkeys. Recent reports suggest that spinocerebellar degeneration may be caused by a selective defect of vitamin E absorption without other evidence of gastrointestinal disease.
...
PMID:Vitamin E and the nervous system. 355 52


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next >>