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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report the cases of two adult patients with cystic fibrosis affecting the pancreas and liver, who also had severe vitamin E deficiency and neurologic disease. The most prominent clinical features were abnormal eye movements, diminished reflexes, decreased vibratory and position sense,
ataxia
, and muscle weakness. Treatment with intramuscular injections of vitamin E partially corrected the neurologic deficits. Vitamin E absorption tests documented severe
malabsorption
, which was later alleviated by the addition of dessicated ox bile to the regimen of alpha-tocopheryl acetate. These studies suggest that a decreased intraluminal concentration of bile salts is an important factor in the development of severe vitamin E deficiency and in the poor response to oral replacement therapy that is seen in some patients with cystic fibrosis.
...
PMID:Vitamin E deficiency and neurologic disease in adults with cystic fibrosis. 359 48
We describe nine patients with fat
malabsorption
in whom a spectrum of vitamin E deficiency was present. Early deficiency was generally asymptomatic, and intermediate deficiency produced some impairment.
Ataxia
, weakness, reflex changes, impaired vision, and pigment retinopathy were associated with chronic, advanced deficiency. In the last group, delayed central somatosensory conduction and amplitude reduction of the electroretinogram were present. In adults, a severe vitamin E deficiency state existed for more than 5 years before producing measurable neurologic damage. The clinical picture is less homogeneous than previously suggested, and electrophysiologic abnormalities need not predate clinical dysfunction.
...
PMID:The spectrum of neurologic disorder from vitamin E deficiency. 371 53
A 30-year-old woman was thought to have Friedreich's disease because of progressive
ataxia
, dysarthria, and titubation from age 3 years. Her diet was normal, and there were neither symptoms nor laboratory evidence of liver disease or fat
malabsorption
. Serum vitamin E content and the ratio of serum vitamin E to total serum lipid were very low, but serum vitamin A, cholylglycine, and lipid levels were normal, as was an oral vitamin E tolerance test. Muscle biopsy showed the lysosomal inclusions of vitamin E deficiency. Mitochondria had normal oxidative phosphorylation using polarographic assays. The cause of her vitamin E deficiency was unknown.
...
PMID:Friedreich's disease: V. Variant form with vitamin E deficiency and normal fat absorption. 379 40
A well-defined degenerative neurological condition has been associated with cholestatic liver disease in children. This syndrome, heralded by gait and limb
ataxia
, areflexia, and proprioceptive and vibratory sensory loss, has also been observed in abetalipoproteinemia (Bassen-Kornzweig syndrome), cystic fibrosis, and
intestinal malabsorption
states. A significant body of evidence suggests that vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol) deficiency is in large part responsible for this condition. In this article, a patient manifesting this syndrome is reported, and the current status of the vitamin E deficiency state is reviewed.
...
PMID:Neurologic complications of vitamin E deficiency: case report and review of the literature. 391 52
A 68-year-old man presenting with chronic intermittent diarrhea and progressive
ataxia
was found to have idiopathic hypoparathyroidism. Intrinsic factor-resistant vitamin B(12)
malabsorption
was demonstrated. Both the diarrhea and vitamin
malabsorption
were reversed by correction of hypocalcemia.His neurological profile was a combination of peripheral nerve, posterior column and cerebellar deficits. He had calcifications in the dentate nuclei of the cerebellum. Possible etiological factors such as vitamin B(12) deficiency, folic acid deficiency and steatorrhea have been excluded. Posterior column and cerebellar abnormalities improved with treatment. It is postulated that hypocalcemia causes functional, reversible spinal cord and cerebellar dysfunction.
...
PMID:Idiopathic hypoparathyroidism with impaired vitamin B 12 absorption and neuropathy. 433 89
Vitamin E
malabsorption
and deficiency during chronic childhood cholestasis has been associated with a progressive ataxic neurologic syndrome. Hyporeflexia, the first sign of neurologic dysfunction, may begin prior to age 2 years, but severe symptoms do not develop until age 5 to 10 years. To establish the age of onset of neuropathologic lesions, we prospectively evaluated four young children with severe cholestasis.
Malabsorption
and deficiency of vitamin E were documented by low serum vitamin E concentrations, low serum vitamin E to total serum lipids ratios, elevated hydrogen peroxide hemolysis, and impaired absorption of a pharmacologic dose of alpha-tocopherol. Abnormal neurologic findings in two patients were limited to areflexia, ptosis, mild truncal
ataxia
, and hypotonia; two patients had minimal signs of neurologic dysfunction. Sural nerve histology at age 6 to 25 months revealed a degenerative axonopathy involving large-caliber myelinated fibers, but without quantitative axonal loss. Muscle histology and histochemistry tests yielded normal results. Our study suggests that neurologic injury may occur during the first two years of life in vitamin E-deficient children with cholestatic hepatobiliary disease, obligating aggressive attempts at correcting this deficiency state at a very young age.
...
PMID:Vitamin E deficiency during chronic childhood cholestasis: presence of sural nerve lesion prior to 2 1/2 years of age. 630 96
A 14-year-old boy of Arabic origin presented with a pellagra-like rash and neurological manifestations including
ataxia
, dysarthria, nystagmus, and coma. There was a striking response to oral nicotinamide. The laboratory findings were not typical of Hartnup disease: aminoaciduris and indicanuria were absent and there was no evidence of tryptophan
malabsorption
. Tryptophan loading did not induce tryptophanuria nor did it increase excretion of xanthurenic or kynurenic acids. These findings support the possibility of a block in tryptophan degradation. The family history suggests a genetically-determined disorder.
...
PMID:Familial pellagra-like skin rash with neurological manifestations. 645 Dec 1
Several authors have recently reported a neurological disorder associated with chronic vitamin E deficiency in man. Except in one patient, this deficiency has always been secondary to an underlying disease resulting in lipid
malabsorption
. We report a second case of such a neurological syndrome in a patient in whom vitamin E deficiency was an isolated finding. The clinical picture in our patient was characterized by a diffuse muscle weakness most prominent distally and in the lower limbs, generalized areflexia, a decrease in proprioception and vibration sense and slight limb and gait
ataxia
. His condition improved on alpha tocopherol therapy so that it is very likely that vitamin E deficiency is responsible for his neurological deficit. Since in our patient as well as in several other reported cases this condition has been treatable, it is important that this syndrome be recognized in children presenting a suggestive clinical picture even if they do not have lipid
malabsorption
.
...
PMID:A progressive neurological syndrome associated with an isolated vitamin E deficiency. 650 2
A 27-year-old woman who had undergone extensive small bowel resection at age 14 months developed kyphoscoliosis, ocular palsies, constricted visual fields, retinitis pigmentosa, progressive
ataxia
, muscular weakness, nearly absent vibration and impaired position sense, areflexia, extensor plantar responses, and macrocytic anemia. Her condition closely resembled Bassen-Kornzweig disease, but lipoprotein electrophoresis was normal. Mild fat
malabsorption
, lactic acidosis, and severe deficiency of vitamins A and E and carotene were documented. Serum B12 and folic acid levels were normal. During vitamin A and E therapy sufficient to elevate serum levels to the normal range, there was improvement of visual fields and visual acuity in dim light, lactic acidosis, and red cell volume. Progression of symptoms was halted during vitamin replacement therapy, and her gait improved. This syndrome is the human counterpart to vitamin E deficiency in experimental animals.
...
PMID:Small bowel resection with vitamin E deficiency and progressive spinocerebellar syndrome. 654 Mar 84
Magnesium deficiency may complicate many diseases. The causes include the following: inadequate intake during starvation or increased requirement during early childhood, pregnancy, or lactation; excessive losses of magnesium as a result of
malabsorption
from the gastrointestinal tract or from the kidneys during use of diuretics; and to a combination of the two, as in alcoholism. Most often the etiological factors have been operative for a month or more. Acute hypomagnesemia can occur without previous Mg deficiency after epinephrine, cold stress and stress of serious injury or extensive surgery. The clinical manifestations depend on the age of the patient and may begin insidiously or with dramatic suddenness, or there may be no overt symptoms or signs. The manifestations can be divided into the following categories: totally non-specific symptoms and signs ascribable to the primary disease; neuromuscular hyperactivity including tremor, myoclonic jerks, convulsions, Chvostek sign, Trousseau sign (rarely), spontaneous carpopedal spasm (rarely),
ataxia
, nystagmus and dysphagia; psychiatric disturbances from apathy and coma to some of all facets of delirium; cardiac arrhythmias including ventricular fibrillation and sudden death; hypocalcemia which is responsive only to Mg therapy; and hypokalemia which is not easily nor completely corrected without Mg therapy. The diversity of etiologies and the multiplicity of manifestations result in confusion and controversy. The documentation of normal renal function is absolutely necessary for maximum doses. The order of magnitude of dose is 1.0 meq Mg/kg on day 1, and 0.3 to 0.5 mEq/kg per day for 3 to 5 days. In emergencies such as convulsions or ventricular arrhythmias, a bolus injection of 1.0 gm (8.1 meq) of MgSO4 is indicated. Therapy of Mg deficiency in the presence of renal insufficiency requires smaller doses and frequent monitoring. Complete repletion occurs slowly.
...
PMID:Magnesium deficiency. Etiology and clinical spectrum. 702 Mar 47
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