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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Plasma total lipid phosphorus, individual phospholipid fractions, free and esterified cholesterol, triglycerides and nonesterified fatty acids were fractionated by thin-layer chromatography and determined in bilharzial hepatic fibrosis patients (57 cases) and normal controls (25 cases). Significant diminutions were encountered in the total and the individual phospholipids, especially the lysolecithin fraction in the 3 groups of patients studied. Total and esterified cholesterol and triglycerides showed significant decreases, especially in moderate and late cases. NEFA, on the other hand, did not reveal any change from normal level in either moderate, late or mixed cases. Such findings may be attributed to
malabsorption
,
lack of energy
, insufficiency of required precursors as well as impaired synthesis by the liver.
...
PMID:Lipid pattern in Bilharzial hepatic fiprosis. 118 Nov 74
Vitamin B12 deficiency develops over a slowly progressive continuum. Early manifestations may be generalized weakness or
fatigue
, indigestion, diarrhea, or depression. Pernicious anemia is considered the classic cause, but others include
malabsorption
because of achlorhydria or other gastric dysfunction, fish tapeworm infection, and strict vegetarianism. Iron deficiency often coexists. Because presentation is often atypical, vitamin B12 deficiency is a diagnostic consideration whenever neuropsychiatric signs or symptoms are unexplained.
...
PMID:Vitamin B12 deficiency. Important new concepts in recognition. 220 95
Relationships between nutrition and infection are generally complex, bidirectional, and not perfectly worked out. Healthy people can adapt to simple decreases in intake or increases in expenditure. However, the imposition of infection with associated cytokines may impair such adaptations, resulting in wasting of lean tissue. In human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, nutritional abnormalities are common. Lean body mass depletion is associated temporally with death in a subset of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients. Weakness,
fatigue
, and anorexia are important symptomatic complaints affecting quality of life. Pathophysiologic mechanisms remain speculative, although there is reason to suspect four theoretic factors: decreased intake,
malabsorption
, hypermetabolism, and altered metabolism. More than one disturbance may be necessary for clinical wasting to develop; ie, a primary abnormality plus a failure of homeostatic adaptation. Excess cytokine production also may be involved, but this is uncertain. Therapeutics remain empiric in the absence of known mechanisms. Current options are restricted to diet adjustments or supplements, treatment of underlying diseases (where possible), and rarely, parenteral alimentation. Promising investigational possibilities include an appetite stimulant (megestrol acetate) and therapies to oppose cytokine production or actions, but definitive beneficial effects on nutritional status, subjective performance, disease activity, or survival have not yet been demonstrated. Advances in clinical therapeutics await an improved understanding of pathophysiologic mechanisms and carefully designed clinical trials testing proposed interventions.
...
PMID:Current approach to the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus-associated weight loss: pathophysiologic considerations and emerging management strategies. 225 24
We report on a 36-year-old female patient suffering from bilateral inguinal pain. The x-ray revealed significant osteoporosis of both proximal femurs with an impacted
fatigue
fracture of the right calcar and Looser zones at the left subtrochanteric femur. The intestinal biopsy proved coeliac disease, resulting in a secondary
malabsorption
. The authors conclude that osteomalacia in young patients could indicate coeliac-induced
malabsorption
.
...
PMID:[Osteomalacia and fatigue fractures in celiac disease]. 234 37
AIDS-related gastrointestinal disease is common, presenting a challenge to all nutritional support clinicians. Patients frequently suffer from weight loss, diarrhea,
malabsorption
, and cachexia. Many factors complicate the course of AIDS-related gastrointestinal disease, including decreased food intake (resulting from
fatigue
and malaise), increased metabolic demand and nutritional requirements, and identifiable gastrointestinal pathology. Gastrointestinal pathology is well-documented, and in approximately 50% of persons with AIDS-related gastrointestinal disease, a causative agent can be identified. In general, treatment of AIDS-related gastrointestinal disease is not always curative. Much of the chronic gastrointestinal dysfunction is caused by recurring opportunistic pathogens that are resistant to chemotherapy. Often, patient care and long-term management can focus only on fluid and electrolyte balance, nutritional support, and symptom control. Even clinically stable patients have been diagnosed as chronically malnourished and, for reasons that remain unclear, are prone to rapid nutritional deterioration during disease exacerbations. Published reports of nutritional assessment and intervention in persons with AIDS are now appearing in the literature. However, the eventual mortality associated with AIDS still results in a hesitancy on the part of many clinicians to prescribe aggressive nutritional support, especially parenteral nutrition. Who to treat and at what stage of illness becomes the question. As new agents, such as AZT, are prescribed on a more frequent basis for persons with AIDS, the use of nutritional support as adjunctive therapy early in the course of disease becomes an issue. Although improving nutrition has not been shown to reverse any of the cellular immunodeficiency caused by HIV infection, quality of life may be improved. In specific cases, nutritional support, whether through diet counseling, food programs, or intervention with enteral or parenteral nutrition, appears to improve strength and endurance, thus enhancing quality of life.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal manifestations of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 249 50
A 40-year-old man who was resected ascending colon and terminal ileum (10 cm) in Aug. 1978, with the diagnosis of Crohn's disease, was admitted to our hospital with general
fatigue
, paresthesia and tremor in May. 1984. A peripheral blood examination on admission revealed Hb 10.1 g/dl, RBC 234 X 10(4)/mm3, MCV 131.4 fl, MCH 43.2 pg. A bone marrow specimen showed marked erythroid hyperplasia (W/E 1.44) with megaloblastic change. While serum folate level was normal, serum vitamin B12 value was low and Schilling test showed vitamin B12
malabsorption
. Roentgenologic and endoscopic examinations revealed diffuse cobblestone appearances in small intestine (from anastomosis part to duodenal bulb). These examinations suggested vitamin B12
malabsorption
with diffuse Crohn's disease caused megaloblastic anemia. The patient had been treated with vitamin B12 1,000 micrograms/day injection and, in Sep. 1984, he recovered from megaloblastic anemia (Hb 13.4 g/dl, RBC 440 X 10(4)/mm3, MCV 90.7 fl, MCH 30.4 pg).
...
PMID:[Megaloblastic anemia associated with diffuse intestinal Crohn's disease]. 271 98
By creating motility disorders, functional pancreatic insufficiency, inadequate bowel absorptive surface, bacterial overgrowth, or mucosal changes, several disease states and treatments have an adverse impact on the body's ability to digest and/or absorb nutrients adequately. The subjective and objective observations associated with the
malabsorption syndrome
--
fatigue
, paresthesia, weight change, alterations in bowel movements, and laboratory abnormalities--are caused by losses of macronutrients, electrolytes, minerals, and vitamins in the stool. The absorption workup consists of tests for fat absorption, bowel integrity, pancreatic function, and bacterial overgrowth, which may be performed alone or in combination to aid in identifying specific absorptive defects. Other diagnostic procedures include abdominal x-rays and CAT scans and intestinal biopsy. A logical, well-planned workup is essential in order to avoid unnecessary and/or costly testing. Nutrition management utilizes parenteral, enteral, and oral feeding in combination with adjunct medical measures for maximizing nutrient absorption and minimizing nutrient losses.
...
PMID:Malabsorption in adults: etiology, evaluation, and management. 309 70
Mg deficiency is a frequent complication of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) demonstrated in 13-88% of patients. Decreased oral intake,
malabsorption
and increased intestinal losses are the major causes of Mg deficiency. The complications of Mg deficiency include: cramps, bone pain, delirium, acute crises of tetany,
fatigue
, depression, cardiac abnormalities, urolithiasis, impaired healing and colonic motility disorders. Serum Mg is an insensitive index of Mg status in IBD. Twenty-four-hour urinary excretion of Mg is a sensitive index and should be monitored periodically. Parenteral Mg requirements in patients with IBD are at least 120 mg/day or more depending upon fecal or stomal losses. Oral requirements may be as great as 700 mg/day depending on the severity of
malabsorption
.
...
PMID:Magnesium and inflammatory bowel disease. 329 19
More than 100 patient-years' experience has been acquired in the treatment of 133 patients with ambulatory home total parenteral nutrition (TPN) between May 1974 and December 1983. Indications for chronic or permanent home TPN include short bowel syndrome,
malabsorption
, scleroderma, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide syndrome. Indications for acute or temporary home TPN include Crohn's disease, malignancies, gastrointestinal fistulas, ulcerative colitis, anorexia nervosa, and numerous other disorders. Eighty-two patients in the acute group were treated primarily with percutaneously placed standard subclavian catheters and 51 patients in the chronic group have been treated thus far with implanted silicone rubber, Dacron-cuffed catheters for a cumulative total of 38,939 patient days. Of the 125 implanted catheters, 115 were placed in the superior vena cava and ten in the inferior vena cava for an average duration of 250 catheter-days, the longest single catheter remaining in situ for more than 8 1/2 years. Catheter-related sepsis occurred 33 times with the implanted catheters, or once every 2.6 catheter-years. One hundred and fourteen temporary catheters were placed percutaneously in the superior vena cava via a subclavian vein for an average duration of 68 days, the longest single catheter remaining in situ for 213 days. Catheter-related sepsis occurred seven times, equivalent to one episode per 3 catheter-years. Total catheter-related complications were quite infrequent and were directly related to duration of catheterization. They included venous thrombosis (12), clotted catheter (11), catheter failure or rupture (8), catheter compression (5) and inadvertent catheter removal (4). Twenty-six catheters were repaired or spliced in situ when the external segment was accidentally damaged or deteriorated secondary to long-term material
fatigue
. One remarkable patient has been maintained exclusively by TPN originally as an inpatient and subsequently as an outpatient for the entire 13 years of his life.
...
PMID:100 patient-years of ambulatory home total parenteral nutrition. 642 31
The classical symptoms of
malabsorption syndrome
are diarrhea, steatorrhea, weight loss, and
fatigue
. Tetany, ecchymosis, anorexia, bone pain, pallor, muscle wasting, hyperpigmentation, apathy, digital clubbing, abdominal distention which contrasts in view of the reduced common statement are other signs of
malabsorption
. Long before the onset of these symptoms there may be a disinterest in regular daily activities often associated with the passage of three soft stools per day and with the remarkable sign of difficulties in flushing bulky stools. Anamnesia, clinical examination in connection with common laboratory findings, small intestinal x-rays and endoscopic investigations associated with biopsies of the small (and large) bowel as well as estimation of stool fat excretion, xylose- and Schilling-test allow the diagnosis in most of the cases.
...
PMID:[Clinical aspects and differential diagnosis of malabsorption]. 684 29
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