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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 7-month-old boy presented with
vomiting
and failure to thrive associated with proteinuria, methylmalonic aciduria and macrocytosis, but without anaemia. Plasma vitamin B12 levels were normal by a radio-dilution method. He was treated as an inborn error of metabolism with intramuscular cyanocobalamin and a low protein diet. However when treatment was withdrawn he remained well for 11 months before relapsing with
vomiting
and weight loss. Re-investigation again showed methylmalonic aciduria, but the haemoglobin was low and plasma vitamin B12 levels by a specific method showed them to be reduced. Studies of vitamin B12 absorption showed the picture of selective
malabsorption
. He was started on regular cyanocobalamin injections.
...
PMID:Selective vitamin B12 malabsorption without anaemia but with profound failure to thrive. 400 74
Breath hydrogen tests were carried out on 157 children either because they had chronic diarrhea or because they were on disaccharide-free diets. Lactose malabsorption was common in patients with postgastroenteritis syndrome (43%), and sucrose
malabsorption
was readily detected in patients with congenital sucrase-isomaltase deficiency. Secondary sucrose
malabsorption
and small bowel bacterial overgrowth were also detected. In predicting clinical response to dietary change, the breath hydrogen test, as we perform it, was clearly the most specific and sensitive and had a predictive accuracy of 96%. Duodenal biopsy results obtained from 48 of the children gave a 23% incidence of misleading disaccharidase results (16.7% falsely normal, 6.3% falsely abnormal), but biopsy remains vital in the diagnosis of congenital sucrase-isomaltase deficiency. False negative breath hydrogen results were obtained on occasions (4%) but in most instances were related to recent antimicrobial therapy or failure of the breath test mechanics (e.g.,
vomiting
, length of sampling).
...
PMID:Value of breath hydrogen analysis in management of diarrheal illness in childhood: comparison with duodenal biopsy. 402 May 71
The blind pouch syndrome is associated with a spectrum of diseases affecting the gastrointestinal tract that includes:
malabsorption
, ulceration, bleeding, and perforation. The clinical signs and symptoms of anemia, weight loss, abdominal pain,
vomiting
, and intermittent intestinal obstruction can be found. Occasionally, constipation or more often diarrhea is an important manifestation. A case report of this entity with related radiological and pathological findings secondary to a side-to-side anastomosis is presented and discussed.
...
PMID:Blind pouch syndrome: a case report. 405 Jul 62
Malrotation of the intestine may become symptomatic in the older child and may manifest itself in atypical presentations. Older children may present with symptoms of less than 72 hours duration which are typical of acute duodenal obstruction. More frequently, however, the older child with malrotation will present with chronic abdominal pain with or without
vomiting
or chronic diarrhea. The diagnosis of malrotation should be considered in any child with intermittent abdominal pain,
vomiting
, diarrhea, or
malabsorption
. Surgical intervention is curative and should be implemented as soon as possible after the diagnosis is made.
...
PMID:Late presentations of midgut malrotation in children. 407 71
A case of intestinal pseudo-obstruction in a 76-year-old man who presented with a six-year history of intermittent
vomiting
and abdominal pain and a 1(1/2)-year history of diarrhea is described. Investigation demonstrated aperistalsis of the lower esophagus and an unresponsive atonic small intestine. Marked
malabsorption
was present and appeared due to intestinal bacterial overgrowth consequent to the hypomotility. Autonomic nervous system testing failed to reveal any definite abnormality. Although this disorder is markedly similar to scleroderma involving the gastrointestinal tract, there was only minimal fibrosis of the bowel musculature evident at autopsy and the neural components appeared to be intact. These findings suggest that the basic disorder may be one of smooth muscle dysfunction. Other known causes of pseudo-obstruction could not be demonstrated.
...
PMID:Chronic idiopathic intestinal pseudo-obstruction with malabsorption, a scleroderma-like disorder. 475 95
The irradiation of the pelvic abdominal cancers extends beyond the centre of the tumour and may induce actinic digestive lesions. The bowel and more rarely the small bowel--which is the subject-matter of our study--are concerned by those radiolesions that are favoured by therapeutic overdose, post-operative adhesions fastening the bows, radio-surgical or chemicostatic associations, and lastly by vascular or nutritive deficiencies. One may distinguish between two kinds of lesions, depending on the lapse of time before their coming out and on the symptoms. The early or acute types are characterized by a radio-mucitis and give an exsudative enteropathy with anorexia,
vomiting
, diarrhoea and loss of weight, of which the diagnosis is easy because it occurs during the irradiation and lessens at the end of the treatment. The late radiolesions of the small bowel are characterized by sclerosis and chronic endarteritis and, after a longlasting period of latency, give varied symptoms: disordered intestinal transit which sometimes is irreversible, perforation, fistula, syndrome of
malabsorption
, giving often rise to be mistaken for a recurrence of the cancer. The treatment varies whether the lesion is segmental or diffuse. In the first case, the failure of the medical means accounts for the surgical cutting away or the internal derivation; in the second case, the digestive mutilation which would result from an enlargement of the lesion commands to be more cautions and to call for the methods of parenteral feeding and digestive setting to rest.
...
PMID:[The radiolesions of the small bowel (author's transl)]. 624 33
When conventional treatment with upright positioning and thickened feedings fails to control
vomiting
associated with gastroesophageal reflux (GER) of infancy, malnutrition and growth failure may result. If this occurs, fundoplication is usually recommended. In this study, 12 infants with growth failure associated with GER were given a trial of short-term (11.1 +/- SE 1.6 days) continuous-drip nasogastric (NG) feedings prior to surgical referral. Five of 10 infants for whom long-term follow-up (3-12 months) was obtained showed immediate weight gain, cessation of
vomiting
, and long-term resolution of growth failure without the need for surgery. All infants who had a favorable long-term response showed evidence of catch-up growth during the first 7 days of NG feeding. Infants who did not begin catch-up growth during the first 7 days did not benefit from longer periods (up to 21 days) of NG feeding. Poor response to NG feedings was associated with the presence of other medical problems (p = 0.024), including chronic pulmonary disease,
malabsorption
, cerebral palsy, and laryngomalacia. Four infants who did require fundoplication still showed no improvement in growth 2-6 months after surgery. In infants with GER and growth failure without other complicating disorders, a 7-10-day course of NG feeding may improve nutrition and bring about a permanent resolution of
vomiting
.
...
PMID:Clinical response to short-term nasogastric feeding in infants with gastroesophageal reflux and growth failure. 641 90
In order to assess the effectiveness and potential limitations of continuous enteral nutrition (CEN) to correct denutrition related to underlying digestive diseases, 10 nutritional criteria were measured weekly in 92 under-nourished patients fed with CEN for a 3-7 week period. All the patients received a standard non-elemental diet providing a mean daily energy intake of 52.8 kcal/kg BW (36.5 kcal/kg BW by tube feeding and 16.3 kcal/kg BW orally). The influence of preexisting
intestinal malabsorption
, hypercatabolic status, and post-radiation or inflammatory bowel disease was studied by an a posteriori classification of patients in one of the six following groups: I (no limiting factor), II (
malabsorption
), III (catabolic disease), IV (catabolic disease and
malabsorption
), V (colitis), VI (enteritis). During CEN, 8 patients had transient and one had persistent
vomiting
while 3 developed bronchopneumonia. Gains in body weight, triceps skinfold, midarm muscle circumference, creatinine-height index, urinary sodium and serum transferrin were significant as early as the 2nd week of CEN. Serum albumin and cholesterol, hemoglobin, and total count of lymphocytes were not significantly affected. Sixty-five patients (71 per cent) had an objective nutritional improvement and mean spontaneous oral intake increased from 17.8 to 28.7 kcal/kg BW per day. Significant increase of oral intake and objective nutritional improvement were observed in each group, but a longer period of CEN was necessary to achieve this result in groups II, IV and VI.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Does continuous enteral nutritional deficiencies in digestive system diseases? Results of a longitudinal study of 92 consecutive patients treated for 3 to 7 weeks]. 642 Feb 21
The main purpose of this work was to study changes in the balance of fluids, electrolytes and blood metabolites in neonatal piglets with severe transmissible gastroenteritis. Six two day old conventional piglets were infected with transmissible gastroenteritis virus while six others were used as normal controls. Blood samples were collected in heparin when the infected piglets were moribund. The following variables were measured: packed red cell volume, total plasma protein and bicarbonate, blood pH, blood urea nitrogen and plasma glucose, creatinine, chloride, inorganic phosphorus, sodium, potassium, magnesium and calcium.
Vomiting
and diarrhea appeared 12 to 24 hours postinoculation in the infected piglets and they were moribund one or two days later. Before becoming moribund, most of the piglets fell rapidly into a lethargic and comatose state. The most evident changes in their blood variables were an increase in packed cell volume, total protein, blood urea nitrogen, phosphorus and magnesium levels and a decrease in pH and bicarbonate concentration as well as a severe hypoglycemia. The results suggest that severe hypoglycemia coupled with metabolic acidosis and dehydration might be an important factor contributing to the high mortality rates caused by transmissible gastroenteritis in neonatal piglets. The hypoglycemia results from a combination of the inadequate glucose metabolism inherent to neonatal piglets and the acute maldigestion and
malabsorption
resulting from the diffuse and severe villous atrophy induced by the virus.
...
PMID:Hypoglycemia: a factor associated with low survival rate of neonatal piglets infected with transmissible gastroenteritis virus. 647 97
Giardia lamblia is the first protozoan to be identified and recognized as an important pathogen in human disease. We studied 8 pediatric patients with giardiasis in order to examine the clinical spectrum, the structural changes of the small intestinal mucosa and mainly the protozoan's ultrastructural features. The most common clinical manifestations were diarrhea, abdominal pain, anorexia,
vomiting
, failure to thrive. Infection was confirmed by excreted cysts in the stools in one patient, by the presence of trophozoites in duodenal aspirate and on jejunal mucosa. Giardiasis was not associated with hypogammaglobulinemia in our patients and no or only slight mucosal abnormalities were present in jejunal biopsies, except one which showed a flat mucosa. Specimens for transmissions and scanning electron microscopy were taken. We could establish the protozoan's features, its normal distribution, its relationship to intestinal mucosa and structural indications of the normal reaction of intestine with the use of ultrastructural techniques. The trophozoites colonized the proximal intestine, adhered to microvilli of columnar cells near the bases of villi, wedged or lodged in mucus. The sticky mucus producing an effective diffusion barrier to nutrients could explain
malabsorption
phenomena. Numerous intraluminal lymphocytes were seen, suggesting an immune response. These observations indicate that in giardiasis the clinical spectrum and structural changes of the small intestinal mucosa vary widely, suggesting a different reaction of immune system and/or a different degree of infection.
...
PMID:[Giardiasis in children. Ultrastructural study of the parasite]. 664 80
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