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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Intestinal infarction is a condition with a high rate of mortality. Progress in the fields of
anesthesia
, maintenance of electrolyte balance, and intensive postoperative care has made survival possible in a number of patients subjected to extensive resection of the small intestine. Many of these patients, however, later succumb to the effects of
malabsorption
. In this paper we report on a patient who has undergone massive intestinal resection, because of venous intestinal infarction, and Mackby's operation, with favorable results twelve months postoperatively.
...
PMID:Shortened small bowel syndrome. Mackby's operation. 113 Jun
The alimentary surveys carried out on various sectors of the population in industrialized countries have shown the existence of chronic clinically silent deficiency in micronutrients. In some cases, as in folates, their lability against conservation techniques, the change in alimentary habits, the abuse of alcohol and the great quantity of frequently used drugs which interfere in their absorption, diminish their content in the diet and their bio-availability. The appearance of macrocytic anemia is a late deficiency sign, and therefore in situations of an increase need and in patients included in the risk groups, a supplemental intake must be given in order to avoid irreversible lesions if it is not possible to monitor the folate levels. There are risk groups in which various etiological factors come into play, acting at a different metabolic level on the folates and making more difficult their dietetic or pharmacological compensation even if supply is considerably increased. We studied these factors independently and in each specific situation (old people, patients with liver disease, alcoholics, pregnant women and nursing mothers, neonates, children,
malabsorption
syndromes, gastrectomy, AIDS,
anaesthesia
and patients being treated with antifolic medication), evaluating their mechanisms of action and their potentiation in determined specific situations.
...
PMID:[Folates in human nutrition, Different clinical situations in which folate deficiencies exist]. 176 30
The hemodynamic effects induced by thiopental and a decrease in blood ionized calcium are uniform. This investigation was undertaken to show a possible decrease in ionized blood calcium during induction of general
anesthesia
with thiopental. Twenty-four patients aged 19-79 years (median 57) were studied. None had any known parathyroid disease,
malabsorption
, or chronic renal insufficiency, and none were receiving calcium channel blockers. For the analysis of blood Ca++, pH, and PCO2, blood samples were drawn anaerobically into a heparinized syringe from an i.v. cannula. A special heparin solution was used (S4500 Radiometer, Copenhagen) to avoid the influence of heparin on the Ca++ determination. The initial 2 ml were discarded. No samples were drawn in the first 3 min after removal of the tourniquet. A maximum of 100 ml isotonic saline was infused between the two samplings. The infusion was stopped for at least 30 s before sampling. PCO2, B-Ca++, and pH were measured directly using the ABL 4 (Radiometer, Copenhagen) and the ICA 1 ionized calcium analyzer (Radiometer, Copenhagen). The standard deviation of repeated measurements of B-Ca++ within a short time using the same sample is 0.01 mmol/l on the ICA 1. The samples were drawn just before and 2 min after thiopental injection (median 5.9 mg/kg) was started. The pulse and blood pressure were simultaneously measured. The individual Ca++ measurements are shown in Table 1. The results of the investigation are shown in Table 2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Effect of thiopental Na on the concentration of calcium ions in blood]. 366 52
During a 9-year period, 204 infants younger than 12 months of age had 294 Broviac central venous hyperalimentation catheters inserted. Fifty-nine adult-size and 235 infant-size Broviac catheters were used. Catheter insertion was via the saphenous vein (267), external jugular (7), internal jugular (16), cephalic (2), and transthoracic right atrial veins (2). General
anesthesia
was used for all internal jugular, but for only 11 saphenous catheters. Catheter function ranged from 6 to 925 days (mean, 112 days). Forty-four infants had
malabsorption
syndromes, 36 had short bowel syndrome, 38 had intractable diarrhea, and 86 required nutritional support for a variety of other conditions. Fifteen of the 204 infants developed inferior (10) or superior vena caval thrombosis (2), or both (3). Thrombosis occurred in 13 of the 267 infants with saphenous catheters (4.9%), and five of the 25 with jugular or cephalic venous catheters (20.0%). Obstruction to normal catheter infusion was the first sign of caval occlusion. Transient mild leg edema (4) and prominent venous pattern over the legs (3) were present with inferior vena caval (IVC) occlusion, but no patient had renal vein obstruction or died as a direct result of this condition. Each of the two patients with superior vena caval (SVC) occlusion experienced mild to moderate edema and venous suffusion of the head and upper extremities, and one developed a pleural effusion. Each of the three infants with combined superior and inferior vena caval thrombosis died from pulmonary insufficiency within six months after SVC occlusion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Complications of superior versus inferior vena cava occlusion in infants receiving central total parenteral nutrition. 644 Sep 68
Breath hydrogen (H2) analysis was used to study lactose
malabsorption
in Southern Chinese children and infants. End-expired air was collected in 85 children using a modified
anaesthesia
bag system; while in infants, a novel automated end-expired sampling device was constructed and tested on 45 term and 27 preterm infants. Hydrogen and other respiratory gases were measured in the expired air using standard gas chromatograph equipped with a thermal conductivity detector. The system was found to have a detection limit of 0.5 ppm for H2. Both sampling methods were found to be reproducible, with intra-individual coefficient variations of less than 10%. Using 5% carbon dioxide as the expected alveolar concentration, the samples obtained by the bag system represented 85% of the end-expired air, while those obtained by the automated machine corresponded to 75%-100% end-tidal air. Taking 20 ppm rise in breath H2 as a cutoff criterion, the incidence of lactose
malabsorption
in the children was 78%; while in term and preterm infants this was 17.8% and 63% respectively.
...
PMID:Breath hydrogen (H2) analysis in southern Chinese children and infants by gas chromatography and a novel automatic sampling system. 878 19
Cobalamin (vitamin B12) deficiency is more common in the elderly than in younger patients. This is because of the increased prevalence of cobalamin
malabsorption
in this age group, which is mainly caused by (autoimmune) atrophic body gastritis. Cobalamin supplementation is affordable and nontoxic, and it may prevent irreversible neurological damage if started early. Elderly individuals with cobalamin deficiency may present with neuropsychiatric or metabolic deficiencies, without frank macrocytic anaemia. An investigation of symptoms and/or signs includes the diagnosis of deficiency as well as any underlying cause. Deficiency states can still exist even when serum cobalamin levels are higher than the traditional lower reference limit. Cobalamin-responsive elevations of serum methylmalonic acid (MMA) and homocysteine are helpful laboratory tools for the diagnosis. The health-related reference ranges for homocysteine and MMA appear to vary with age and gender. Atrophic body gastritis is indirectly diagnosed by measuring serum levels of gastrin and pepsinogens, and it may cause dietary cobalamin
malabsorption
despite a normal traditional Schilling's test. The use of gastroscopy may also be considered to diagnose dysplasia, bacterial overgrowth and intestinal villous atrophy in healthy patients with atrophic body gastritis or concomitant iron or folic acid deficiency. Elderly patients respond to cobalamin treatment as fully as younger patients, with complete haematological recovery and complete or good partial resolution of neurological deficits. Chronic dementia responds poorly but should, nevertheless, be treated if there is a metabolic deficiency (as indicated by elevated homocysteine and/or MMA levels). Patients who are at risk from cobalamin deficiency include those with a gastrointestinal predisposition (e.g. atrophic body gastritis or previous partial gastrectomy), autoimmune disorders [type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus and thyroid disorders], those receiving long term therapy with gastric acid inhibitors or biguanides, and those undergoing nitrous oxide
anaesthesia
. To date, inadequate cobalamin intake has not proven to be a major risk factor. Intervention trials of cobalamin, folic acid and pyridoxine (vitamin B6) in unselected elderly populations are currently under way.
...
PMID:Age-related changes in cobalamin (vitamin B12) handling. Implications for therapy. 957 92
Although up to 20% of patients with Crohn's disease have their first flare during childhood or adolescence, there are no or only a few randomized, controlled studies. However, big differences and uncertainty may be observed between the diagnosis and therapy of pediatricians and gastroenterologists specialized for adults. In addition, special problems result from the enormous somatic and psychological evolution during adolescence. The diagnosis is done as in adult patients by enteroclysm and ileocolonoscopy (including multiple biopsies) whereas a deep sedoanalgesia or
anesthesia
should be performed routinely. Corticosteroids are the gold standard for therapy of Crohn's disease in the adolescence (especially in cases with high inflammatory activity), but also enteral nutrition over 4-12 weeks--or a combination of both. A recent randomized controlled study demonstrates the positive effect of 6-mercaptopurine in newly diagnosed patients with Crohn's disease in the adolescence. 5-aminosalicylates or the probably more effective azathioprine/6-mercaptopurine could be used for prevention of recurrence in Crohn's disease. The therapy of ulcerative colitis is performed as in adults including the very effective local rectal applications. An accompanying psychosomatic therapy is recommended especially in young patients with disturbed separation from the parents and inadequate coping. The indication for surgery is similar to adults. However, a specific indication for earlier surgery is given, if severe
malabsorption
and delay of growth takes place in spite of adequate therapy, because this delay of growth could be only caught up before puberty. A conservative therapeutic regimen is recommended in young patients with perianal Crohn's disease.
...
PMID:[Consensus of the Chronic Inflammatory Bowl Disease Study Group of the Austrian Society of Gastroenterology and Hepatology on the topic of "diagnosis and therapy of chronic inflammatory bowel diseases in adolescence"]. 1107 75
Four patients, three women aged 49, 47 and 74 years, and a man aged 64 years, presented with progressive sensory deficit, pyramidal tract symptoms and postural instability. Tests revealed megaloblastic anaemia and low vitamin B12 levels. Two of the female patients had undergone gynaecological surgery with nitrous oxide
anaesthesia
, and the male patient had undergone a gastric resection. Subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord is a neurological disease based on vitamin B12 deficiency. It involves the posterior and lateral columns of the spinal cord, and sometimes the peripheral nerves, the optic nerve or the brain. An MRI scan of the cervical cord revealed abnormalities for three of the four patients. Following parenteral supplementation of vitamin B12, the symptoms and the MRI abnormalities either disappeared or significantly improved. Vitamin B12 deficiency can cause subacute combined degeneration of the cord by interfering with myelin synthesis. As vitamin B12 deficiency is caused by
malabsorption
in the gastrointestinal tract, oral supplementation is insufficient. It is essential to recognise this treatable disease at an early stage, and not to reject the possible diagnosis if the MRI findings are abnormal. Simple blood tests can lead to the diagnosis and to effective treatment.
...
PMID:[Subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord: easy diagnosis, effective treatment]. 1172 22
Previously we demonstrated that the digestion, absorption and lymphatic transport of lipid and key essential fatty acids (EFA) from randomly interesterified fish oil/medium-chain structured triglycerides (STG) were significantly higher than an equivalent physical mixture (PM) in a normal lymph fistula rat model and in a rat model of lipid
malabsorption
caused by ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. The goals of this study were to further explore the potential absorptive benefits of STG by comparing the intestinal absorption and lymphatic transport of tocopherol and retinol when delivered gastrically with either STG or PM under normal conditions and after I/R injury to the small bowel. Food-deprived male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly assigned to two treatments (sham controls or I/R). Under halothane
anesthesia
, the superior mesenteric artery (SMA) was occluded for 20 min and then reperfused in I/R rats. The SMA was isolated but not occluded in control rats. In both groups, the mesenteric lymph duct was cannulated and a gastric tube was inserted. Each treatment group received 1 mL of the fish oil/MCT STG or PM (7 rats/group) along with (14)C-alpha-tocopherol and (3)H-retinol through the gastric tube followed by an infusion of PBS at 3 mL/h for 8 h. Lymph was collected hourly for 8 h. Under steady-state conditions, the amount of (14)C-alpha-tocopherol and (3)H-retinol transported into lymph was significantly higher in the STG-fed rats compared with those fed PM in both control and I/R groups. In addition, control and I/R rats given STG had earlier steady-state outputs of (14)C-alpha-tocopherol and (3)H-retinol and maintained approximately 30% higher outputs in lymph throughout the 8-h lymph collection period compared with rats given the PM. We conclude that STG provides the opportunity to potentiate improved absorption of fat-soluble vitamins under normal and malabsorptive states.
...
PMID:Randomized structured triglycerides increase lymphatic absorption of tocopherol and retinol compared with the equivalent physical mixture in a rat model of fat malabsorption. 1148 11
Zinc has been recognized as an antioxidant with potential for chronic and acute effects. Oxidative damage produced by free radicals, including nitric oxide (NO), is responsible for certain types of
intestinal malabsorption
syndromes and diarrhea. Under physiologic or mildly stimulatory conditions for NO synthesis, the small intestine characteristically is in a proabsorptive state; however, an excessive production of NO triggers formation of cyclic nucleotides, which cause secretion and
malabsorption
. In this study, we hypothesized that low-molecular-weight, soluble zinc chelates could modulate the effects of induced NO excess on the small intestine. In vitro experiments demonstrated that zinc-citrate or zinc-histidine at > or =0.66 mM, as well as a known NO scavenger, 2-[carboxyphenyl]-4,4,4,4-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide, at 2 microM, were effective at removing chemically generated NO. In vivo jejunal perfusions, conducted in healthy rats under
anesthesia
, showed that c-PTIO reduced the proabsorptive effects produced by 1 mM L-arginine, the precursor of NO. In a standard oral rehydration solution, 1 mM zinc-citrate partially reversed the antiabsorptive effects on potassium caused by an excess of NO generated from 20 mM L-arginine but did not alter sodium or water absorption. The data are consistent with the view that soluble zinc compounds incorporated into an oral rehydration solution may deserve further attention as a means to scavenge NO with fluids used for the treatment of chronic or acute diarrhea, especially in malnourished children who are often zinc deficient.
...
PMID:Zinc as a potential enteroprotector in oral rehydration solutions: its role in nitric oxide metabolism. 1259 91
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