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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 58-year-old patient suffered from severe
malabsorption
due to agammaglobulinemia. Treated empirically with salicylazosulfapyridine 2--6 g/day, the subjective and objective features of
malabsorption
regressed. About a year after this treatment she developed a
generalized weakness
without renewal of the diarrhea; the diagnosis of Heinz body hemolytic anemia was established. In our patient, hemolysis began many months after the commencement of treatment and no deficiency of G6PD or other erythrocyte enzyme or pathological hemoglobin were found.
...
PMID:Salicylazosulphapyridine-induced Heinz body anemia. 2 55
Severe protein-energy undernutrition is a frequent finding among chronically ill patients. Its causes are anorexia, hypermetabolism, and
malabsorption
. Adverse consequences include impaired cell-mediated immunity increased susceptibility to infection, poor wound healing,
weakness
, and death. Spontaneous oral intake is inadequate in patients with this disorder, and therapeutic maintenance or repletion alimentation is needed. Enteral hyperalimentation is the method of choice, if tolerated. A successful treatment program usually requires a small-bore, flexible nasoenteral tube, appropriate feeding solution, and constant flow delivery of nutrient. If only partial dietary requirements are tolerated enterally, peripheral intravenous nutrient solutions can often supply the deficit. Although not suitable for all patients, enteral hyperalimentation is more physiologic, safer, easier, and more economical than central venous hyperalimentation. It would be well tolerated by many patients who now receive nutritional repletion by the latter method.
...
PMID:Enteral hyperalimentation: an alternative to central venous hyperalimentation. 10 58
Five years following jejunoileal intestinal bypass surgery for obesity, a patient developed debilitating
weakness
and muscle pain. Osteomalacia was suspected clinically by radiographic and laboratory abnormalities and confirmed by bone biopsy.
Malabsorption
was documented as well as secondary hyperparathyroidism. Successful treatment of this syndrome with vitamin D and calcium identified a medically reversible disorder which obviated the need for surgical reanastomosis.
...
PMID:Osteomalacia and weakness complicating jejunoileal bypass. 43 11
Although a neuromuscular syndrome has been induced experimentally by vitamin E deficiency, a human syndrome has not yet been documented. This report describes a 7-year-old boy with severe
malabsorption
since birth who presented with progressive external ophthalmoplegia, proximal muscle
weakness
, peripheral neuropathy, hyporeflexia, and bilateral Babinski signs. Abnormalities on neurologic examination included elevated creatine phosphokinase and aldolase, slowed distal sensory latencies, type II muscle fiber atrophy, and a plasma vitamin E level of 8 microgram per deciliter (normal, 550-1500 microgram per deciliter). Treatment with oral water-solubilized vitamin E (400 IU daily; greater than 50 times the normal daily intake) was begun, with repeat laboratory studies at 3-month intervals. Over a 16-month period, plasma vitamin E content gradually increased to 350 microgram per deciliter, associated with declining sarcoplasmic enzyme activities and clinical improvement.
...
PMID:Reversibility of human myopathy caused by vitamin E deficiency. 57 10
Magnesium deficiency can occur in congestive heart failure, after diuresis with furoxemide, ethacrynic acid and mercurials, and with digitalis intoxication, diabetic acidosis, acute and chronic alcoholism, delerium tremens, cirrhosis,
malabsorption
syndromes, protracted postoperative cases, open heart surgery, the diuretic phase of acute tubular necrosis, and with hypoparathyroidism, primary aldosteronism, juxta-glomerular hyperplasia and pancreatitis. Two cases of serious ventricular arrhythmias associated with magnesium depletion are described. Clinical manifestations are vague but center around neurologic symptoms such as
weakness
, tremors, stupor, coma, nausea, vomiting and anorexia. Serious cardiac arrhythmias also occur with magnesium depletion. Magnesium appears to be very useful in hypomagnesemic or digitalis-toxic tachyarrhythmias. Magnesium may also be valuable in normomagnesemic tachyarrhythmias. Ten to fifteen milliliters of a 20 percent magnesium sulfate solution, given intravenously over 1 minute, followed by a slow 4 to 6 hour infusion of 500 ml of 2 per cent magnesium sulfate in 5 per cent dextrose in water is recommended. Recurrence of arrhythmias is common and a second infusion of magnesium sulfate may be necessary. Hypermagnesemia occurs frequently in renal insufficiency, and magnesium therapy may then be contraindicated. Serum levels above 5.5 meq/liter should be avoided. Loss of deep tendon reflexes and a decrease in respiratory rate can be used as guides to magnesium therapy. A plea is made for frequent analysis of serum magnesium so that more knowledge can be gained regarding this important biologic element in cardiovascular disorders.
...
PMID:Magnesium deficiency and cardiac disorders. 80 29
Two IgA-deficient children with inflammatory myopathy and
intestinal malabsorption
were evaluated. The myopathy was characterized by
weakness
of facial and proximal limb muscles, increased serum concentrations of lactic dehydrogenase and creatine phosphokinase, and histologic evidence of inflammation and degeneration of muscle fibers. Features of the intestinal abnormality were blunted villi, interstitial inflammation, and reduction in IgA-containing plasma cells and IgA content of epithelial cells. The myopathy and
malabsorption
improved with corticosteroid treatment. Circulating antibodies to striated muscle could not be demonstrated in either patient, but one had antibodies to milk and chicken serum proteins. We speculate that IgA deficiency may predispose to the development of inflammatory myopathy.
...
PMID:Inflammatory myopathy, IgA deficiency, and intestinal malabsorption. 94 14
Five patients presenting clinically with a form B12-deficiency neuromyelopathy, with cord involvement in all and proximal muscle
weakness
in two of them, were investigated for their neurologic, hematologic and vitamin status. Megaloblastosis and achlorhydria were present in all, and impaired absorption of 57Co vitamin B12 and of D-xylose was detected in four. Total cyanide extracted vitamin B12 (A) was lowered in all cases and noncyanide extractable (B) in four of the five, being zero in three. All five responded to injections of hydroxocobalamin. In two patients sequential estimations showed that both A and B, especially the latter, rose steeply initially, normalizing at 50% of A after some weeks. Moiety B is suggested to be physiologically the more active and dissociable form of vitamin B12. Markedly elevated initial serum folate levels, and their subsequent fall under treatment with B12, indicated the operation of the "methyltetrahydrofolate trap". Blood levels of thiamin, nicotinic acid and pantothenic acid were within normal limits. However, serum riboflavin (B2) total vitamin B6 and pyridoxal were reduced in all where tested. Vitamin B6 deficiency could have resulted from its own
malabsorption
and have contributed to be B12 deficiency. Vitamin B2 and B6 levels also corrected themselves on B12 therapy. The B-vitamin deficiencies in our patients probably resulted from
intestinal malabsorption
, with a possible factor of malnutrition consequent to their strictly vegetarian diet.
...
PMID:Interrelationships between the B-vitamins in B12-deficiency neuromyelopathy. A possible malabsorption-malnutrition syndrome. 124 17
Microdissection-point count morphometric study of the myenteric (Auerbach) plexus or esophagus, small intestine, and colon was done for infants and children with acardia (2), ataxia-telangiectasia (5), cystic fibrosis of the pancreas (CFP) (25), extrahepatic biliary atresia (EBA) (17), pediatric AIDS (10), and Werdnig-Hoffmann disease (WHD) (8). Values for fractional area of neural tissue in the plane of the plexus were compared to those of control patients in same age range as those in each disease category by t-test. Statistically abnormal values included low values for small intestine and colon in Werdnig-Hoffmann disease, high values for small intestine and colon in biliary atresia, and high value for colon but a low value for small intestine in cystic fibrosis. Values for all three loci were within the normal range for ataxia telangiectasia and pediatric AIDS. The mechanisms of the low value for small and large intestines in WHD, which causes chronic constipation as a result of skeletal muscle
weakness
, and of the high values for colon in CFP and EBA, both causing
malabsorption
with bulky stools, are unclear. The value for small intestine in acardia was normal for term but lower than expected for fetal bowel of the same size, possibly because of reduced neural crest inflow to the fetal bowel.
...
PMID:Microdissection study of the myenteric plexus in acardia, ataxia-telangiectasia, cystic fibrosis, extrahepatic biliary atresia, pediatric AIDS and Werdnig-Hoffmann disease. 140 39
Osteomalacia is characterized by large osteoid seams and a preserved volume of bone trabeculae. The mineralization of newly formed bone requires adequate concentrations of calcium and phosphate: the Ca.P product has been regarded as a useful, empirical diagnostic test of osteomalacia. It decreases in patients with osteomalacia mainly because they have very low plasma phosphate levels. At present total body bone mineral and total body bone density can be directly measured by whole body absorptiometry, which indicates the lowest total mineral content of the skeleton which can increase quickly after adequate treatment. The main symptoms of osteomalacia are: bone pain; muscular
weakness
(commonly as pelvic girdle myopathy); Looser-Milkman pseudofractures or more often a pattern of generalized demineralization at X-ray. The main biochemical parameters in osteomalacia include: defective calcium absorption with hypocalcemia and hypocalciuria; defective intestinal phosphate absorption with hypophosphatemia; there is often increased renal phosphate clearance due to hypocalcemia and secondary hyperparathyroidism; elevated alkaline phosphatase and osteocalcin levels; high bone turnover confirmed by kinetic studies carried out with radiocalcium or 99mTc-MDP. An etiological classification of the osteomalacias includes: 1) nutritional osteomalacia: a) inadequate exposure to sunlight and/or insufficient vitamin D intake; b) defective intestinal absorption of vitamin D because of
malabsorption
syndromes (e.g. jejuno-ileal bypass for obesity).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The osteomalacias. 166 41
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
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