Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (malabsorption)
7,319 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A series of 29 cases of amyloidosis of the alimentary tract is reported. Five cases (17%) were primary amyloidosis; 14 cases (48%) were amyloidosis secondary to other diseases (such as chronic inflammatory and neoplastic diseases); 10 cases (35%) were amyloidosis of the heredo-familial type connected with Familial Mediterranean Fever. In 23 patients (79%) the diagnosis was established by biopsies, and in 6 more cases on autopsy. Gastrointestinal involvement was found in all age groups. Gastro-enterologic complications observed in the present series include: diarrhea, malabsorption, ileus and gastrointestinal bleeding. In addition other conditions such as jaundice (3 cases), esophagitis and acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis were observed. In 22 patients proteinuria was observed and in 13 patients the nephrotic syndrome. Among 17 patients, in 11 the clinical picture before death was that of terminal renal failure. The survival after diagnosis among 14 patients reached 4 years in 9 cases, and 19 years in one case. The diagnostic value of the rectal biopsy is emphasized.
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PMID:[Gastrointestinal amyloidosis]. 18 89

Coeliac disease in children is frequently associated with a slow growth rate. This observation may be linked to the malabsorption that occurs in these patients; however, the underlying mechanism remains unknown. To better understand this phenomenon, we have studied the growth patterns of 153 patients with coeliac disease for 2-9 years. Gastro-intestinal biopsies were performed before and after gluten exclusion. In a second group of 79 children, somatostatin levels and binding properties in the plasma and jejunal mucosa were measured. In a third group of 40 patients we measured insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) and IGF-binding protein 3 (IGF-BP3) levels. We found that in children diagnosed before 2 years of age weight was the most affected growth parameter. In children diagnosed after this age, height was more affected. Suppression of gluten intake induced an acceleration of growth velocity. Although plasma levels of somatostatin were not significantly altered, somatostatin concentrations in the jejunal mucosa of patients in the active phase of the disease were significantly elevated (p < 0.05). Children with coeliac disease exhibited significantly lower levels of IGF-BP3 when compared to patients with normal stature and growth velocities. In contrast, these patients showed an increase in IGF-BP3 levels after gluten exclusion from the diet.
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PMID:Growth in malnutrition related to gastrointestinal diseases: coeliac disease. 128 43

Adult coeliac disease has a broad clinical spectrum and remains undetected for years. Among subclinical deficiency states, attributable to coeliac enteropathy, combined iron and folic acid malabsorption is predominant. An unexplained recurrent iron anaemia is an indication for small intestinal biopsy. Gastro-intestinal disorders are present in only 50% of the cases. Coeliac disease is frequently associated with other major histocompatibility complex (MMC)-linked diseases which are mediated by immunological mechanisms: dermatitis herpetiformis, oral ulcerations, IgA nephropathy, rheumatoid arthritis, sarcoidosis. Dermatitis herpetiformis is a useful model for examination of the spectrum of mucosal changes that typify gluten sensitivity and subliminal lesions without villous atrophy. An increased interest is devoted to the intra-epithelial T-lymphocyte population, not only in the small intestine, but at the level of the stomach and the colon. A "rectal challenge" test has been proposed for detecting gluten sensitivity in coeliac patients. Such a test could be an original method of screening, reducing so the need of small intestinal biopsy. The preliminary results are to be confirmed. Until now, jejunoscopy remains mandatory for the diagnosis and the survey of intestinal lesions related to coeliac disease.
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PMID:[Celiac disease in adults: clinical aspects--role of endoscopy]. 163 35

A patient with urticaria pigmentosa who gave a 40-year history of diarrhoea was found to have systemic mastocytosis with gut involvement. The radiological appearance of the gut in this disease, although not widely recognized, are specific and should be looked for carefully in patients with urticaria pigmentosa who complain of gastro-intestinal symptoms. Gastro-intestinal symptoms, due mainly to alterations in bowel motility or peptic ulceration, are said to occur in some 25-50% of cases of systemic mastocytosis (3, 6). These symptoms have usually been ascribed to generalized histamine release acting on the gut, although cases where mast cell infiltration of the bowel has occurred have also been reported (4, 5). In a review of the radiological features (2), increased gastric rugosity with or without evidence of peptic ulceration and nodular space-filling defects of the bowel mucosa were the most commonly found. Occasionally, diffuse thickening of the bowel wall was seen. It was concluded that these appearance were probably due to local release of vasoactive substances causing submucosal oedema following mast cell accumulation in the gut. Another result of such infiltration may be malabsorption (1).
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PMID:Forty years of diarrhoea in a patient with urticaria pigmentosa. 617 76