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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The possibility that the canine pancreas might have an important role in the physiologic absorption of cobalamin (vitamin B12) has been explored by determining the effect of exocrine pancreatic insufficiency on cobalamin absorption and by examining the subsequent influence of bovine pancreatic enzymes and canine pancreatic juice. Exocrine pancreatic insufficiency was induced by ligation of pancreatic ducts and confirmed by indirect assessment of exocrine pancreatic function.
Cobalamin
absorption was determined by oral administration of cyano[58Co]cobalamin and quantitation of radioactivity in blood, urine, and feces during 48 hours. Pancreatic duct ligation resulted in a significant (P less than 0.001) decrease in cobalamin absorption, which was not restored by oral administration of bovine pancreatic enzymes, despite considerable improvements in steatorrhea and in vivo proteolytic activities. In marked contrast,
malabsorption
of cobalamin was significantly (P less than 0.05) reversed by oral administration of canine pancreatic juice. These results indicate that pancreatic secretions have an important role in the normal absorption of cobalamin in the dog, a role that does not appear to be attributable to pancreatic enzymes, but is consistent with the existence of a pancreatic intrinsic factor in this species.
...
PMID:Effect of exocrine pancreatic insufficiency on cobalamin absorption in dogs. 278 6
The results of all dual isotope tests (2142) carried out on 1989 patients, 807 males (40.6%) and 1182 females (59.4%), during a 10 year period (1976-1985 inclusive) in the Grampian Health Board Area (population 497,272) have been reviewed. Patient age ranged from 5-95 years with 45.5% over 60 years. The referring specialties were Gastroenterology (47.6%), Haematology (11.3%), Paediatrics (2.1%) and all others (39.0%). According to the manufacturer's recommended criteria, results were classified as normal in 1054 (49.2%), abnormal in 659 (30.8%), equivocal in 337 (15.7%) and unsatisfactory in 92 (4.3%) tests.
Vitamin B12
malabsorption
of ileal type was indicated in 544 tests (25.4%) and of gastric type in 115 (5.4%). Of the latter, 76 were related to pernicious anaemia, 10 to previous gastric surgery and 2 to gastric carcinoma. Of the 337 patients with equivocal results, 138 patients were reviewed and 115 (83.3%) found to have a documented cause for gastric
malabsorption
(96 pernicious anaemia and 19 previous gastric surgery). In 172 patients with proven pernicious anaemia the manufacturer's recommended criteria for gastric
malabsorption
were completely satisfied in only 76 (44.3%) but 167 (96.5%) had an excretion ratio greater than or equal to 1.3 and 127 (73.8%) a ratio greater than or equal to 1.7. Unsatisfactory tests were mainly due to incomplete urine collection (91.3%) or contamination with another isotope (5.4%).
...
PMID:A survey and critical evaluation of a dual isotope (Dicopac) vitamin B12 absorption test. 292 Jul 38
A physiologic and metabolic assessment was carried out on eight patients six months after total proctocolectomy with ileal reservoir for ulcerative colitis and familial adenomatosis coli. All patients were continent and able to defecate spontaneously, stool frequency ranging from two to five per 24 hours. Anal sphincter resting pressures (35 +/- 14 mmHg) and squeeze pressures (88 +/- 24.2 mmHg) were similar to those of a healthy population, with the exception of one patient's complaint of nocturnal mucous leakage per anus. Biopsies of the ileal mucosa of the reservoirs showed a mild inflammation in seven patients; in one a subtotal villous atrophy (plus glandular pattern) was found. Anthropometric measurements, lymphocyte counts, hemoglobin, albumin, transferrin, iron, B12, and folate were normal in all. In the majority of patients there was no evidence of bacterial overgrowth.
Vitamin B12
absorption was reduced slightly in only one patient. Lipid absorption (as judged by the 14C-Triolein breath test) was abnormal in three patients. Fecal clearance of alpha 1 antitrypsin as protein losses index was abnormal in three patients. Bile acid
malabsorption
was the most important ileal dysfunction observed in the patients.
...
PMID:Physiology of ileoanal anastomosis with ileal reservoir for ulcerative colitis and adenomatosis coli. 303 Jun 77
Three cases of adult coeliac disease with severe vitamin B12 deficiency not accompanied by folate or iron depletion are presented. Two of the patients had the extremely rare combination of coeliac disease and lack of intrinsic factor and autoimmune thrombocytopenic purpura. A close association between coeliac disease and autoimmunity is indicated by the development of autoimmune thyroiditis in the third patient.
Vitamin B12
malabsorption
caused by coeliac disease is emphasized as a pathogenetic mechanism of megaloblastic anaemia.
...
PMID:Selective vitamin B12 malabsorption in adult coeliac disease. Report on three cases with associated autoimmune diseases. 324 90
The results of clinical, laboratory and therapeutic observations conducted over a seven year period in 40 expatriates from the tropics who presented in New York City with overt tropical sprue have been described. The majority of subjects presented with symptoms referable to the gastrointestinal tract, weight loss and weakness. Only nine were symptomatic at the time of arrival; the remainder developed symptoms within several months to 14 years after arrival. Thirty-five subjects had a megaloblastic anemia; this was a secondary to a combined deficiency of folate and vitamin B12 in 25 and to deficiency of only one of these vitamins in the other ten. Serum concentrations of albumin, calcium, and cholesterol were subnormal in approximately one-half and the serum carotene concentrations were low in all but two subjects. Serum values of one or more immunoglobulin were reduced in 19. All 40 subjects had
malabsorption
of xylose; 12 of 19 tested had
malabsorption
of a pharmacologic dose of folic acid; 27 of 28 tested had
malabsorption
of vitamin B12; and 23 of 27 persons tested had steatorrhea. Jejunal morphology was abnormal in 34 of 35 subjects biopsied prior to treatment; villi were completely absent in four and showed changes of moderate severity in 30. Treatment with pharmacologic doses of folic acid or vitamin B12 produced a clinical remission in 18 of 21 patients. This remission was sustained in all 14 subjects who were followed for periods of from one to four years and reevaluation of intestinal morphology and function in nine showed improvement in all, but return to normal in less than one-half. Treatment with oral tetracycline for three weeks resulted in clinical improvement in 11 of 12 subjects, a hematologic response in nine of the ten cases who had a megaloblastic anemia, increased absorption of xylose and cessation of steatorrhea in all, and improved jejunal morphology in 11.
Vitamin B12
absorption remained subnormal in nine. Continued antibiotic therapy for six months in eight patients was associated with additional weight gain, further improvement in jejunal morphology and xylose absorption in all, and return of vitamin B12 absorption to normal in all except one. Fifty asymptomatic expatriates from the West Indies were surveyed for abnormalities of intestinal function. The absorption of xylose was reduced in six (24%) of 25 subjects who had been resident in a temperate climate for less than one year but in only one (4%) of 25 persons who had been away from the tropics for more than a year.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Tropical sprue in expatriates from the tropics living in the continental United States. 495 Dec 35
We evaluated gastrointestinal structure and function in 13 hemizygous males and 17 heterozygous females, five to 67 years old, from four kindreds with Fabry's disease. Gastrointestinal symptoms, noted in 62% (8/13) of the males and 29% (5/17) of the females, were present prior to the diagnosis of Fabry's disease in five patients; were discovered at the time of study in six patients and were associated with multiple other symptoms in two patients. Serum protein, albumin, folate,
Vitamin B12
, calcium, phosphorous, cholesterol and iron were normal in all 30 patients. Xylose absorption was normal in 2/2 males and 13/13 females studied. HLA B8 antigen was present in none of the males and 2/17 females. Peroral duodenal (one male), jejunal (six males, two females) and rectal (one male) biopsies on light microscopy demonstrated a normal villous pattern and luxol-fast blue positive "foamy" cell deposits in all males, while no deposits were visualized in the females. In all males and females studied, electron microscopic examination showed electron dense, intralysosomal "zebra-like" (0.5-0.75 micrometer.) bodies in the vascular endothelial and perithelial cells and in the cytoplasm of the small unmyelinated neurons, and perineurial cells. Despite the frequency of gastrointestinal symptoms, both
malabsorption
and celiac disease were absent.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal structure and function in Fabry's disease. 627 88
The conventional method of measuring vitamin B12 absorption using a whole-body counter normally involves a delay of fourteen days before complete faecal excretion of unabsorbed B12 tracer can be assumed. A modified technique has been used which reduces the delay to four days. A non-absorbable tracer, 51Cr-chromic chloride, was administered firstly with 58Co-labelled vitamin B12 and then three hours later with 57Co-labelled vitamin B12 and then three hours later with 57Co-labelled vitamin B12 plus 50 mg hog intrinsic factor which normalises B12
malabsorption
in patients with pernicious anaemia. Three days later, the residual whole-body activities of the three radionuclides were measured. The retention of 51Cr indicated the efficiency of faecal excretion of unabsorbed B12 tracer and could be used to quantify vitamin B12 absorption before complete excretion of unabsorbed B12 tracer.
Vitamin B12
absorption values were measured at four days by this technique and compared with the corresponding values at fourteen days in 38 tests on 33 subjects, 16 of whom had pernicious anaemia. Excellent correlations between the results obtained at four and 14 days were obtained for both B12 tracers.
...
PMID:A fast method of measuring vitamin B12 absorption using a whole-body counter. 683 44
Vitamin B12
and folate concentrations were determined by radioimmunoassay in groups of horses in Queensland. Highest serum vitamin B12 levels were found in supplemented performance horses. These, together with pastured horses that included pregnant and lactating mares, had significantly greater serum folate activity than permanently stabled animals. The range of red cell folate concentrations was much narrower in horses in training than from any other group. Red cell folate may be a better indicator of a horse's folate status than the serum folate value.
Vitamin B12
and folate concentrations were highest in spring and summer. Small intestinal dysfunction in 2 horses was not associated with vitamin B12 or folate
malabsorption
. Serum folate levels returned to normal 24 h after intramuscular injections of 75 to 150 mg folic acid, whereas serum vitamin B12 values remained elevated for at least one week following injections of 8 to 10 mg to non-supplemented horses. None of the horses in this survey had evidence of vitamin B12 or folate deficiency, or showed significant haematological changes. Nevertheless, permanently stabled horses and some horses in training may require additional folic acid, preferably on a daily basis by the oral route. However, exogenous vitamin B12 administration does not appear to be justified.
...
PMID:Serum and red cell folate and serum vitamin B12 levels in horses. 687 Jul 12
Twenty-one female patients studied between six and 12 months following a jejunoileal bypass procedure for obesity were found to have a wide variety of metabolic disturbances. Hepatic histological abnormalities were common and included liver cell necrosis and inflammation in nine patients and hepatic fibrosis in five. Liver function tests were no guide to the degree of hepatic impairment.
Vitamin B12
malabsorption
occurred in seven patients, in six probably as a result of bacterial intestinal overgrowth; three of these six patients had the most serious hepatic morphological changes.
Malabsorption
rather than poor oral intake of food appeared to account for continued postoperative weight loss in the majority of patients.
...
PMID:The metabolic consequences of jejunoileal bypass for obesity. 693 66
Cobalamin
levels are frequently low in patients with dementia, but it is unclear if they represent definable deficiency and what the mechanisms are. Therefore, patients being evaluated for dementia who had low cobalamin levels but no obvious evidence of deficiency were studied hematologically, neurologically and with metabolic tests and were re-evaluated after cobalamin treatment. Abnormalities suggestive of or diagnostic for deficiency were documented in most of the 16 demented and nondemented patients. Metabolic results: 50% of patients tested had abnormal deoxyuridine suppression and 44% had increased serum methylmalonic acid and/or homocysteine levels; these test results correlated with each other. Neurologic results: 73% of patients had clinical abnormalities, primarily mild neuropathies, not attributable to other causes, 75% had electroencephalographic abnormalities, 77% had abnormal visual evoked potentials and 33% had abnormal somatosensory potentials. Metabolic and neurologic dysfunction were present together or absent together in all but 2 cases.
Cobalamin
therapy improved 50-100% of the various types of abnormalities, although it did not improve cognitive function in the 13 demented patients. Food-cobalamin
malabsorption
was found in 60% of the patients. Despite the absence of megaloblastic anemia and rarity of traditional
malabsorption
of free cobalamin, low cobalamin levels in demented patients frequently represent mild cobalamin deficiency and are often associated with food-cobalamin
malabsorption
. Perhaps most importantly, this is accompanied not only by metabolic changes but by evidence of mild neurologic dysfunction. Their frequent reversibility by cobalamin confirms that these defects indeed arise from cobalamin deficiency. Although the long-standing dementia does not improve, treating such patients with cobalamin has other concrete benefits.
...
PMID:The frequently low cobalamin levels in dementia usually signify treatable metabolic, neurologic and electrophysiologic abnormalities. 778 70
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