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)

The effect of vitamin E deprivation on the fully developed human nervous system is not known. In children with fat malabsorption from various causes neuropathological and neurological changes have been ascribed to vitamin E deficiency. Herein we described a neurological deficit that occurred in a 64-yr-old man with chronic steatorrhea leading to severe vitamin E deficiency. long-term supplementation with vitamin E resulted in clinical improvement beginning a few months after normalization of his vitamin E status.
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PMID:Reversible neurological symptoms caused by vitamin E deficiency in a patient with short bowel syndrome. 714 43

Two adults are described who developed a progressive neurological disorder more than 20 years after the onset of chronic fat malabsorption. The clinical features included dysarthria, cerebellar ataxia, and prominent proprioceptive loss with depressed or absent tendon reflexes. Serum vitamin E was undetectable in both cases. One patient improved clinically and electrophysiologically after oral therapy with vitamin E. The findings in these patients were similar to those in others recently reported with vitamin E deficiency associated with biliary atresia. Electrophysiological observations suggested that the human deficiency state parallels that found neuropathologically in vitamin E-deficient animals.
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PMID:Spinocerebellar degeneration secondary to chronic intestinal malabsorption: a vitamin E deficiency syndrome. 718 49

In 656 patients aged from one to 39 years, the incidence of axonal dystrophy in the gracile nucleus (ADG) is correlated with underlying diseases. The age-related incidence of ADG (minimal to severe) in these patients, 13, 53, 76 and 97% in the first, second, third, and fourth decades, respectively, is comparable to that observed by other investigators. The incidence drops to 8, 16, 31, and 60% when more than five spheroids in each gracile nucleus are taken into account. Diseases with which ADG is frequently associated vary according to the patient's age. Congenital biliary atresia and cystic fibrosis account for 71% of cases of ADG (mild to severe) in the first decade, while cystic fibrosis and malignancies account for 38 and 35% in the second decade, respectively. In the third decade, malignancies, renal diseases, cystic fibrosis, and heart diseases account for 30, 14, 12, and 12% of ADG cases, respectively, while malignancies, renal diseases, heart diseases, and diseases of digestive organs account for 30, 24, 15, and 11% in the fourth decade, respectively. The incidence of ADG also increases progressively with age, duration of the clinical course in the individual disease, or both, regardless of types of the diseases. This fact, when viewed together with the precocious development of severe ADG in patients with the malabsorption syndromes and in those with grave illnesses with protracted course leading to cachexia, seems to indicate that malnutrition represents a common factor correlated with severe ADG in the young patients. It seems to be premature at this time to disregard the hypothetical question that ADG in man is in some way related to deficiency or altered metabolism of vitamin E.
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PMID:Axonal dystrophy in the gracile nucleus in children and young adults. Reappraisal of the incidence and associated diseases. 720 26

It has been reported that lipid peroxidation increases in patients with antioxidant deficiencies, such as vitamin E and glutathione peroxidase. The relationships between serum lipid peroxide and vitamin E on the one hand and glutathione peroxidase on the other were examined in 22 patients with chronic pancreatitis, often accompanied by malabsorption of fats and fat-soluble vitamins due to the impaired exocrine pancreatic function. Both serum vitamin E concentrations and glutathione peroxidase activities were depressed, especially in patients with chronic calcifying pancreatitis. On the other hand, serum lipid peroxide levels were elevated. A significant negative correlation was found between the serum lipid peroxide levels and vitamin E concentration. These findings suggest than an elevation of the serum lipid peroxide level may be due to the lack of an antioxidative defense mechanism, such as vitamin E, against lipid peroxide.
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PMID:Serum vitamin E, lipid peroxide and glutathione peroxidase in patients with chronic pancreatitis. 721 10

In 63 patients with malabsorption syndromes, 16 with congenital biliary atresia (BA) and 47 with cystic fibrosis (CF), axonal dystrophy in the gracile nucleus (ADG) was studied. Of the 16 patients with BA, ADG of considerable severity was observed in all 10 over one year of age. Of the 47 patients with CF, it was observed in 32, 61 and 80% of the cases in the first, second, and third decades, respectively. Evidence is presented that there has been a substantial decrease in the incidence of ADG in CF patients in recent years and that the decreased incidence is attributable to vitamin E (Aquasol E) therapy. The beneficial effect of vitamin E supplementation in CF patients is proffered as strong evidence that ADG in BA and CF is related to vitamin E deficiency. The present study indicates that BA and CF patients require vitamin E supplementation to maintain a normal integrity of axons related to the gracile and perhaps other sensory nuclei. Critical neurological evaluation for possible dysfunction of the sensory nuclei in these patients with malabsorption syndromes is advised.
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PMID:Axonal dystrophy in the gracile nucleus in congenital biliary atresia and cystic fibrosis (mucoviscidosis): beneficial effect of vitamin E therapy. 721

Vitamin E levels were measured in the plasma of infants and children with various neuromuscular disorders. Seven of 8 infants with Werdnig-Hoffmann disease (WHD) had a significantly lower plasma vitamin E level (p less than 0.01) than age-matched normal controls, children with congenital myopathies, or children with muscular dystrophy. Vitamin E deficiency in WHD is not caused by malabsorption. A therapeutic trial of vitamin E in 3 patients with WHD did not change the natural course of the disease. Vitamin E deficiency may play a role in the pathogenesis of WHD.
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PMID:Vitamin E deficiency in Werdnig-Hoffmann disease. 729 34

A progressive neurologic syndrome developed in six children with longstanding cholestatic liver disease. The neurologic abnormalities included areflexia, gait disturbance, decreased proprioceptive and vibratory sensation, and paresis of gaze. Serum vitamin E concentrations were uniformly low. Neuropathological studies carried out in two of the three fatal cases revealed degeneration of the posterior column, selective loss of large-caliber, myelinated axons in peripheral nerve, and spheroids in the gracile and cuneate nuclei. These lesions are similar to those found in animals with experimentally induced vitamin E deficiency. We therefore speculate that the neurologic syndrome in these children may be the result of chronic vitamin E malabsorption.
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PMID:A progressive neurologic syndrome in children with chronic liver disease. 745 84

We report a 44-year-old woman in whom intestinal bypass for obesity at age 23 resulted in chronic malabsorption. After hysterectomy for menorrhagia due to atypical endometrial hyperplasia, the finding of myometrial lipofuscinosis led to a demonstration of vitamin E deficiency. Vitamin E supplementation led to an unexpected improvement in the unsteadiness of gait and slurring of speech of which she had also complained. We suggest that supplementation with vitamin E should be routine in all patients with persistent severe steatorrhoea.
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PMID:Symptomatic vitamin E deficiency diagnosed after histological recognition of myometrial lipofuscinosis. 765 82

In cystic fibrosis (CF) patients the antioxidative-oxidative balance is chronically disturbed. Free radicals were generated by bronchial-pulmonal infection and additional exist a deficiency of antioxidative substances by enteral malabsorption especially vitamin E and selenium. Because selenium is an essential content of glutathione peroxidase, which is acting in cytosol and cell membranes, for the present we tested a selenium therapy (peroral sodium selenite 155 micrograms (Se/m2 BSA/d i. e. 4 micrograms Se/kg/d; 4 fold of recommended supply) in 32 CF patients. After three months of this therapy we have seen positive metabolic (normalized content of plasma-selenium, -glutathione peroxidase), endocrine (enhanced efficacy of thyroid hormones, mild increased IgF-I reduced LDL-chol) and clinical consequences (enhanced left ventricular cardiac output), but in three patients side effects (anorexia, nausea, mild hair loss) were observed. Longtime sodium selenite therapy only with 60 micrograms Se/m2 BSA/d over 1 year, stabilized the favourable influences without side effects. For CF patients therefore we recommend a sodium selenite substitution therapy, the best in combination with vitamin E.
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PMID:[The value of selenotherapy in patients with mucoviscidosis]. 771 84

Rare instances of symptomatic fat malabsorption have been reported in patients with heterozygous hypobetalipoproteinemia, but with an unclear pathogenesis. An 8-month-old boy with chronic diarrhea and failure to thrive was found to have abnormally low plasma total cholesterol (85 mg/dl), LDL-cholesterol (48 mg/dl), apoB (52 mg/dl), apoA-I (53 mg/dl), and vitamin E (0.22 mg/dl). Decreased plasma LDL-C and apoB were noted in the father (34 and 40 mg/dl, respectively), as well as several other family members. Fasting triglycerides were normal but did not increase normally in response to a fat meal test. Lipoprotein composition showed an abnormal profile of very low density (VLDL, d 1.006 g/ml), low density (LDL, d 1.063 g/ml), and high density (HDL, d 1.21 g/ml) lipoproteins. A fasting jejunal biopsy revealed lipid-laden enterocytes. Electron microscopy of the jejunal biopsy revealed the absence of lipid particles in the intercellular spaces after a fat meal. Jejunal explants cultured with [14C]palmitate and [3H]leucine showed limited synthesis of triglycerides and apolipoproteins (36 and 42% of controls, respectively), whereas the father's results were close to normal. At 1 year of age, improvement in intestinal fat absorption was accompanied by the presence of chylomicrons in the intercellular space, concomitant with the enhanced synthesis of lipids and apoB by jejunal explants. These data provide evidence that heterozygous hypobetalipoproteinemia may present early in life as transient, symptomatic lipid malabsorption. The mechanisms responsible for improved lipid transport despite persistent hypobetalipoproteinemia remain to be established.
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PMID:Variable expression of familial heterozygous hypobetalipoproteinemia: transient malabsorption during infancy. 789 15


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