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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (malabsorption)
7,319 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The nutritional needs of children with human immunodeficiency virus infection are poorly understood. Twenty-eight children with vertically transmitted human immunodeficiency virus infection were evaluated for carbohydrate malabsorption using lactose hydrogen breath tests and d-xylose absorption studies. Lactose malabsorption was a common finding in human immunodeficiency virus-infected children and occurred in 8 of 20 patients who had no identifiable enteric pathogen. Lactose malabsorption occurred at an earlier age in human immunodeficiency virus-infected children than in an age-matched group of 45 symptomatic control children (P = 0.02). However, lactose malabsorption was not associated with higher rates of diarrhea or growth failure. Abnormalities in d-xylose absorption were not significantly associated with either diarrhea or growth failure. However, 39% of d-xylose studies (9 of 23) showed abnormal results and were significantly associated with enteric infections (P = 0.004). Abnormalities in small-bowel morphology were found in 4 of 9 children with growth failure, 3 of whom had an enteric infection and low d-xylose absorption. Lactose hydrogen breath testing and d-xylose testing showed carbohydrate malabsorption in 61% of children (17 of 28). This study demonstrates that human immunodeficiency virus-infected children are at risk for malabsorptive disorders, which are not always related to clinical symptoms. We speculate that human immunodeficiency virus may be directly involved in the development of lactose malabsorption. Carbohydrate malabsorption in human immunodeficiency virus-infected children may not be the only factor responsible for growth failure.
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PMID:Malnutrition and carbohydrate malabsorption in children with vertically transmitted human immunodeficiency virus 1 infection. 201 74

The influence of hydrolysis on the assimilation rate of important nutritional carbohydrates was studied in healthy subjects and patients with intestinal diseases, mainly by means of 13CO2 breath test techniques. All substrates were "naturally enriched" with carbon-13. The studies showed that hydrolysis is the rate limiting step for the assimilation of lactose, starch and even maltose, but not for the assimilation of sucrose. The degree of gelatinisation and the degree of side-branching of starch molecules were two important parameters, influencing starch hydrolysis in normal subjects. Addition of wheat bran had no influence on the digestion rate of starch. A comparative study between normal subjects and patients with pancreatic disease, showed that starch digestion may be impaired in patients with pancreatic disease. However, this occurs only if amylase output is extremely low. The effect of lactase deficiency on lactose absorption was studied in patients with a history suggestive of lactase deficiency. For this purpose a lactose 13CO2 and H2 breath test were compared with lactase activity in a jejunal biopsy. The results showed that the relation between lactase activity in the biopsy and lactose assimilation takes the form of a saturation curve. The 13CO2 breath test was found to be a reliable test for the diagnosis of lactase deficiency. Finally, the effect of acarbose on starch digestion was studied in normal subjects, ileostomy patients, and a fecal incubation system. These experiments showed that acarbose may induce an important degree of starch malabsorption. If administered in high doses, the effect is not only related to inhibition of brush border enzymes, but also to the inhibition of alpha-amylase.
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PMID:Georges Brohee Prize 1988-1989. Assimilation of nutritional carbohydrates: influence of hydrolysis. 205 48

The relative effectiveness of five milk products with various levels of lactose reduction [0%, 50%, 80% (#1), 80% (#2), and 95%] was evaluated in six subjects with lactose malabsorption. Breath hydrogen was measured for 4 h after consumption of 300 mL of each product in a single-blind, randomized design. The mean +/- SEM maximum breath-hydrogen rise (ppm) after the 0%, 50%, 80% (#1), 80% (#2), and 95% lactose-reduced (LR) milks was 31 +/- 6, 7 +/- 3, 5 +/- 3, 5 +/- 2, and 8 +/- 3, respectively. The difference between whole milk and the LR milks was statistically significant (P less than 0.05) but there was no difference between any of the LR milks. Whole milk provoked symptoms in most subjects whereas 95% LR milk produced none. Only one of six subjects reacted to the 50% and 80% LR milks. The results suggest that a 50% level of lactose reduction in milk may be adequate to relieve the signs and symptoms of milk intolerance in the majority of healthy adults with lactose malabsorption.
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PMID:Relative effectiveness of milks with reduced amounts of lactose in alleviating milk intolerance. 205 76

Breath-test was performed for diagnosis of lactose malabsorption in 50 Gabonese children of normal nutritional status, aged 5 to 15 years, with parasites in stools, but without diarrhoea or digestive symptoms. Control group was unparasitized and consisted of 17 children and 18 young adults living in the same area. Parasites discovered by stool examination were Ascaris lumbricoides in 76% of parasitized children, Trichuris trichiura in 58%, Giardia in 24%, Entamoeba histolytica in 20%, Schistosoma intercalatum in 16% and Necator Americanus in 14%. Children were given a 10 g lactose load and adults 20 g. Lactose malabsorption was discovered in 64% of parasitized patients and in 63% of unparasitized. Ten of 12 (83.3%) of Giardia infected children had a lactose malabsorption (no significant difference). These data show that decrease of lactase activity in African children is not related to the presence or to the importance of intestinal parasitism, except for Giardia infestation, if nutritional status is normal.
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PMID:[Intestinal parasites and lactose malabsorption]. 207 8

Oxidation of orally administered [13C]glucose and [13C]lactose and fecal recovery of malabsorbed substrates were determined in two groups of premature infants. Eighteen studies were performed with six infants at Johns Hopkins Hospital (JHH); 24 studies were performed with nine infants at Columbus Children's Hospital (CCH). The two groups differed in that JHH infants had shorter gestations but were older when studied. Fecal 13C loss after [13C]glucose administration did not differ between the two groups. Compared with glucose, the metabolism of lactose appeared to involve more malabsorption and colonic fermentation in JHH infants than in CCH infants and resulted in higher fecal losses of substrate carbon. Maturation appeared to involve increased proximal intestinal absorption and greater retention of absorbed carbohydrate. Simultaneous absorption of substrate from the small and large intestine may limit the usefulness of breath tests for 13C in the premature infant.
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PMID:Comparative absorption of [13C]glucose and [13C]lactose by premature infants. 210 54

We analyzed the results of 352 consecutive four-hour lactose hydrogen breath tests with the aim of verifying whether the results after two hours have the same accuracy as those after four hours in the diagnosis of malabsorption of 20g of lactose. Our results show that in 208 subjects who proved to be lactose malabsorbers the mean changes in breath H2 concentration were higher at three and a half hours than at any other time. Moreover, although the majority of the subjects (63%) reached the cut-off value (more than 20 parts per million with respect to the baseline value) in the first two hours of the test, in 76 of our 208 lactose malabsorbers (37%) a hydrogen increase higher than the cut-off value is only detectable after the second hour of the test. Therefore, unlike those who believe that two samples of expired air at 0 time and after two hours are sufficient, we think that for greater diagnostic accuracy the lactose H2 breath test must be prolonged for at least 4 hours.
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PMID:Methodology of the H2 breath test. II. Importance of the test duration in the diagnosis of carbohydrate malabsorption. 213 33

The Authors examined 515 children with abdominal pain in the outpatient clinics for a period of two years. The pain was frequently periumbilical or mid epigastric with a history of more than two months. Persistent lactose malabsorption was found in 252 children (48,9%), which justifies the use of Breath Hydrogen Test as a first diagnostic procedure for assessing recurrent abdominal pain. Putative pathogens were identified in the stool specimens of 21 patients. Oesophagitis was diagnosed in 18 children and duodenal ulcer in one. 91 patients (less than 6 years old) improved after successful treatment of the chronic upper respiratory inflammations. The authors did not find any causes in 18.1 per cent of the children examined and they think that the abdominal pain in these children may be psychogenic. The use of high-fiber diet is proposed for the later group.
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PMID:[Chronic recurrent abdominal pain and lactose malabsorption in childhood]. 226 51

Breath test was performed in 664 school-aged children in order to measure lactose malabsorption. The first screening showed that 23.4% of the children evidenced malabsorption of milk sugar. In these children further stool examination for Giardia lamblia infection, and saccharose breath test was performed to identify more complex absorption problems. The remaining 146 children were tested again after a period of 3-9 month and 45.8% of this population showed lactose malabsorption. In conclusion the authors determined that 10.1% of school aged children were permanently hypo- or alactasic. During the examination, they measured the approximate consumption of milk considering the quantity of milk intake showed that the consumption of milk and lactose malabsorption were not closely related normal and abnormal absorption among children who would not normally consume milk.
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PMID:[Incidence of lactose malabsorption in the population 6-18 years of age]. 234 45

Adult (primary) lactose malabsorption is practically universal in Africans of Bantu and San ('Bushmen') stock. Recent environmental changes, especially in rural areas, have exacerbated rates of malnutrition in hospital patients belonging to these groups. In order to assess the advisability of using milk as a nutritional supplement for such patients, the tolerance and absorption of 350 ml boluses of whole milk (containing 17 g lactose) was measured in 110 malnourished hospitalized patients in Namibia and South Africa belonging to Bantu (ie, Zulus, Hereros, and Kavangos) and San (ie, Bushmen) populations and compared with 22 healthy Westernized controls. Mild symptoms of intolerance were noted in about 10 per cent of Bantus and 20 per cent of Bushmen in comparison to 33 per cent of lactose-malabsorbing controls consuming Westernized diets and reported rates of 48 and 80 per cent in American population studies. The average increase in breath hydrogen excretion of 20 parts per million was also lower than the value of 34 parts per million in controls. Fasting breath methane concentrations were high in between 60-84 per cent of the groups of patients, but the level was not significantly affected by milk ingestion. Despite the combination of hypolactasia and malnutrition, 350 ml drinks of milk were well tolerated by African patients. Thus, milk should form an appropriate nutritional supplement for Africans hospitalized in rural areas.
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PMID:Milk tolerance and the malnourished African. 240 Dec 80

To investigate the prevalence of lactose malabsorption among patients with functional gastrointestinal disturbances we prospectively evaluated all patients referred to a gastrointestinal outpatient clinic over a period of 18 months. All patients had a breath hydrogen test following oral lactose in addition to the standard diagnostic procedures. In 37 of the total of 64 patients no organic cause of the gastrointestinal complaints was found. In 9 of these 37 patients (24%) the breath hydrogen test indicated lactose malabsorption. Three to 6 month later most of the patients with lactose malabsorption showed a significant reduction of gastrointestinal complaints after they had maintained a lactose-poor diet. In comparison, patients with functional disturbances but without lactose malabsorption reported nor or only minor improvement of symptoms; most of these patients had consulted another physician since the last visit in the clinic.
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PMID:Prevalence of lactose malabsorption among patients with functional bowel disorders. 240 33


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