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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The in vitro and in vivo production of hydrogen gas (H2) from various carbohydrates or proteins has been examined in normal rats and in rats infected with the nematode Nippostrongylus brasiliensis. Normal rat fecal homogenates were capable of producing H2 in vitro from glucose, sucrose, xylose, lactulose, bovine serum albumin, or casein hydrolysate. Direct injection of glucose, sucrose, xylose, lactulose, bovine serum albumin, or casein hydrolysate into the cecum of normal rats resulted in approximately twice as much H2 production in vivo than when these same carbohydrates or proteins were administered to the normal rats by gavage. Partial small intestinal villous atrophy was produced by infecting rats with the nematode N. brasiliensis. Impaired small intestinal cell function and evidence of
malabsorption
in the nematode-infected rats included: (a) decreased activity of intestinal cell lactase (-43%),
sucrase
(-33%), and alkaline phosphatase (-46%); (b) decreased gut sac uptake of 3-O-(methyl-3H]-D-glucose (-21%) or 1-[carboxyl-14C]-aminocyclopentane-1-carboxylic acid (-28%); and (c) increased (+ 64%-561%) 14CO2 production after D-[U-14C]xylose administration. These rats produced approximately twice as much H2 after gavage administration of glucose, sucrose, xylose, bovine serum albumin, or casein hydrolysate compared with normal rats. The present study suggests that H2 analysis may be useful in the evaluation of small
intestinal malabsorption
states in rats.
...
PMID:Use of hydrogen gas (H2) analysis to assess intestinal absorption. Studies in normal rats and in rats infected with the nematode, Nippostrongylus brasiliensis. 728 87
An oral sucrose tolerance test was performed in a group of 103 children, aged between 3 months and 15 years because of episodic diarrhea and/or abdominal pains. Sucrose
malabsorption
defined as an abnormal increase in expired hydrogen, was found in only 3 children who suffered from congenital
sucrase-isomaltase
deficiency. This 1% incidence of sucrose
malabsorption
was lower than the incidence of lactose
malabsorption
found in this group (33%). Mean rise in blood glucose during the sucrose test was higher (3.4 +/- 1.4 vs. 2.4 +/- 1.2 mmol/l, p less than 0.0001) and the occurrence of false flat blood glucose curves was lower (3% vs. 12.8%, p less than 0.05) than during the lactose test. These findings are consistent with the higher
sucrase
activity in the small bowel mucosa compared to lactase. In contrast to the lactose tolerance test, sucrose tolerance test should not be used as a screening procedure for secondary disaccharidase deficiency in children.
...
PMID:Diagnostic value of sucrose tolerance test in children evaluated by breath hydrogen measurement. 736 16
To determine the prevalence of short polymers of glucose and starch
malabsorption
caused by small intestinal glucoamylase deficiency in children with chronic diarrhea, we studied small bowel biopsy specimens from 511 children (aged 1 month to 9 years) with chronic diarrhea evaluated at 54 medical centers. Glucoamylase and disaccharidase (lactase,
sucrase
, maltase, and palatinase) enzyme assays were performed. Of the 511 children, 15 had glucoamylase deficiency. Six who had significant small intestinal mucosal injury and disaccharidase deficiencies were defined as having secondary glucoamylase deficiency; the other nine patients with normal mucosal morphologic features were defined as having primary glucoamylase deficiency. Secretin tests showed normal pancreatic amylase values for age in all seven children tested. Four of them had abnormal findings on tolerance tests for starch and short polymers of glucose (rise in blood glucose concentration: < 20 mg/dl) and reducing substances in stools, and three of these four had symptoms of intolerance (abdominal distention, flatulence, and diarrhea). All seven patients responded to a starch elimination diet. After reintroduction of a starch diet, diarrhea recurred in four patients; this was alleviated 48 hours after reelimination of starch. We conclude that intestinal glucoamylase deficiency is present in some patients with chronic diarrhea.
...
PMID:Small intestinal glucoamylase deficiency and starch malabsorption: a newly recognized alpha-glucosidase deficiency in children. 815 67
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-associated intestinal abnormalities can occur before immunodeficiency or infection with opportunistic enteropathogens. Rhesus macaques infected with simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) develop an AIDS-like illness that frequently includes enteropathy. The development of enteropathy and its association with SIV infection in the intestinal tract was examined. By 1 week after infection, SIV-infected macrophages and T lymphocytes were detected in gut-associated lymphoid tissue. In contrast to findings in the asymptomatic stage, SIV-infected macrophages were numerous in primary and terminal stages of infection. An acute enteropathy syndrome was observed in the primary acute stage of infection. Functional abnormalities of absorptive epithelium, indicated by D-xylose
malabsorption
and decreased
sucrase
activity, occurred before the onset of diarrhea or opportunistic enteric infections. These findings indicate that macrophages and T cells in the intestinal tract are early targets of SIV infection and may play a critical role in the development of SIV-associated intestinal dysfunction.
...
PMID:Primary acute simian immunodeficiency virus infection of intestinal lymphoid tissue is associated with gastrointestinal dysfunction. 816 4
Resection of distal small intestine causes calcium
malabsorption
in humans and in a rat model of 50% distal resection. We tested the hypothesis that this calcium
malabsorption
is caused in the rat model by a brush border defect. We compared brush border membrane vesicles from the proximal small intestine of control (transection and anastomosis at mid-small intestine) with distally resected rats. Mucosal protein was 25% greater in the resected group and the vesicles were enriched 37-fold in
sucrase
activity when compared with homogenate. Kinetic constants Vmax (maximal initial rate of saturable calcium uptake at infinite concentration), kT (calcium concentration for saturable calcium uptake rate at half Vmax), and KD (rate constant for nonsaturable calcium uptake per unit concentration) were slightly but not significantly greater in the resected as compared with the transected group, ruling out the brush border as the cause for decreased transmucosal calcium transport.
...
PMID:Brush border calcium uptake in short-bowel syndrome in rats. 841 65
Intestinal colonization with the protozoan Giardia causes diffuse brush border microvillous alterations and disaccharidase deficiencies, which in turn are responsible for
intestinal malabsorption
and maldigestion. The role of T cells and/or cytokines in the pathogenesis of Giardia-induced microvillous injury remains unclear. The aim of this study was to assess the role of T cells and interleukin-6 (IL-6) in the brush border pathophysiology of acute murine giardiasis in vivo. Athymic nude (nu(-)/nu(-)) CD-1 mice and isogenic immunocompetent (nu(+)/nu(+)) CD-1 mice (4 weeks old) received an axenic Giardia muris trophozoite inoculum or vehicle (control) via orogastric gavage. Weight gain and food intake were assessed daily. On day 6, segments of jejunum were assessed for parasite load, brush border ultrastructure, IL-6 content, maltase and
sucrase
activities, villus-crypt architecture, and intraepithelial lymphocyte (IEL) infiltration. Despite similar parasitic loads on day 6, infected immunocompetent animals, but not infected nude mice, showed a diffuse loss of brush border microvillous surface area, which was correlated with a significant reduction in maltase and
sucrase
activities and a decrease in jejunal IL-6 concentration. In both athymic control and infected mice, jejunal brush border surface area and disaccharidases were high, but levels of tissue IL-6 were low and comparable to the concentration measured in immunocompetent infected animals. In both immunocompetent and nude mice, infection caused a small but significant increase in the numbers of IELs. These findings suggest that the enterocyte brush border injury and malfunction seen in giardiasis is, at least in part, mediated by thymus-derived T lymphocytes and that suppressed jejunal IL-6 does not necessarily accompany microvillous shortening.
...
PMID:Jejunal brush border microvillous alterations in Giardia muris-infected mice: role of T lymphocytes and interleukin-6. 1081 92
Trehalose is a disaccharide, the main dietary source being mushrooms. It has been approved as an additive in the preparation of dried food. Isolated intestinal trehalase deficiency is found in 8% of Greenlanders, but is rare elsewhere. The normal range of trehalase activity and the incidence of isolated trehalase deficiency in the UK have not been reported. Patients (n 400) were investigated for suspected
malabsorption
. Endoscopic distal duodenal biopsies were taken for histological assessment and maltase,
sucrase
, lactase and trehalase estimation. Disaccharidase activities were determined by Dahlqvist's technique (Dahlqvist, 1968). Most patients (n 369) had normal duodenal histology. In these, square root transformation of trehalase activity produced a normal distribution. The normal range (mean +/- 2 SD) was 4.79-37.12 U/g protein. One patient had an isolated borderline trehalase deficiency. The thirty-one patients with villous atrophy had significantly reduced disaccharidase activities. With ingestion of a gluten-free diet, maltase,
sucrase
and trehalase activities recovered to normal in most patients, whereas lactase activity did not. The normal range and very low incidence of isolated enzyme deficiency is comparable with that described in populations from the USA and mainland Europe. Activity is significantly reduced in untreated coeliac disease and recovers with treatment with a gluten-free diet. There is no place for routine determination of trehalase activity in the UK population and there should be no concern over the introduction of trehalose-containing dried foods.
...
PMID:Intestinal trehalase activity in a UK population: establishing a normal range and the effect of disease. 1088 12
Carcinogenic and other toxic manifestations of areca/betel nut extracts on the buccal cavity and upper digestive tract are well documented. The present study deals with in vivo and in situ effects of aqueous and alcoholic extracts of areca nut on rat intestinal epithelial cell membrane. In vivo daily oral administration by gastric intubation for 1p w produced significant declines in brush border membrane alkaline phosphatase, Ca2+-Mg2+-ATPase, and the digestive enzyme
sucrase
. The decline in activities were more prominent after 4-w exposures. Instant short term in situ exposure to aqueous extract produced higher enzyme activities, indicating the initial activation of active sites by areca nut extract constituent(s). Significant declines in brush border membrane constituents (total hexose, sialic acid and cholesterol) were also evident following continuous exposures to areca nut extracts. These findings suggest that prolonged chewing of areca nut causes significant alterations in intestinal epithelial cell lining functions and could lead to
malabsorption
of nutrients.
...
PMID:Effect of betel/areca nut (Areca catechu) extracts on intestinal epithelial cell lining. 1100 13
Some interesting advances in mechanisms and regulation of nutrient absorption were reported last year. Further evidence was obtained that the rate-limiting step in triacylglycerol absorption, especially with large doses of lipid, is transport of prechylomicrons from the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi apparatus. Targeted disruption of the adenosine triphosphate-binding cassette transporter in mice produced changes similar to human Tangier disease and suggested that this mouse may be a model for studying intestinal high-density lipoprotein assembly and secretion. A new mechanism for carbohydrate
malabsorption
was discovered: in
sucrase-isomaltase
deficiency, the enzyme fails to anchor in the brush border membrane and so is secreted into the lumen, where it is ineffective. Glycosylating insulin at B1 phenylalanine permitted it to bind to the brush border membrane and greatly enhanced its hypoglycemic activity when given orally. CaCo-2 cells and normal human enterocytes were shown to have two variants of the human sodium-dependent vitamin C transporter, hSVCT1; one is active and the other is an inactive splice variant. In rats, the divalent metal ion transporter, DMT1, appeared to be important for regulation of both absorption of iron and its movement into the liver.
...
PMID:Nutrient absorption. 1122 65
T-cell-mediated pathogenesis has been documented in various idiopathic and microbially induced intestinal disorders. Diffuse microvillous shortening seen in giardiasis is responsible for disaccharidase insufficiencies and
malabsorption
of electrolytes, nutrients, and water. Other mucosal changes include crypt hyperplasia and increased numbers of intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL). A recent report using an athymic mouse model of infection showed that these epithelial injuries were dependent on T cells. The aim of the present study was to identify which subset of superior mesenteric lymph node (SMLN) T cells were responsible for mucosal alterations in giardiasis. CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, as well as whole lymphocyte populations, were isolated from SMLN of Giardia muris-infected mice for adoptive transfer. Jejunal segments of recipient mice were assessed for brush border ultrastructure,
sucrase
activity, crypt/villus ratio, and IEL numbers. Mice that received enriched CD8+ and whole SMLN lymphocytes, but not CD4+ T cells, from infected donors showed diffuse shortening of microvilli, loss of brush border surface area, impaired
sucrase
activity, and increased crypt/villus ratios compared to respective controls. Transfer of whole SMLN lymphocytes, as well as enriched CD4+ or CD8+ T cells, from infected donors led to increased IEL numbers in the recipient jejunum. The findings indicate that loss of intestinal brush border surface area, reduced disaccharidase activities, and increased crypt/villus ratios in giardiasis are mediated by CD8+ T cells, whereas both CD8+ and CD4+ SMLN T cells regulate the influx of IEL.
...
PMID:Role of CD8+ and CD4+ T lymphocytes in jejunal mucosal injury during murine giardiasis. 1515 62
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