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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In animal experiments (20 mongrel dogs)
malabsorption
was induced by resection of 100 cm ileum. Subsequently the influence of the ileocoecal valve (Valvula Bauhini) in absorption was studied. In one group of animals intestinal continuity was reestablished by ileoileostomy, in a second by ileocolostomy. The results of the absorption studies were compared with a healthy control group. After ileoileostomy animals do not lose weight, serum cholesterol and protein remain normal. Oral tolerance tests with
Triolein
-iodine-131 and Cyanocobalamine show results identical with those of the control group. After ileocolostomy all these parameters are lowered--partially to a pathological level. It is concluded that in all operations in the area of the terminal ileum and colon the Valvula Bauhini should be retained if possible.
...
PMID:[Resection of the valvula bauhini and its effect on the metabolism. An experimental study in animals (author's transl)]. 48 Oct 32
Adults eating a Western diet digest and absorb ingested food containing approximately 100 g fat, 350 g carbohydrate, and 75 g protein daily. Normal fat absorption requires adequate gastric, pancreatic, liver-biliary, mucosal, and lymphatic function. Carbohydrate and protein absorption is much less dependent on liver-biliary and lymphatic function. The intestine has a large reserve capacity for digestion and absorption of nutrients which is due to both excess function and to adaptive changes which increase function in one segment of the digestive-absorptive system when it is decreased or lost in another segment. The large reserve capacity explains why most of the prevalent intestinal diseases seldom cause clinically detectable changes in absorption. However, there are more than 30 less-common human diseases which cause
malabsorption
of one or more nutrients. Those that cause the
malabsorption syndrome
, i.e., steatorrhea and weight loss, can be conveniently categorized according to the major deficiency leading to the absorptive defect as follows: insufficient pancreatic enzyme activity, insufficient bile acid, disease of the small intestinal wall, multiple defects, mechanism unknown, and drug-induced
malabsorption
. A few diseases, most of which are congenital, cause
malabsorption
of only one or a few related nutrients such as lactose
malabsorption
in lactase deficiency. Most of the tests currently in use for detecting and diagnosing the cause of
malabsorption
are relatively insensitive and nonspecific. Chemical analysis of the fat in a three-day stool collection remains the single best test for diagnosing the
malabsorption syndrome
. However, a breath test using
Triolein
labeled with either the radioactive or stable isotope of carbon may be an important recent advance. Other breath tests are also currently being investigated for quantitating absorption or
malabsorption
of various substances including bile acids and various sugars. Studies of the function of the intestinal epithelial cells are usually best accomplished using tissue obtained by per oral biopsy. Biopsy specimens are used for many types of study including light and electron microscopic examination, chemical and enzymatic assays, tissue culture, and uptake of various radiolabeled compounds.
...
PMID:Normal and abnormal intestinal absorption by humans. 54 Jun 10
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
Twenty-two hospital patients without gastrointestinal symptoms and fourteen patients with clinically suspected fat
malabsorption
were studied using the 14C-
Triolein
Breath Test and three day fecal fat estimation. The 14C-
Triolein
Breath Test was 100% sensitive and 86% specific for fat
malabsorption
. Three day fecal fat estimations were 86% sensitive and 91% specific. These data confirm the high sensitivity and specificity obtained using the 14C-
Triolein
Breath Test. The speed and convenience of the 14C-
Triolein
Breath Test plus acceptable sensitivity and specificity make this a practical screening test to detect fat
malabsorption
.
...
PMID:Clinical evaluation of the 14C-Triolein Breath Test: a critical analysis. 659 3
The diagnosis of
intestinal malabsorption
is difficult to make without the use of specific tests such as endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) or duodenal biopsy which are invasive and potentially hazardous. Faecal fat estimation or C14
Triolein
breath tests have limitations as screening tools are time consuming and expensive. The butterfat absorption test (BFAT) is, in contrast, a simple, quick and cheap test for fat
malabsorption
. We have assessed the performance of this test in a blinded retrospective study of all such procedures performed in a teaching hospital over an 8 year period. One hundred and fourteen cases of suspected
malabsorption
had one or more butterfat tests. These were divided into absorbers and malabsorbers without knowledge of the butterfat test results. We found the butterfat test to have a sensitivity of 88% and a specificity of 94% using a cut-off of 20 light-scattering intensity units to discriminate normal from abnormal tests. At this level, predictive values are 91% for a positive result and 92% for a negative. These results are similar to those reported with the C14
Triolein
breath test and adjusted faecal fats. We conclude that the butterfat test is a simple, cheap and effective screening test in the diagnosis of
malabsorption
.
...
PMID:Butterfat absorption--a valuable screening test in malabsorption. 814 13