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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Jejunal biopsies were obtained from 37 children with cystic fibrosis, 16 with gluten-induced enteropathy, and 18 control subjects for the following studies: (1) disaccharidase activity, (2) L-ALA-L-Phe hydrolase activity, and (3) intestinal uptake of three 14C-labeled amino acids. Values were significantly reduced in the three determinations in patients with gluten-induced enteropathy as compared to control subjects.
Lactase
and L-ALA-L-Phe hydrolase activities were significantly reduced (p less than 0.01) in CF patients as compared to control subjects. Definite hypolactasia was also observed in 23% of the children with CF. Uptake of lysine was normal in CF patients whereas that of phenylalanine and cycloleucine was reduced as compared to control subjects. This study suggests an intestinal component to the
malabsorption
of patients with CF.
...
PMID:Small bowel mucosal dysfunction in patients with cystic fibrosis. 124 82
Brush-border membrane proteins of the small-bowel mucosa were separated on polyacrylamide gels from intestinal biopsy specimens obtained from four children with congenital lactose
malabsorption
and from two adults with specific hypolactasia. In three patients with the congenital type of
lactase
deficiency the protein band corresponding to brush-border
lactase
was reduced in intensity, but was never completely absent. No difference in gel patterns was detected when this pattern in congenital deficiency was compared to that obtained from the two patients with adult-type selective hypolactasia. In one patient with congenital lactose
malabsorption
the protein band corresponding to
lactase
activity was not detectable. The findings suggest that the mechanisms leading to low
lactase
activity in the congenital and adult forms of lactose intolerance are similar.
...
PMID:Protein patterns of brush-border fragments in congenital lactose malabsorption and in specific hypolactasia of the adult. 125 11
The quantity of lactose not absorbed by 4 normal and 6
lactase
-deficient subjects was determined by three indirect methods which involved: (1) measurement of pulmonary hydrogen (H2) excretion, (2) pulmonary (14)CO2 excretion, and (3) stool (14)C excretion, after ingestion of 12.5 g of 1-(14)C-lactose and 4 g of polyethylene glycol (PEG). Results were compared with absorption determined directly from the (14)C:PEG ratio of multiple terminal ileal aspirates. The fraction of lactose not absorbed determined by ileal aspiration ranged from 0 to 8% in normals and 42 to 75% in mild-intolerant subjects. Whereas all three indirect methods were useful in qualitatively separating normal from deficient subjects, the quantity of lactose absorbed as determined by H2 excretion correlated most closely with ileal measurements (r = 0.94). Pulmonary (14)CO2 excretion for 24 hr after (14)C-lactose ingestion did not distinguish normal (17 +/- 4% (SEM) of ingested (14)C per 24 hr) from
lactase
-deficient subjects (21.1 +/- 3%). Likewise, stool (14)C:PEG ratios grossly underestimated
malabsorption
with less than one-quarter of the nonabsorbed (14)C appearing in the stool. This study suggests that individual differences in susceptibility to diarrhea after milk ingestion by
lactase
-deficient subjects may be due to differences in the quantity of lactose not absorbed and/or differences in the rate of bacterial metabolism of lactose in the colon. Analysis of ileal fluid collected during passage of the lactose meal indicated that about two-thirds of the osmotic load delivered to the colon consists of endogenous electrolytes. Thus the water load delivered to the colon is about 3 times that calculated to be osmotically held by the nonabsorbed sugar.
...
PMID:Quantitative measurement of lactose absorption. 126 65
Intestinal disaccharidase activities were determined in 294 jejunal biopsies obtained from 254 children with various disorders of the small bowel, and alkaline phosphatase activity was measured in 251 biopsies. In normal mucosa a broad range of enzyme activity was found corresponding with the data in the literature. A primary disaccharidase deficiency was observed in 5 children with congenital sucrase-isomaltase deficiency and in a 12-year-old Egyptian boy with acquired
lactase
deficiency. A secondary generalized depression of disaccharidase activity and a diminution of alkaline phosphatase activity existed chiefly in patients who had severe or moderate mucosal damage, also in active coeliac disease and during gluten loading, in protracted diarrhoea of infancy, chronic
malabsorption
of unknown origin and agammaglobulinemia. During remissions enzyme activities recovered together with mucosal improvement. Low levels of enzyme activities were also seen in some cases of protracted diarrhoea of infancy and chronic
malabsorption
of unknown origin although only mild mucosal lesions were demonstrated.
...
PMID:[Intestinal disaccharidase and alkaline phosphatase activities of jejunal biopsies in small bowel diseases of children (author's transl)]. 127 85
Lactose malabsorption was investigated in 169 Chinese children aged between two and 16 years using the breath hydrogen test. The challenge was either lactose solution (1 g/kg) or cow's milk (10 ml/kg). Overall, 68% of the children showed a significant increase in breath hydrogen following the lactose challenge while only 17% showed an increase after the cow's milk challenge and 13% after both challenges. The number of malabsorbers increased significantly (p less than 0.001) with age and no associated gastrointestinal symptoms or signs were found in any of the children following the challenges, suggesting a gradual and partial loss of intestinal
lactase
activity. We conclude that the prevalence of lactose
malabsorption
in Hong Kong children is very high using the standard lactose tolerance test but when a more realistic amount of lactose and a natural medium such as a glass of milk is used as the challenge, the number of malabsorbers becomes small and clinically insignificant.
...
PMID:The status of lactose absorption in Hong Kong Chinese children. 139 83
During a six-year period, 29 children (aged 0.7-13.5 years, mean 3.3 years) suffering from chronic diarrhoea due to giardiasis were studied. The incidence of this illness was 81 per 1,000,000 children aged 0- < 7 years per year. According to growth charts, relative height and weight of the patients decreased significantly (approximately 0.5 SD) from before the onset of diarrhoea to the time of diagnosis and subsequently increased up to the end of catch-up growth. Small intestinal mucosal specimens were studied. Two patients had severe villous atrophy, 8 moderate abnormalities, 6 only light changes and 13 biopsies were normal. D-xylose or lactose
malabsorption
was detected in 25% of the patients. The lactose
malabsorption
was due to hereditary low
lactase
levels. None of the patients with a Danish ethnic background showed lactose
malabsorption
. D-xylose absorption and the relative weight loss of the patients correlated with the degree of mucosal damage. Patients with persistent diarrhoea (n = 19) were younger and had a shorter duration of diarrhoeal illness and a more significant weight reduction than those with intermittent diarrhoea (n = 10). However, the age at onset of symptoms was similar in the two groups (medians 1.3 years). Seven patients contracted the disease abroad. They all developed persistent diarrhoea and had a more severe course of the illness than those who acquired the disease in Denmark.
...
PMID:Giardiasis causing chronic diarrhoea in suburban Copenhagen: incidence, physical growth, clinical symptoms and small intestinal abnormality. 146 10
Hydrogen breath tests were performed in Gabon (Central Africa) after a loading dose of lactose in 67 well-nourished African children (50 with intestinal parasites and 17 unparasitized) and in 18 unparasitized young adults. All had normal nutritional status, and none had diarrhea or digestive symptoms. Parasites that were found included Ascaris lumbricoides in 76% of the parasitized children, Trichuris trichiura in 58%, Giardia in 24%, Entamoeba histolytica in 20%, Schistosoma intercalatum in 16%, and Necator Americanus in 14%. A similar proportion of parasitized (64%) or unparasitized (62.8%) subjects were lactose malabsorbers. Giardia infection was associated with a higher, but not significantly different, proportion of lactose intolerance (10 of 12, 83.3%). The presence of infection with A. lumbricoides or T. trichiura did not increase the percentage of lactose
malabsorption
. These data indicate that a decrease of
lactase
activity in well-nourished African children is not related to the presence or the importance of Ascaris or other intestinal parasites if the nutritional status is normal.
...
PMID:Influence of intestinal parasitism on lactose absorption in well-nourished African children. 153 47
An assessment was made of the efficacy of a beta-galactosidase, obtained from Aspergillus niger and added to intact milk, in decreasing lactose
malabsorption
and intolerance. Sixteen adult patients with
malabsorption
and intolerance to this sugar were studied in a double-blind crossover study vs. placebo. A 5-hour hydrogen breath test was used to assess
malabsorption
of lactose contained in 400 ml milk. When compared with placebo, the addition of exogenous
lactase
to intact milk caused a statistically significant reduction in the maximum breath H2 concentration (P less than 0.01) and in the cumulative H2 excretion (P less than 0.005). In the same way, the cumulative index for gastrointestinal intolerance was significantly lower (P less than 0.005) after the ingestion of
lactase
-added milk. This study demonstrates that enzyme replacement therapy, with beta-galactosidases obtained from Aspergillus niger, is effective in decreasing lactose
malabsorption
and its consequent intolerance in adult subjects with
lactase
deficiency.
...
PMID:beta-Galactosidase from Aspergillus niger in adult lactose malabsorption: a double-blind crossover study. 154 16
Lactose-intolerant postweaning rats were fed experimental diets including yogurt, quargs prepared from yogurt culture and buttermilk culture, and two types of whey obtained from quarg processing. After feeding each diet for a period of 7 d, absence of blood glucose elevation and occurrence of diarrhea were used as indicators of lactose
malabsorption
. Blood glucose assays and absence of diarrhea indicated that yogurt and quargs prepared from yogurt and buttermilk culture were well tolerated by the rats. Wheys containing the same levels of viable organisms and lactose as the quargs caused severe symptoms of diarrhea and poor lactose absorption as indicated by no changes in blood glucose levels. Plate counts and enzyme assays of gastrointestinal contents confirmed presence of viable culture organisms and beta-galactosidase activity after feeding the two types of quarg. The availability of viable organisms, the exogenous
lactase
activity, and especially the slow gastric emptying may all have contributed to more efficient hydrolysis and digestion of lactose from quargs and yogurt than from the wheys.
...
PMID:Lactose absorption by postweaning rats from yogurt, quarg, and quarg whey. 190 66
The present study intended to evaluate the influences of Metagonimus yokogawai on the activities of brush border membrane bound enzymes of the small intestine. Mice were infected with 500 metacercariae respectively, and the worm recovery, morphological changes and enzyme activities were observed chronologically. A part of them were followed after the treatment. Recovered worms decreased in number continuously after the infection, and they were less than 10% after 2 weeks and almost zero after 28 weeks. Villous atrophy and stromal inflammation were found at two locations of the proximal jejunum from 2 weeks to 4 weeks after the infection. The enzymes, alkaline phosphatase, leucine aminopeptidase and disaccharidases (sucrase,
lactase
, maltase, and trehalase), showed lowered activities in the duodenum and proximal jejunum of the infected mice but they increased in the distal jejunum for the first two weeks. From three weeks after the infection, the activities were gradually recovered. In one week treated mice, they recovered the activities at 2 weeks from the treatment, but there found no differences of the activities between the 3 week treated group and infected controls. The present data reveal that M. yokogawai infection induces degenerative changes of the host's intestinal mucosa not only morphologically but functionally during the initial phase of infection. The lowered enzyme activities in acute metagonimiasis should be associated with
malabsorption
and diarrhea.
...
PMID:Activities of brush border membrane bound enzymes of the small intestine in Metagonimus yokogawai infection in mice. 191 29
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