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)

Five years following jejunoileal intestinal bypass surgery for obesity, a patient developed debilitating weakness and muscle pain. Osteomalacia was suspected clinically by radiographic and laboratory abnormalities and confirmed by bone biopsy. Malabsorption was documented as well as secondary hyperparathyroidism. Successful treatment of this syndrome with vitamin D and calcium identified a medically reversible disorder which obviated the need for surgical reanastomosis.
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PMID:Osteomalacia and weakness complicating jejunoileal bypass. 43 11

A young female with osteomalacia complicating a blind loop syndrome associated with congenital megaduodenum is described. In this case, the correction of vitamin D malabsorption by administration of antibiotics highlights the role of massive intraluminal bacterial overgrowth from destruction of vitamin D, or decreased unicellar solubilization due to deconjugation of biliary acids. The importance of cutaneous vitamin D synthesis in patients with osteomalacia of gastrointestinal origin is emphasized. The detection of megaduodenum and megaesophagus in the patient's father may be the first report of a familial association of these gastrointestinal abnormalities.
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PMID:Osteomalacia complicating a blind loop syndrome from congenital megaesophagus-megaduodenum. 43 12

To investigate whether hepatobiliary rickets is caused by defective intestinal absorption of vitamin D or by impaired hepatic hydroxylation of the vitamin, we studied three children who developed severe rickets, hypocalcemia, and hypophosphatemia, two despite having received 400 to 800 IU vitamin D per day by mouth, and one despite prolonged treatment with 10,000 IU daily. On oral vitamin D therapy, plasma vitamin D and 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels were low. When two children were treated with weekly intravenous doses of 3,000 IU vitamin D to approximate the recommended prophylactic allowance, their plasma calcium and phosphate values improved promptly, the radiographic lesions healed, and the plasma concentrations of vitamin D and 25-hydroxyvitamin D became normal. Our studies indicate that the primary cause of hepatobiliary rickets is intestinal malabsorption of vitamin D, not impairment of the hepatic metabolism of the vitamin.
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PMID:Pathogenesis of rickets in chronic hepatobiliary disease in children. 44 26

Osteodystrophy frequently accompanies severe childhood hepatobiliary disease. Proposed causes include malabsorption of vitamin D and calcium, and diminished 25-hydroxylation of vitamin D. Two children, ages 23 and 35 months, with radiographic and biochemical evidence of rickets with extrahepatic biliary atresia, were treated with 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3. The minimal effective therapeutic dose and efficacy of 1,25-(OH)2D3 in the treatment of rickets associated with severe childhood hepatic disease were determined. Oral 1,25-(OH)2D3 was ineffective at doses of 0.10 microgram/kg/day. Parenteral doses of 0.20 microgram/kg/day effectively produced radiographic, bone mineral (photon absorptiometric), and biochemical evidence of healing. The need for four times the physiologic dose of 1,25-(OH)2D3 by the parenteral route suggested enhanced catabolism of, or end-organ resistance to, 1,25-(OH)2D3 in our patients with severe cholestatic liver disease treated with phenobarbital.
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PMID:1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D3 in childhood hepatic osteodystrophy. 44 53

The case history of a hypoparathyroid female with short bowel syndrome and long-standing therapy-resistant symptomatic hypocalcemia is reported. During treatment with massive doses of the potent vitamin D analog, 1 alpha-hydroxyvitamin D3(1 alpha(OH)D3), normocalcemia was re-established and clinical symptoms of hypocalcemia were relieved. Furthermore, significant improvement of t of intestinal calcium absorption and bone mineral content was observed after three months of treatment with 1 alpha(OH)D3. The data suggest that 1 alpha(OH)D3 may be of therapeutical value in patients with hypoparathyroidism and intestinal malabsorption.
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PMID:1 alpha-hydroxyvitamin D3 treatment of therapy-resistant symptomatic hypocalcemia in a hypoparathyroid patient with intestinal malabsorption. 47 89

Increased urinary excretion of phosphorylethanolamine (P.E.A.) is one of the salient features of hypophosphatasia. This inherited disorder is generally transmitted as an autosomial recessive trait and is characterized by abnormal mineralization of bone, premature loss of deciduous teeth and reduced tissue and serum alkaline phosphatases (A.P.) levels. The authors report a series of patients presenting with pains of skeletal origin attributed to an osteomalacia syndrome on the ground of a bone biopsy. These patients had no history of rickets during childhood but complained of early severe caries of the permanent dentition before the age of twenty. They had neither malabsorption nor renal tubular abnormalities. Their serum 25 OH vitamin D was normal and their serum A.P. levels were within the normal range with a normal isoenzyme distribution. All these patients had increased excretions of urinary P.E.A. and the latter correlate significantly with the degree of osteomalacia. Control patients with a malabsorption syndrome, showing osteomalacia and serum A.P. of the same degree of magnitude as the patients of the first group, have a normal P.E.A. excretion and no correlation appears between the degree of osteomalacia and the P.E.A. excretion. The cases with increased P.E.A. excretion may correspond to adult pseudohypophosphatasia. The signification of increased P.E.A. excretion is discussed.
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PMID:[Osteomalacia in hyperphosphoethanolaminuria without hypophosphatasia (author's transl)]. 47 10

Serum 25-hydroxy-vitamin D (25-OHD) concentrations were measured in 49 patients with hepatobiliary disease in infancy. Low mean values were found in groups of patients with biliary atresia, neonatal hepatitis, choledochal cyst, and chronic intrahepatic cholestatic syndrome. In the group of patients with surgically repaired biliary atresia, the mean value did not differ from normal. Parenteral vitamin D increased 25-OHD in serum in patients with biliary atresia, but did not do so in one patient with neonatal hepatitis. In contrast, oral vitamin D did not increase serum 25-OHD concentrations in patients with biliary atresia. It is concluded that the reduction of serum 25-OHD seen in biliary atresia was largely due to the malabsorption of vitamin D, while in neonatal hepatitis it was due to impairment of 25-hydroxylation of the vitamin.
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PMID:Serum 25-hydroxy-vitamin D in hepatobiliary disease in infancy. 47 12

The authors discuss the main features of the complex pathophysiology of patients subjected to duodenocephalopancreatectomy, and particularly the difficulties inherent in clinical assessment of the digestive and metabolic impairment consequent upon the duodeno-gastro-pancreatic mutilation. Out of a total of 57 cases of this description, they singled out for recheck 23 patients who had undergone duodenocephalopancreatectomy not less than six months and not more than seven years before (chronic pancreatitis, 11 cases; various malignancies of the periampullar area, 10 cases; Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, 1 case; retroperitoneal lymphoma, 1 case). Seventy-six per cent of patients who had been gainfully employed were able to resume their jobs after surgery. Steatorrhea, assessed in terms of fecal fats, was present in all cases; notwithstanding, 70% of the patients gained weight (average increase 7 kg). All patients were on enzyme replacement therapy. Only 4% developed diabetes, and none developed postoperative peptic ulcers. Conversely there was a high incidence (65%) of bone structure reshuffling, signally osteoporosis, probably imputable to steatorrhea and vitamin D malabsorption, plus the often associated increase of serum alkaline phosphatase activity.
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PMID:[The biological results of duodenocephalopancreatectomy. Clinical evaluations based on a long-term follow-up]. 53 2

Effects of ethanol on the gastrointestinal tract are reviewed, and an overview of possible mechanisms of ethanol damage to the alimentary tract is presented. Ethanol toxicity most commonly results in metabsorption. Mechanisms contributing to ethanol-induced calcium malabsorption are considered in detail as a prototype for problems encountered in evaluating effects of toxicants on intestinal function. Effects at the local level in the intestine must be differentiated from systemic effects. The mechanism of suppression of calcium absorption by chronic ethanol ingestion differs from that produced by acute administration. Effects of acute administration appear to be due to local mucosal damage and are reversed in 18 hr. Such damage is not present with chronic administration, which affects only duodenal transport. Treatment with vitamin D and its metabolites does not reverse the inhibition of calcium transport. The overall findings suggest that ethanol inhibition of calcium transport is mediated at the intestinal level, probably affecting vitamid D independent mechanisms.
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PMID:Ethanol and development of disease and injury to tha alimentary tract. 59 53

The serum 25-OHCC concentration was measured in 151 patients in order to evaluate the potential use of this determination in the management of gastrointestinal disorders. Patients with functional bowel disease had lower serum mean 25-OHCC levels than normals. The results were divided into normal (greater than 21 ng/ml), low normal (12-21 ng/ml), and low levels (less than 21 ng/ml). Two thirds of patients with malabsorption had low serum 25-OHCC. Most patients following jejunoileal bypass surgery for morbid obesity had low levels despite supplemental oral calciferol therapy. In patients with chronic liver disease, cholestasis more than parenchymal cell disease appeared responsible for low serum 25-OHCC levels. Measurement of serum 25-OHCC may be an ancillary screening test for fat malabsorption and in patients with intraluminal bile salt deficiency. Furthermore, repeated measurements may be useful in monitoring therapy with vitamin D products in patients with chronic malabsorption and cholestasis.
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PMID:Significance of serum level of 25-hydroxycholecalciferol in gastrointestinal disease. 62 77


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