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

The cause of the recently described syndrome of chronic watery diarrhea associated with microscopic colitis is unknown. A patient appearing to have this disorder is described here. A major pathophysiologic role for bile-salt malabsorption in her, and perhaps other such patients, was suggested by her clinicopathologic response to cholestyramine.
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PMID:Is microscopic colitis due to bile-salt malabsorption? 369 Dec 68

Germfree rats were fed 24-14C-ursocholic acid (UC) mixed into the diets for 10 days. The bile was then drained by cannulation for 6 hours to collect the bile salt pool. No biotransformation of the labelled UC occurred and it constituted approximately equal to 75% of an enlarged bile salt pool. Less phospholipid and cholesterol were secreted into the bile per mumol bile salt compared to normal rats. The critical micellar concentration (CMC) of the bile was determined by equilibrium dialysis and found to be increased. Faecal excretion of labelled triolein added to the diet was unaffected by feeding ursocholic acid. Excretion of 14C-octadecane and 14C-cholesterol increased significantly under the same conditions. Ursocholic acid feeding thus resulted in a selective malabsorption of octadecane and cholesterol.
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PMID:Effects of feeding ursocholic acid to germfree rats. 371 70

Twenty patients with exocrine pancreatic insufficiency secondary to alcohol abuse were studied for the presence of bile salt malabsorption. Fecal bile salts and fecal fat excretion were determined in 15 patients receiving pancreatic enzyme therapy, not receiving enzyme therapy, and on a regimen of pancreatic enzymes plus cimetidine. Serum bile salt levels were measured during fasting and postprandial conditions both during enzyme therapy and after it was stopped in 8 cases. In addition, 5 patients underwent [14C]cholylglycine breath testing during and after discontinuation of enzyme therapy. The fecal bile salt excretion varied between 610 and 3460 mg/day in the untreated patients. Treatment with pancreatic enzymes was associated with significant (p less than 0.05) reduction in fecal bile salt and fecal fat excretion. Cimetidine therapy in addition to enzyme therapy further reduced steatorrhea but failed to alter bile salt excretion significantly. Serum cholylglycine level showed significant (p less than 0.05) postprandial increase in patients receiving enzyme therapy, suggesting improved bile salt absorption. These data suggest a wide range of bile salt malabsorption in alcoholic patients with pancreatic insufficiency, which improves with pancreatic enzyme therapy.
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PMID:Bile salt malabsorption in pancreatic insufficiency secondary to alcoholic pancreatitis. 375 16

Collagenous colitis is a clinicopathologic syndrome with chronic watery diarrhea, diffuse colitis with surface epithelial injury, and a distinctive collagen band beneath the surface epithelium especially in the proximal colon. The cases of seven patients (including six middle-aged women) with chronic, watery, noninfectious diarrhea were studied. Roentgenographic and endoscopic findings were not diagnostic. Two patients had rectal mucosal inflammation but sparing of the distal colon from subepithelial collagen. Other findings included thyroid disease (four patients), urethral fibrosis (three), elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (six), and eosinophilia (three). The colon was thought to be the main source of diarrheal fluid, but bile salt malabsorption, steatorrhea, and net small-bowel secretion were additive factors in some patients. With antiinflammatory treatment the diarrhea abated, the surface epithelial injury decreased, and the subepithelial collagen resolved (two patients), but lamina propria inflammation persisted. Collagenous colitis seems to be a chronic systemic, and perhaps autoimmune, disorder.
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PMID:Collagenous colitis: physiologic and histopathologic studies in seven patients. 378 77

The nutritional and metabolic complications following intestinal resection and ileostomy for necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) in low birth weight preterm infants often necessitate repeated prolonged hospitalization for salt and water imbalance and reliance on total parentaral nutrition (TPN). The traditional concerns about anesthetic and anastomotic complications delays the restoration of intestinal continuity until the infant has attained a weight of about 5 kg, but recent nutritional balance studies in our unit have shown a combination of nutrient and mineral malabsorption in neonates with ileostomies. Beginning 4 years ago, a prospective study of early closure of the ileostomy was undertaken in infants weighing as low as 2 kg to examine the effect on surgical morbidity, infant growth, and gastrointestinal function using the preclosure infant as his/her own control. Ten infants with birthweights ranging from 670 to 2,000 g developed NEC requiring ileostomy at age three days to 11 weeks. In addition to partial ileal resection, the cecum was resected in 10 patients, ascending colin in 7, transverse in 4, descending colon in 1 patient. Postoperative treatment, including short-term TPN and elemental diet, preceded closure of ileostomy at a mean age of 18 weeks (range 5 to 36 weeks). Mean weight at time of closure was 3,052 +/- 994 g. There were no short-term complications of early closure in this series, nor was there any incidence of anastomotic dysfunction, colon stricture, or recurrent NEC.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Early ileostomy closure in necrotizing enterocolitis. 382 10

Several factors play a role in the cause of malabsorption in CF. Besides the enzyme deficiency in the secretion of the exocrine pancreas, decreased bile-salt concentration in the gut may also be an important factor in the fat malabsorption. The contribution to the fat absorption by other lipases, such as lingual lipase and gastric lipase, remains to be proved. The therapeutic measures are only partly effective because of the breakdown of swallowed enzymes by gastric acid. Some improvement is reached by using a new acid-resistant coating for the enzyme supplement. Newly developed and essential for its success is the application of small coated particles to prevent retention in the stomach, and the easy breakdown of the coating in an alkaline solution. The treatment of the bile salt deficiency has not been successful until now. A trial with additional Tween 80, with the option of supplementing the detergent activity which was found to be successful in Crohn disease, was without marked success.
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PMID:Problems in the treatment of malabsorption in CF. 386 58

The cause of intractable chronic diarrhoea was found to be malabsorption of bile acid in five out of 42 patients thought to have the irritable bowel syndrome, six out of 29 patients with persistent diarrhoea after surgery for peptic ulcer, 23 who had undergone small bowel resection, and two others. Specific treatment brought symptomatic relief. The diagnosis was established by measuring the proportion of SeHCAT, a synthetic bile salt, retained one week after oral administration of a tracer dose of less than 100 micrograms of the compound labelled with 40 kBq (1 microCi) of selenium-75. These results indicate that malabsorption of bile acid is a more common cause of chronic diarrhoea than is generally appreciated. Measurement of retention of SeHCAT is a simple, accurate, and acceptable means of establishing the diagnosis of this debilitating but treatable condition.
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PMID:Is bile acid malabsorption underdiagnosed? An evaluation of accuracy of diagnosis by measurement of SeHCAT retention. 391 8

The naturally occurring, nonradioactive, stable isotopes, 2H, 15N, 18O, and in particular, 13C, are valuable tracers in studies of pediatric nutrition and gastroenterology. Techniques using these isotopes have been developed for the measurement of digestion, absorption, utilization, and excretion of nutrients in premature and term infants, as well as in young children. Compounds labeled with 13C enable quantitative measurements of nutrient oxidation rates and percent nutrient malabsorption. Illustrations of these applications are presented in studies of simple and complex carbohydrate metabolism, of medium- and long-chain triglyceride absorption and malabsorption, and of bile salt conservation and loss in the neonate. Modular protocols for the determination of nutrient absorption, oxidation, and loss now can be applied in longitudinal studies which involve comparisons of diet or which monitor recovery following malnutrition or disease. Instrumentation to be available in the future will simplify isotope ratio determinations and create ready access to the methodologies described.
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PMID:Applications of stable isotopes to pediatric nutrition and gastroenterology: measurement of nutrient absorption and digestion using 13C. 392 Mar 78

Ileal resection causes malabsorption of bile acid; the increased load of bile acids in the colon induces increased secretion of salt and water and hence diarrhoea. A study was carried out to test the effect of an enterocoated cholestyramine tablet designed to disintegrate in the colon and sequester the bile acids there, thereby minimising diarrhoea induced by bile acids while having no effect on malabsorption of bile acid and jejunal fat absorption. The study comprised 14 patients who had undergone ileal resection of 40-150 cm for Crohn's disease. A double blind crossover trial was performed with placebo and cholestyramine enterocoated with cellulose acetate phthalate. During treatment with cholestyramine the daily faecal output decreased, the number of defecations each week decreased, and the intestinal transit time increased. Acceptability of the tablets was high, in contrast with general clinical experience with cholestyramine powder. No change was observed in the total faecal output of bile acids or fat. Cholestyramine tablets caused a reduction in diarrhoea without noticeably interfering with the metabolism of fat or bile acid.
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PMID:Effect of enterocoated cholestyramine on bowel habit after ileal resection: a double blind crossover study. 392 71

The effect of ileal resection and cholecystectomy on bile salt metabolism was studied in female prairie dogs 4 weeks after either a sham laparotomy, cholecystectomy, ileal resection, or cholecystectomy and ileal resection. Bile was collected from a common bile duct cannula at hourly intervals for 12 hours. Pool sizes and synthetic rates of primary and secondary bile salts were determined from washout curves. Cholate, chenodeoxycholate, deoxycholate, and lithocholate levels were determined by gas chromatography from pooled collections of bile. After cholecystectomy and ileal resection, the pool sizes of primary and secondary bile salts were significantly reduced to amounts that were much less than the pool sizes after either procedure alone. Primary bile salt synthesis was significantly increased after combined cholecystectomy and ileal resection, to the same degree as cholecystectomy alone. After the combined procedures, there was a decrease in the proportion of cholate in hepatic bile associated with an increase in chenodeoxycholate, deoxycholate, and lithocholate levels. The data suggest that after the loss of both ileum and gallbladder the bile salt pool sizes are drastically reduced, the synthesis of primary bile salts is increased, and the proportion of secondary bile salts is increased. Cholecystectomy should be avoided, if possible, in patients with ileal resection in order to conserve the bile salt pool and prevent severe fat malabsorption.
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PMID:Changes in bile salt composition after cholecystectomy and ileal resection. 403 97


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