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

The effects of oral calcitriol (0.25 and 0.50 micrograms/d), together with calcium (1 g/d), on calcium absorption and bone resorption were measured in postmenopausal osteoporotic women with calcium malabsorption. Radiocalcium absorption was significantly improved and urinary hydroxyproline/creatinine excretion significantly reduced on both doses, but the higher dose caused an unacceptable incidence of hypercalcemia. In 49 patients treated for an average of 15 months with the lower dose, there was a nonsignificant gain in forearm bone mass of 0.4 +/- 0.3 mg/cm/mo (approximately 1/2% per annum) compared with a significant decrease in 17 untreated patients of 3.8 +/- 1.3 mg/cm/mo (approximately 5% per annum).
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PMID:Calcium and calcitriol therapy in osteoporotic postmenopausal women with impaired calcium absorption. 232 73

Individuals with sufficient intestinal lactase hydrolyze ingested lactose to galactose and glucose and these monosaccharides are absorbed. Lactose is not digested completely when intestinal lactase activity is low and the disaccharide is malabsorbed. Breath hydrogen excretion after lactose ingestion is used commonly to diagnose lactose malabsorption. However, no direct tests are currently used to assess lactose absorption. We tested a new method of assessing lactose absorption in 26 healthy individuals. Each subject ingested 50 g of lactose. Participants were evaluated for lactose malabsorption using a standard 3-h breath hydrogen test. In addition, the urinary excretions of galactose, lactose, and creatinine were quantitated for 3-5 h after lactose ingestion. On the basis of breath hydrogen analysis after lactose ingestion, 12 individuals were lactose malabsorbers (defined as a rise in the breath hydrogen concentration of greater than 20 parts per million above the baseline value). The 14 subjects who did not malabsorb lactose by breath hydrogen testing (defined as a rise in the breath hydrogen concentration of less than or equal to 20 parts per million above the baseline value), had significantly more galactose in their urine 1, 2, and 3 h after lactose ingestion than lactose malabsorbers. The ratio of excreted lactose to excreted galactose was significantly decreased in lactose absorbers compared with lactose malabsorbers (p less than 0.001). Determination of the ratio of urinary galactose to urinary creatinine separated lactose absorbers from lactose malabsorbers completely (p less than 0.001). We conclude from this study that the determination of urinary galactose, urinary lactose/galactose ratio, and urinary galactose/creatinine ratio may be used to assess lactose digestion and absorption in healthy adults.
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PMID:Assessment of lactose absorption by measurement of urinary galactose. 277 42

Studies in 24 recurrent oxalate stone-formers have shown that values for urinary calcium excretion for this group on at-home diets vary significantly (P less than 0.001) more than values for creatinine excretions. By placing stone-formers on controlled in-hospital diets and measuring their calcium excretions, we were able to predict probable outpatient hypercalciuria (greater than 7.5 mmol/day) with a sensitivity of 95% and a specificity of 95%. In this study, the renal loss of calcium during low-calcium diets was proportional to the absorptive hypercalciuria during high-calcium diets. Calcium loading experiments in fasted stone-formers and normal subjects indicated that citrate, at citrate:calcium molar ratios ranging from 0.12 to 1, stimulated urinary calcium excretion more than did calcium carbonate loading alone. In addition, citrate also significantly (P less than 0.05) increased the excretion of urinary oxalate by two normal subjects for a given load of calcium oxalate. Malabsorption of citrate and possibly other hydroxycarboxylic acids may thus predispose to oxalate nephrolithiasis by promoting calcium and oxalate absorption.
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PMID:Effect of citrate on the urinary excretion of calcium and oxalate: relevance to calcium oxalate nephrolithiasis. 291 May 76

A high percentage of hospitalized patients are malnourished. By means of biochemical examinations (visceral proteins), anthropometric measurements (body mass, triceps skinfold, arm muscle circumference, creatinine index) and immunological methods (total lymphocyte count in the blood, skin testing with test antigens) it is possible to classify nutritional conditions in severity and kind of malnutrition. 158 patients with chronic inflammatory diseases of the GI-tract and cancer without generalization were studied by means of an exact nutritional assessment and by means of the modified D-xylose test. There was no significant correlation between the degree of malnutrition and the extent of intestinal absorption. Only in 5.7 per cent of malnourished patients existed a malabsorption.
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PMID:[Nutritional status and small intestine absorption]. 310 29

A previous study indicated increased urea production and low nitrogen (N) retention on a free amino acid elemental formula (FAA; Vivonex-HN). The limitations of this earlier study were: irregular nitrogen absorption in the malabsorption patients, high nitrogen intake, and failure to match FAA to control formula (hydrolyzed casein; CAS; Criticare-HN) with respect to kcal/nitrogen. A more critical test of FAA quality was sought in the current study. Four healthy males received the minimal daily nitrogen requirements (0.6 g protein/kg) from either FAA or CAS in a 10-day balance study; a second balance on the alternate formula followed. Maintenance energy, minerals, and vitamins were supplied in each period. The results indicated a higher apparent nitrogen absorption (p less than 0.05) from FAA relative to CAS in the first 5 days of the balance, although these differences were no longer present in the remaining 5 days of the period. Urinary total nitrogen increased on FAA, most of which could be accounted for by urea nitrogen; urinary creatinine nitrogen, ammonia nitrogen, and uric acid nitrogen were nearly identical between formulas. The unmeasured fraction of urinary nitrogen was markedly diminished on FAA while the urea nitrogen to total nitrogen ratio was significantly increased (p less than 0.05) compared to CAS. During the initial 5 days of study nitrogen balance was lower on FAA than on CAS and this difference became significant during the last 5 days of the period (mean +/- SD for FAA = -0.42 +/- 0.59 g/D vs CAS = 0.98 +/- 0.30 g/day, p less than 0.001). Hyperglycinemia was consistently present during FAA infusion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Free amino acid formula: nitrogen utilization and metabolic effects in normal subjects. 343 Jun 85

Although calcium supplements are widely used to reduce bone resorption in osteoporosis, their beneficial effect is not conclusively established. We have studied the acute (after 12 h) effects of an oral calcium load (1 g) in a group of 35 osteoporotic postmenopausal women, comprising 19 subjects with normal absorption and 16 subjects with malabsorption of calcium. In the subjects with normal calcium absorption the fasting urinary total hydroxyproline/creatinine ratio fell from 0.021 to 0.017 (p less than 0.001), but in those with malabsorption of calcium it did not change significantly. This difference between the two groups was significant (p less than 0.01). These results indicate that an oral calcium load rapidly suppresses bone resorption in osteoporotic subjects with normal absorption of calcium, but not in those with malabsorption of calcium.
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PMID:Biochemical effects of a calcium supplement in osteoporotic postmenopausal women with normal absorption and malabsorption of calcium. 369 89

We studied the effect of aluminum injections on bones of rats after intervals of 3, 6, and 9 weeks. To study reversibility, we allowed one group to recover for 3 weeks. Both weanling and adult rats were examined to determine the influence of age. The calcium, phosphate, creatinine, and parathyroid hormone levels were similar in aluminum-treated rats and controls. Aluminum could be seen by histochemical stain after 6 weeks, but at that time the bone was otherwise normal. By 9 weeks the bone formation (as measured by tetracycline labeling) in aluminum-treated rats was severely decreased on trabecular and endosteal surfaces. The periosteal surfaces showed normal formation. After 3 weeks of recovery, the bone formation rate in the young aluminum-treated rats was similar to that in the controls, although the serum and bone aluminum values had not significantly decreased. A higher percentage of aluminum was seen in the cement lines. In the adult rats, the bones had more stainable aluminum, and increased osteoid was noted along trabecular and periosteal surfaces. The doses of aluminum used in these rats greatly exceeded those that cause toxicity in humans; thus these findings may not directly apply to clinical practice. We conclude that aluminum administration can lead to decreased rates of bone formation in the rat, despite normal calcium level and renal function, and without decreased parathyroid hormone levels. The peritoneal route of administration could also have contributed to bone lesions by causing peritonitis, malabsorption, or both. Adult rats showed signs of early osteomalacia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Development and reversibility of aluminum-induced bone lesion in the rat. 379 13

D-Xylose kinetics were studied after oral and intravenous administration to 10 patients with impaired renal function, three of whom were being evaluated for intestinal malabsorption. The 0.32 +/- 0.06 L/kg (mean +/- SD) distribution volume of D-xylose in patients with uncomplicated renal impairment was larger than the value of 0.23 +/- 0.04 L/kg that we reported previously for normal subjects (P less than 0.01). Renal clearance was also reduced, averaging 87% of glomerular filtration rate estimated from creatinine clearance, so that the elimination-phase half-life was prolonged to 138 +/- 39 minutes from 75 +/- 11 minutes in normal individuals (P less than 0.01). The 25 gm oral D-xylose dose was 77.4% +/- 14.8% absorbed in the patients with uncomplicated renal impairment, similar to the 69.4% +/- 13.6% absorption reported in normal individuals. However, the absorption half-life was prolonged from 31 +/- 12 minutes in normal subjects to a value of 62 +/- 23 minutes (P less than 0.02). Of the usual clinical indexes of D-xylose absorption, the serum concentration measured 1 hour after the oral dose was best correlated with the extent of D-xylose absorption (r = 0.76; P less than 0.01), and the standard lower normal limit of 0.2 mg/ml was satisfactory.
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PMID:D-xylose absorption and disposition in patients with moderately impaired renal function. 381 22

36 patients with severe neurological diseases (craniocerebral trauma, cerebrovascular insufficiency, meningo-encephalitis, polyneuropathy, paraplegia, intoxication etc.) received for more than 3 months monosaccharides and polyols (Triofusin E 1000) and a 10-%-concentration of crystalline amino acids (Aminofusin L10% kohlenhydratfrei) via the parenteral route in combination with / or exclusively a nutrient-defined diet (Biosorb). Exclusive enteral nutrition was given preference if possible. Numerous laboratory parameters, as for example blood counts, "hepatic enzymes", electrolytes, trace elements, plasma proteins, lipids, urea and creatinine were determined once a week. Substitutions and secondary complications were registered in addition. Iron and plasma proteins had to be substituted most frequently. It could be proved that hypoferremia was caused by insufficient iron supply in case of exclusive/prevailing parenteral nutrition, incorrect application of the iron preparations, inflammatory complications with iron moving into the R.E.S., as well as malabsorption syndromes probably induced by bacteria. Inflammatory complications were also the major cause of protein deficiency syndromes (hypoalbuminemia). In case of relatibely often occurring diarrhea, however, it could clearly be proved that it was not induced by nutrition but was produced by a broad-spectrum antibiosis. Chronically persistent diarrhea with colitis-like colonic changes required enteral feeding with an oligopeptide diet (z.B. Peptisorb) via jejunal feeding tube. Nitrogen balances which were determined after more than 3 months of artificial nutrition formed the basis of a nutritional plan differentiated according to diagnostic groups and stages of disease.
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PMID:[Artificial nutrition in neurology--indications and problems]. 640 43

Calcium malabsorption is common in the elderly and may contribute to the development of age-related bone loss. To investigate its cause, we have measured radio-calcium absorption, plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D and parathyroid hormone in forty-eight elderly women with a normal plasma creatinine. Calcium malabsorption was associated with low 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations and was corrected by increasing these into the normal range by treatment with oral 25-hydroxyvitamin D3. Treatment also increased 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, and decreased parathyroid hormone concentrations. Before treatment, plasma parathyroid hormone was related to plasma creatinine but not to 25-hydroxyvitamin D, and the change in absorption on treatment correlated inversely with plasma creatinine. 51Cr EDTA clearance was measured in sixteen elderly women and confirmed that renal impairment was common even with a plasma creatinine in the normal range. Our results suggest that calcium malabsorption in the elderly is predominantly due to vitamin D deficiency; renal impairment is also common and contributes to the malabsorption by increasing the requirements for vitamin D.
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PMID:Calcium malabsorption in the elderly: the effect of treatment with oral 25-hydroxyvitamin D3. 641 53


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