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)

Intestinal permeability was investigated with a chromium-51-EDTA (edetic acid) absorption test in 36 non-intoxicated alcoholic patients without liver cirrhosis or overt clinical evidence of malabsorption or malnutrition. Patients abstaining from alcohol for less than 4 days almost invariably had higher intestinal permeability than controls, and in many the abnormality persisted for up to 2 weeks after cessation of drinking. The presence of gastritis did not correlate with the presence of increased permeability. The site of altered intestinal permeability was shown by an in-vitro permeability test to be the small bowel. The increased intestinal permeability to toxic "non-absorbable" compounds of less than 5000 molecular weight may account for some of the extraintestinal tissue damage common in alcoholic patients.
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PMID:The leaky gut of alcoholism: possible route of entry for toxic compounds. 614 32

The elements zinc, copper, manganese, molybdenum, selenium and chromium are considered to be essential nutrients in man. It is known that they cross the placenta because they are all present in fetal bodies where they are presumably necessary for normal growth and development. Though deficiency of copper, zinc, selenium and chromium have been reported in man only copper and zinc deficiency have been described in premature infants. Typically, the deficiency develops late (between 3-6 months of age), at a time when the concentration in breastmilk is falling and before a mixed diet has been introduced. This late onset, together with data on body composition, suggests that preterm infants are born with stores--albeit small--of copper and zinc, as they are with iron. The stores may be depleted to a variable extent following birth by dietary insufficiency (particularly total parenteral nutrition), malabsorption and diarrhoea. This leads to severe deficiency in some infants and possibly less severe deficiency in many more, which may pass unrecognised because of difficulties in diagnosis. Dietary provision of a trace element should have two purposes. It should be sufficient to prevent the development of a deficiency state, and to provide enough to enable stores to be formed so that deficiency does not immediately occur if the diet is temporarily inadequate. No case of manganese, molybdenum, selenium or chromium deficiency has yet been described in preterm infants, but no systematic search for deficiency of these elements has yet been undertaken.
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PMID:Trace metal requirements of preterm infants. 696 54

Glucose Tolerance Factor (GTF) is synthesized in vivo from absorbed dietary chromium, and acts as a physiological enhancer of insulin activity, binding to insulin and potentiating its action about three-fold. Since GTF is well absorbed orally, the development of sufficiently concentrated and stable supplementary sources of this agent may enable convenient and physiologically appropriate pharmacological modulation of insulin activity. A review of the numerous physiological actions of insulin suggests a number of therapeutic applications for GTF, in such diverse ailments as diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, reactive hypoglycemia, obesity, cancer, protein malnutrition or malabsorption, endogenous depression, Parkinsonism, hypertension and cardiac arrhythmias. GTF supplementation may also have value in preventive medicine.
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PMID:The therapeutic potential of glucose tolerance factor. 700 27

Two diets, with or without a nonfermentable carboxymethylcellulose (CMC) with high viscosity, were fed to broiler chickens beginning at 2 wk of age to study whether the anti-nutritive effect of gelling fibers on lipid digestibility may be associated with reduced intestinal bile salt concentration. Moreover, the microflora were examined to study whether possible changes in bile salt concentration coincide with alterations in microbial numbers. Carboxymethylcellulose depressed apparent lipid digestibility (P = 0.021). Feed intake and weight gain were not significantly affected. Water intake was increased in birds fed the CMC diet (P = 0.039). Bile acid concentration in small intestinal digesta was decreased (P = 0.047) in birds fed the CMC diet, which may have been caused by the increased water content of digesta (P < 0.001). The concentration of bile acids per gram dry matter or per milligram chromium was not reduced in small intestinal contents. Broiler chickens fed the CMC diet excreted more bile acids in the excreta (P < 0.001). Total aerobic and anaerobic microbial counts in the intestinal digesta were significantly increased in the duodenum plus jejunum (P = 0.038) but not in the ileum. Significant increases were found in the numbers of Clostridia (P = 0.017), Lactobacillus (P = 0.009), Bacteroides (P = 0.022), and yeasts and molds (P = 0.012). The present study supports the hypothesis that a nonfermentable gelling fiber (CMC) decreases apparent lipid digestibility by reducing the concentration of bile acids in the chyme in broiler chickens. Moreover, the ingestion of gelling fibers may increase the bacterial activity in the small intestine, which may further contribute to malabsorption of lipids.
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PMID:The inhibitory effect of carboxymethylcellulose with high viscosity on lipid absorption in broiler chickens coincides with reduced bile salt concentration and raised microbial numbers in the small intestine. 977 62

During 2010, 15 articles were published which focused on chronic sensorimotor axonal neuropathy; some will be discussed in this review. Clinical diagnosis from signs and symptoms seems to be excessively variable, often overestimating the incidence of diabetic sensorimotor polyneuropathy. Long-term use of Metformin is associated with malabsorption of vitamin B12. Metformin exposure may be a iatrogenic cause for exacerbation of peripheral neuropathy in patients with type 2 diabetes. The neuroprotective role of vitamin E against cisplatinperipheral neurotoxicity has been suggested by a phase III study. Metallosis after hip arthroplasty with a cobalt-chromium alloy prosthesis can cause progressive sensory disturbance, hearing loss and hypothyroidism. The effects of electrical stimulation on neuromuscular recovery after nerve crush injury in rats do not support a benefit of the tested protocol using electrical stimulation during the period of motor nerve recovery following injury. The rate of motor vehicle accidents in patients with neuropathy, based on surveys from 260 subjects, demonstrated that 40.6% were involved in traffic accidents. Accident frequency and discomfort with driving are higher in neuropathy patients compared to age-matched national statistics. Peripheral neuropathy in primary (AL) amyloidosis may be the cause of stepwise progressive, multiple upper limb mononeuropathies.
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PMID:[Original articles on axonal neuropathy in 2010]. 2210 Mar 24

Aim. To determine trace element status and aetiologic factors for development of trace elements deficiencies in children with iron-deficiency anaemia (IDA) aged 0 to 3 years. Contingent and Methods. 30 patients of the University Hospital, Pleven, Bulgaria-I group; 48 patients of the Sumy Regional Child's Clinical Hospital, Sumy, Ukraine-II group; 25 healthy controls were investigated. Serum concentrations of iron, zinc, copper, chromium, cobalt, and nickel were determined spectrophotometrically and by atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Results. Because the obtained serum levels of zinc, copper, and chromium were near the lower reference limits, I group was divided into IA and IB. In IA group, serum concentrations were lower than the reference values for 47%, 57%, and 73% of patients, respectively. In IB group, these were within the reference values. In II group, results for zinc, cobalt, and nickel were significantly lower (P < 0.05), and results for copper were significantly higher in comparison to controls. Conclusion. Low serum concentrations of zinc, copper, cobalt, and nickel were mainly due to inadequate dietary intake, malabsorption, and micronutrient interactions in both studied groups. Increased serum copper in II group was probably due to metabolic changes resulting from adaptations in IDA. Data can be used for developing a diagnostic algorithm for IDA.
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PMID:Trace Element Status (Iron, Zinc, Copper, Chromium, Cobalt, and Nickel) in Iron-Deficiency Anaemia of Children under 3 Years. 2483 56