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

More than one-third of Thai infants were lactose malabsorbers soon after birth and the percentage of lactose malabsorption increased with age. Beyond 4 years of age, all Thai children studied were lactose malabsorbers. Continued milk supplementation over the study period did not affect the ability to digest lactose in the amount given in the load test. Since the milk-supplemented group of children tended to have better weight gain and few undesirable gastrointestinal symptoms, it seems milk feedings can be used to advantage even among populations with a record of high lactose intolerance.
Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health 1976 Dec
PMID:Lactose malabsorption in Thai infants and children: effect of prolonged milk feeding. 103 26

A case of extensive primary lymphocytic lymphoma (lymphosarcoma) of the gastrointestinal tract is reported. At the time of presentation the patient had diffuse involvement of the gastrointestinal tract from the stomach to the ano-rectal junction. Malabsorption was present. Pre-treatment immunologic studies showed elevated serum IgA and IgG, but impaired humoral and cellular immunity. Death occurred 13 months after diagnosis.
Aust N Z J Med 1976 Dec
PMID:Extensive primary lymphoma of the gastrointestinal tract. 107 44

Diagnosis is often overlooked because symptoms develop slowly and insidiously and many patients don't complain about them. Then too, the giddiness, apathy, confusion, clumsiness, and similar problems may be considered simply signs of "old age." Iron deficiency anemia is the most common type in old people. It's usually due to gastrointestinal bleeding, but there may be a second, less obvious cause. The classic picture of low serum iron, high total iron-binding capacity, and low iron-binding saturation is sometimes distorted. Usually, many studies are needed to confirm the suspicion of a vitamin B12 or folic acid deficiency. A raised mean corpuscular volume in itself signals the need for further investigation. In patients with macrocytosis, the bone marrow must be examined. Tests for intestinal malabsorption must be considered too. Repeated blood tests are essential in patients being treated for any type of anemia. Iron deficiency may hide evidence of folate or B12 deficiency. And iron therapy may lessen bleeding from colonic cancer, delaying diagnosis until it's too late to operate.
Geriatrics 1976 Dec
PMID:Anemia--a common but never a normal concomitant of aging. 108 61

Disturbances of the central and peripheral nervous system in Crohn's disease can be directly or indirectly caused by the disease itself or by the treatment. The first mentioned disturbances are very seldom. Cerebral arterial and venous thromboses can be attributed to hypercoagulation. Malabsorption of vitamin B 12 or folic acid can lead to a subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord, sometimes in combination with a polyneuropathy and an encephalopathy. Spinal abscesses very seldom occur. An opticusneuropathy can be caused either by vasculitis or by a lack of vitamin A and/or vitamin B. Polyneuropathies in Crohn's disease which are not induced by drugs are manifested as mononeuritis multiplex or as symmetrical sensory neuropathy. An autoimmune process is being discussed as the probable cause of there diseases. In some cases large doses and prolonged administration of metronidazole can lead to cerebral dysfunctions with state of confusion, alterations of consciousness, cerebral convulsions and cerebellar syndrome. Most of these symptoms disappear rapidly after this drug is not longer administered. In long-term administration of metronidazole 10-50% of the patients develop a sensory polyneuropathy with a total dosis of at least 22.5 g, but mostly above 60 g. After the use of metronidazole is stopped, it takes a substantial period of time until there is a full recovery from the symptoms.
Fortschr Neurol Psychiatr 1992 Dec
PMID:[Neurologic concomitant diseases in Crohn disease]. 128 45

Magnesium is an essential cofactor for many enzymatic reactions, especially those involved in energy metabolism. Deficits of magnesium are prevalent due to inadequate intake or malabsorption and due to the renal loss of magnesium that occurs in certain disease states (alcoholism, diabetes) and with drug therapy (diuretics, aminoglycosides, cisplatin, digoxin, cyclosporin, amphotericin B). Protracted deficits of magnesium in humans and animals result in neurological disturbances, including hyperexcitability, convulsions and various psychiatric symptoms ranging from apathy to psychosis, some of which can be reversed with magnesium supplementation, others requiring correction of the dysregulation mechanism. Although the role of magnesium in neuronal function is not completely understood, a lowering of CSF or brain magnesium can induce epileptiform activity and there is an association between decreased CSF magnesium and the development of seizures. CSF concentrations of magnesium are normally higher than magnesium plasma ultrafiltrate (diffusible) concentrations due to the active transport of magnesium across the blood-brain barrier. Under conditions of magnesium deficiency, CSF concentrations decline, although this decline lags behind and is less pronounced than the changes observed in plasma magnesium concentrations. Decreases in CSF magnesium concentrations correlate with the alterations observed in extracellular brain magnesium concentrations in animals following the dietary deprivation of magnesium. CSF magnesium concentrations can readily be repleted following magnesium supplementation, although high dose magnesium therapy, such as that used in the treatment of convulsions in eclampsia, will only increase CSF magnesium concentrations to a very limited degree (approximately 11-18 per cent) above physiological concentrations. Greater increases in CSF magnesium may occur in neonates since neonatal swine, following treatment with magnesium, have CSF magnesium concentrations that are similar to their plasma concentrations. There has been a recent resurgence of interest in magnesium deficiency and its neurological consequences due to the finding that magnesium, at physiological concentrations, blocks N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors in neurones. NMDA receptors are normally activated by glutamate and/or aspartate which represent the principal neurotransmitters for excitatory synaptic transmission in vertebrate CNS. Magnesium deficiency produces epileptiform activity in the CNS which can be blocked by NMDA receptor antagonists. Other mechanisms, including alterations in Na+/K(+)-ATPase activity, cAMP/cGMP concentrations and calcium currents in pre- and postsynaptic membranes, may also be at least partially responsible for the neuronal effects associated with low brain magnesium. Further studies are necessary to increase our understanding of the neurological implications of magnesium deficit in the central nervous system.
Magnes Res 1992 Dec
PMID:Brain and CSF magnesium concentrations during magnesium deficit in animals and humans: neurological symptoms. 129 67

The role of dietary fiber as a cause of antidepressant malabsorption has received little attention. Three patients are described who had previously been successfully treated with tricyclic antidepressants and subsequently became refractory to treatment after commencing a high-fiber diet. Serum antidepressant levels were decreased while the patients ingested the high-fiber diets and rose when the fiber content of the diet was reduced. Clinical improvement of their depression followed the concomitant rise in serum tricyclic antidepressant levels.
J Clin Psychopharmacol 1992 Dec
PMID:High-fiber diet and serum tricyclic antidepressant levels. 133 61

AIDS-associated gastric secretory failure has been characterized by decreased secretion of acid, pepsin, and gastric juice volume. To determine whether decreased intrinsic factor secretion and vitamin B12 malabsorption occur in this entity, we performed prospective measurements of maximal acid output, intrinsic factor output, vitamin B12 absorption, serum vitamin B12, and holotranscobalamin II in 10 consecutive AIDS patients. Four of 10 patients had low maximal acid output, i.e., < or = 1.5 mEq/h (control = 12.8 +/- 9.0, range 2.5-25 mEq/h). Four patients had low intrinsic factor output, i.e., < or = 1.1 microgram/h (control = 8.2 +/- 6.9, range 3.1-19.4 micrograms/h). One patient with low intrinsic factor output had low serum vitamin B12 and a Schilling test consistent with pernicious anemia. A second patient with very low intrinsic factor output (0.16 micrograms/h) had low parts I and II Schilling tests; malabsorption most likely resulted from both low intrinsic factor secretion and ileal disease. One of three vitamin B12 malabsorbing patients, with normal serum vitamin B12, had low holotranscobalamin II, 25 pg/ml (control holotranscobalamin II = 76 +/- 44, range 44-152 pg/ml). Maximal acid output and intrinsic factor output did not correlate in AIDS (r = 0.36, p = 0.30) in contrast to the expected correlation in controls (r = 0.91, p = 0.03). We conclude that low intrinsic factor secretion is common in AIDS and contributes to vitamin B12 malabsorption. Decreased parietal cell secretion of intrinsic factor and acid may occur independently in human immunodeficiency virus-associated gastric secretory failure. Low holotranscobalamin II, an early manifestation of vitamin B12 malabsorption, results in decreased delivery to vitamin B12-dependent tissues prior to depletion of serum vitamin B12. Regular supplementation with vitamin B12 may therefore be warranted in patients with advanced HIV infection.
Am J Gastroenterol 1992 Dec
PMID:Decreased intrinsic factor secretion in AIDS: relation to parietal cell acid secretory capacity and vitamin B12 malabsorption. 144 41

Although bile acid malabsorption (BAM) in post-cholecystectomy diarrhea (PCD) is a well-known clinical condition, its true etiopathogenetic role is not entirely clear. The SeHCAT (23-selena-25-homotaurocholic acid) test, a simple and reliable BAM test, was performed in 33 cholecystectomized patients, 26 with chronic diarrhea. The test revealed a marked degree of BAM in 25/26 cases. Cholestyramine in doses of 2-12 g/day was effective in 23/25, ineffective in two, and was not tolerated in one patient. When treatment was suspended, diarrhea recurred in nine, whereas bowel habit remained regular in 60%, with brief sporadic episodes of diarrhea in the other cases. The SeHCAT test was repeated in 11 cases after cholestyramine treatment interruption, and revealed the normalization of parameters in two patients and an improvement in three. We conclude that BAM is an important etiopathogenetic factor in PCD that responds favorably to cholestyramine. In 60% of the cases, it resolved diarrhea definitively, although without eliminating BAM in all cases: this suggests that existence of other factors associated with BAM. The SeHCAT test is essential for a differential diagnosis between PCD and the irritable bowel syndrome.
Am J Gastroenterol 1992 Dec
PMID:Post-cholecystectomy diarrhea: evidence of bile acid malabsorption assessed by SeHCAT test. 144 56

Twenty-seven cases of primary peripheral T-cell lymphomas of the intestine (PTLI) were investigated. Seven patients had histories of malabsorption. The most frequent symptoms at presentation were weight loss, abdominal pain, and acute abdomen. The jejunum was the most common site of lymphoma and multifocal disease was found in 72% of the cases. Twenty-two patients (92%) presented with localized disease confined to the intestine and abdominal lymph nodes, only two patients had generalized disease. According to the pattern of lymphoma infiltration and the morphology of the uninvolved small intestinal mucosa, 21 cases were separated histologically into three categories; 1) enteropathy-associated T-cell lymphoma (EATCL, n = 9) showing predominant intramucosal lymphoma spread and villous atrophy of uninvolved mucosa with high density of intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL), 2) EATCL-like lymphoma without enteropathy (EATCL-LLWE, n = 5) but with an infiltration pattern similar to EATCL, and 3) T-cell lymphoma without features of EATCL (Non-EATCL, n = 7). Distinctive features of EATCL were the high incidence of malabsorption states, multifocal intestinal disease in all cases, and the high frequency of intestinal recurrences. On frozen sections four of eight PTLI showed the phenotype CD3+ CD4- CD8- HML-1+, which is also expressed on a small subset of normal IEL. The morphologic and immunomorphologic findings suggest that the majority of PTLI is derived from mucosal T lymphocytes. This derivation may be responsible for certain biologic features, such as the preferential spread to and relapse of PTLI at small intestinal sites.
Am J Pathol 1992 Dec
PMID:Peripheral T-cell lymphomas of the intestine. 146

In a prospective study of thirty five consecutive patients with decreased plasma cobalamine (P-Cbl), twenty-two (63%) were diagnosed as having pernicious anaemia (PA) (no age or sex differences) on basis of the B12-absorption test and/or megaloblastic changes in the bone marrow. In this group ten patients were anaemic (six of whom were characterized as macrocytic), sixteen of nineteen examined had megaloblastic changes in the bone marrow, and all of thirteen examined had achlorhydria with positive correlation to Parietal Cell Antibodies (PCA). Two patients with PA had normal Cbl-absorption and two had malabsorption at the time of diagnosis. Twenty-one patients (95%) had PCA and thirteen (59%) were Intrinsic Factor Antibody (IFAb) positive. Three patients IFAb-seroconverted within a year. Among the remaining thirteen patients (37%), one had PCA but not IFAb and three were IFAb-positive all of whom had normal Cbl-absorption. Of the three patients with IFAb one had also PCA, one IFAb-seroconverted within three months, and one had microcytic anaemia with iron depleted bone marrow due to coecal cancer. Among twenty two healthy adult controls four (18%) had PCA while none had IFAb. This investigation shows that at the debut half of PA patients (55%) do not have anaemia, some have normal Cbl-absorption and some have malabsorption. 95% have PCA and 59% have IFAb. So, IFAb-negative PA is often seen (41%) and seroconversion can take place. Diagnosis is even more reliable, when achlorhydria is present in PCA-positive persons. Healthy PCA-positive persons are probably predisposed to develop PA. Patients with cbl-deficiency, IFAb and/or PCA must be considered as having latent PA even if they have normal haemoglobin and normal Cbl-absorption. These patients should be followed and, in case of anaemia or signs of neuropathia, treated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Ugeskr Laeger 1992 Dec 21
PMID:[Pernicious anemia. A study of initial forms of the disease and diagnostic significance of determination of the intrinsic factor antibody and parietal cell antibody]. 846 Apr 41


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