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)

The coeliac disease (CD) or gluten-sensitive enteropathy (GSE) is a permanent intolerance to wheat gliadin and to correlated proteins inducing malabsorption and typical damages of the jejunal mucosa (total or subtotal villous atrophy = SVA) in genetically-predisposed individuals ("DQW2"). A large amount of research has been devoted to CD pathogenesis: the most recent studies, thanks to sophisticated and experimental methods, support the pathogenetic immunological theory and the one of direct cytotoxicity. The correct diagnostic procedure for CD, established in 1970 by the European Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition (ESPGAN), suggested three small bowel mucosal biopsies. In the last years, because of the difficulties of such a practice, the necessity of non-invasive diagnostic approaches has developed; such approaches have been verified in absorption tests (one-hour blood xylose, intestinal permeability methods) and in immunogenetic tests (antibodies antigliadin, anti-reticulin, anti-endomysium, anti 90 KD glycoprotein, anti-human jejunum, HLA I/II antigens). The specific MHC antigens establish CD's incidence in several population and in particular situations, as in first-degree relatives and in diseases associated with CD (dermatitis herpetiformis (DH), insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) and other auto-immune syndromes). The specific serum antibodies singly used as first level screening if estimated in combination with absorption tests, reach the highest levels of specificity and sensibility in CD diagnosis. It's anyway fundamental the comparison with at least a typical CD histological feature, caused by a challenge with a sufficient gluten to be carried in dubious cases and in non high auxological risk age (ESPGAN 1989). Adolescence is a period of frequent non compliance with a gluten-free diet and of particular psychological and physical problems: the apparent "gluten insensitivity", typical of teen-agers and adults, recalls the definitions of silent CD and latent CD (iceberg like). In the first case the jejunal mucosa is abnormal and the symptomatology isn't evident. In latent CD, genetically restricted, the mucosa is normal but there are minimal markers of inappropriate immunity to gliadin (at intestinal humoral immunity level) and a possible worsening of histological lesions to the third stage under environmental stimuli. This represents a two-stage model CD. That's why CD is still under-evaluated despite recent statistics reporting an increasing incidence (late and atypical forms). Prevalence rates between 1:300 and 1:4,000 and more are quoted in literature. The necessity of a strict gluten-free diet is confirmed by the evident frequency of lymphoma and by the increased risk of malignancy in untreated CD.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Celiac disease and its diagnostic evolution. Comparisons and experiences in a hospital pediatric department (1975-1992). I]. 152 93

The class II major histocompatibility complex antigen deficiency syndrome is a rare immunodeficiency disease associated with defective expression of the class II antigens encoded for by the major histocompatibility complex. Clinically, this syndrome is manifest as a combined immunodeficiency presenting early in life, and affected individuals are susceptible to a variety of severe and/or opportunistic infections. Chronic, severe diarrhea and malabsorption are also characteristically found, and death is common within the first few years of life. Although the precise molecular lesions responsible for the failure of membrane antigen expression in this syndrome have not yet been identified, the pathogenetic mechanisms involve regulatory defects in the transcription of structural genes encoding for class II antigens. The absence of class II MHC antigens results in profound abnormalities in lymphocyte function and differentiation. Of central importance is the defective MHC-restricted interactions between CD4+ "helper" T lymphocytes and the various types of antigen-presenting cells found in the skin and elsewhere. The absence of class II MHC antigens also appears to alter the ability of affected B cells to be activated by a variety of membrane-mediated stimuli, and it profoundly disrupts both the intrathymic development and post-thymic differentiation of immunoregulatory T cells. This "experiment of nature" thus demonstrates the critical role of class II MHC antigens in the proper development and function of the immune system.
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PMID:The class II major histocompatibility complex antigen deficiency syndrome: consequences of absent class II major histocompatibility antigens for lymphocyte differentiation and function. 219 Oct 47