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)

One case each of pernicious anemia and folic acid deficiency with chronic malabsorption with disease of the cord and histologically demonstrated concomitant disease of the peripheral nerve system in the sense of a polyneuropathy are described. The histological findings of nerve obtained by biopsy show, in both cases, the loss of individual nerve fibers as an expression of a chronic axonal degeneration. The pathogenetic basis to be considered in these cases is presented.
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PMID:[Polyneuropathy in vitamin B 12 and folic acid deficiency. Clinical and histopathological study with electron-microscopy analysis of the sural nerve]. 17 62

The authors report 12 cases of neurological syndromes due to folic acid deficiency, due in 8 cases to chronic alcoholism. In 5 cases there was polyneuritis, 3 cases had cerebellar atrophy, whilst 4 patients had subacute combined degeneration of the cord. Folic acid deficiency occurred alone in five cases out of twelve, as in 3 cases vitamin B1 deficiency was associated, and in four cases there was malabsorption of vitamin B12. A neuropathological study of these cases showed: 1) moderate involvement of the mamillary tubercles as observed in deficiency encephalopathies. 2) severe peripheral nerve involvement especially of axonal type. 3) involvement of the anterior horns of the spinal cord with appearances of central chromatolysis and a few atrophic neurones.
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PMID:[Role of folic-acid deficiency in deficiency diseases of the nervous system. Apropos of 12 cases including an anatomo-clinical case]. 19 44

Sibling cases of familial vitamin E deficiency accompanied by ataxia, polyneuropathy and mental retardation were reported. Case 1 was a 37-year-old male who developed progressive gait disturbance, deformity of the feet and head tremor from childhood, after normal delivery and development of early childhood. On physical examination, he had cataract, high arched palate and pes cavus. Neurological examination revealed mental retardation (WAIS 68), scanning speech, muscular atrophy of the face and extremities with predominance in the lower limbs, absent Achilles tendon reflex, disturbance of superficial and deep sensation predominant in distal limbs, and marked gait ataxia. Ataxia was both cerebellar and sensory in nature. Laboratory data of the blood showed no significant abnormalities including blood glucose and vitamin B12 except a markedly low level of serum vitamin E. The brain CT scan revealed severe cerebellar atrophy and marked dilatation of the cisterna magna and the subarachnoid space around the cerebellum. Motor nerve conduction velocity in the leg was decreased. Biopsy specimen from the quadriceps muscle showed neurogenic atrophy. Sural nerve biopsy revealed decrease in large myelinated fibers with axonal degeneration and regeneration. Oral administration of alpha-tocopherol acetate, 600 mg per day, diminished ataxia significantly. Based on lysosomal enzyme activity in leukocytes, clinical and laboratory examination, lipidosis or spinocerebellar degeneration was excluded. Chronic lipid malabsorption or beta lipoprotein deficiency which can cause decrease in vitamin E absorption, was not recognized. On oral loading with 2 g of alpha-tocopherol acetate, the decrease rate of serum vitamin E was normal. Consequently the low vitamin E was considered to have resulted from selective impairment of vitamin E absorption.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Familial idiopathic vitamin E deficiency associated with cerebellar atrophy]. 226 7

Acanthocytes have a distinct morphology and are not normally found in peripheral blood. They occur in association with at least three neurological syndromes. In abetalipoproteinaemia, a progressive spinocerebellar ataxia and retinopathy occurs secondary to malabsorption of vitamin E. Cases with chorea are often familial, with orofacial dyskinesia and an axonal neuropathy causing areflexia and muscle wasting. Areflexia and a subclinical myopathy also occur in the McLeod syndrome, in which there is abnormal expression of Kell blood group antigens. The exact mechanism of acanthocytosis in each disorder remains uncertain: passive changes in membrane lipids, surface receptor/ligand interactions, and a primary membrane defect are among the possibilities.
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PMID:Acanthocytosis and neurological impairment--a review. 268 30

A patient with acquired intestinal malabsorption developed a motor-sensory polyneuropathy with a recurrent remittent course, normal CSF and reduced motor and sensory conduction velocities. Nerve biopsy showed axonal changes. Serum DL-alpha-tocopherol was abnormally low. Six months supplementation with vitamin E was followed by normalization of DL-alpha-tocopherol serum levels and clinical and electrophysiological improvement.
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PMID:Neuropathy secondary to vitamin E deficiency in acquired intestinal malabsorption. 285 79

A 41-yr-old woman with primary biliary cirrhosis developed weakness and wasting in proximal muscles, areflexia, and decreased proprioceptive and vibratory sensation. Investigations revealed law serum levels of vitamin E and electromyographic and muscle biopsy changes consistent with a neuropathy. Sural nerve histology demonstrated axonal dystrophy with patchy demyelination. These features closely resemble a neurologic syndrome associated with chronic cholestatic liver disease and vitamin E deficiency in children. Adults with chronic cholestasis may also be susceptible to neurologic damage from prolonged malabsorption of vitamin E.
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PMID:Neurologic syndrome associated with low levels of vitamin E in primary biliary cirrhosis. 301 81

The most common forms of polyneuropathies are the alcoholic and diabetic polyneuropathies. They each constitute 1/3 of all polyneuropathies. The first symptoms shown by the alcoholic polyneuropathy are symmetric sensory disturbances with loss of tendon reflexes and of vibration sense in the peripheral segments of the lower extremities. At the beginning one almost always finds pressure pain in the calves. Important differential clues in diagnosis compared to the diabetic neuropathy, are the age at which the disease begins, the degree to which the autonomic nerve fibres and the cranial nerves are affected, as well as the form of manifestation. Pathogenetically, a direct toxic alcohol effect can above all be suspected in accordance with the typical electrodiagnostic findings with a neurogenic pattern in the EMG in the case of normal or slightly diminished conduction velocity, and in agreement with the morphological finding of an axonal degeneration in most of the biopsies. Possibly, in a small number of cases a vitamin deficiency or a malabsorption can play a causal role. The prognosis is good by complete abstinence from alcohol.
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PMID:[Differential diagnosis, pathogenesis and therapy of alcoholic polyneuropathy]. 301 50

Vitamin E malabsorption and deficiency during chronic childhood cholestasis has been associated with a progressive ataxic neurologic syndrome. Hyporeflexia, the first sign of neurologic dysfunction, may begin prior to age 2 years, but severe symptoms do not develop until age 5 to 10 years. To establish the age of onset of neuropathologic lesions, we prospectively evaluated four young children with severe cholestasis. Malabsorption and deficiency of vitamin E were documented by low serum vitamin E concentrations, low serum vitamin E to total serum lipids ratios, elevated hydrogen peroxide hemolysis, and impaired absorption of a pharmacologic dose of alpha-tocopherol. Abnormal neurologic findings in two patients were limited to areflexia, ptosis, mild truncal ataxia, and hypotonia; two patients had minimal signs of neurologic dysfunction. Sural nerve histology at age 6 to 25 months revealed a degenerative axonopathy involving large-caliber myelinated fibers, but without quantitative axonal loss. Muscle histology and histochemistry tests yielded normal results. Our study suggests that neurologic injury may occur during the first two years of life in vitamin E-deficient children with cholestatic hepatobiliary disease, obligating aggressive attempts at correcting this deficiency state at a very young age.
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PMID:Vitamin E deficiency during chronic childhood cholestasis: presence of sural nerve lesion prior to 2 1/2 years of age. 630 96

In 656 patients aged from one to 39 years, the incidence of axonal dystrophy in the gracile nucleus (ADG) is correlated with underlying diseases. The age-related incidence of ADG (minimal to severe) in these patients, 13, 53, 76 and 97% in the first, second, third, and fourth decades, respectively, is comparable to that observed by other investigators. The incidence drops to 8, 16, 31, and 60% when more than five spheroids in each gracile nucleus are taken into account. Diseases with which ADG is frequently associated vary according to the patient's age. Congenital biliary atresia and cystic fibrosis account for 71% of cases of ADG (mild to severe) in the first decade, while cystic fibrosis and malignancies account for 38 and 35% in the second decade, respectively. In the third decade, malignancies, renal diseases, cystic fibrosis, and heart diseases account for 30, 14, 12, and 12% of ADG cases, respectively, while malignancies, renal diseases, heart diseases, and diseases of digestive organs account for 30, 24, 15, and 11% in the fourth decade, respectively. The incidence of ADG also increases progressively with age, duration of the clinical course in the individual disease, or both, regardless of types of the diseases. This fact, when viewed together with the precocious development of severe ADG in patients with the malabsorption syndromes and in those with grave illnesses with protracted course leading to cachexia, seems to indicate that malnutrition represents a common factor correlated with severe ADG in the young patients. It seems to be premature at this time to disregard the hypothetical question that ADG in man is in some way related to deficiency or altered metabolism of vitamin E.
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PMID:Axonal dystrophy in the gracile nucleus in children and young adults. Reappraisal of the incidence and associated diseases. 720 26

In 63 patients with malabsorption syndromes, 16 with congenital biliary atresia (BA) and 47 with cystic fibrosis (CF), axonal dystrophy in the gracile nucleus (ADG) was studied. Of the 16 patients with BA, ADG of considerable severity was observed in all 10 over one year of age. Of the 47 patients with CF, it was observed in 32, 61 and 80% of the cases in the first, second, and third decades, respectively. Evidence is presented that there has been a substantial decrease in the incidence of ADG in CF patients in recent years and that the decreased incidence is attributable to vitamin E (Aquasol E) therapy. The beneficial effect of vitamin E supplementation in CF patients is proffered as strong evidence that ADG in BA and CF is related to vitamin E deficiency. The present study indicates that BA and CF patients require vitamin E supplementation to maintain a normal integrity of axons related to the gracile and perhaps other sensory nuclei. Critical neurological evaluation for possible dysfunction of the sensory nuclei in these patients with malabsorption syndromes is advised.
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PMID:Axonal dystrophy in the gracile nucleus in congenital biliary atresia and cystic fibrosis (mucoviscidosis): beneficial effect of vitamin E therapy. 721


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