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Query: UMLS:C1510475 (
diverticular disease
)
2,138
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Recent theories have postulated that low fiber diets are related to colon cancer and
diverticulosis
, and to atherosclerosis. These theories are based on British and African diet history information. There has been no recent assessment of fiber intake in an area of high incidence of colonic disease in the United States. Using recall diet histories in subjects with no disease and with colon disease, and correcting our data to account for any loss in recall history, we find a low daily fiber intake in all 21 subjects evaluated, mean 3.5 g, range 1.6 to 11 g. There was no statistical difference in intake among patients with or without colon disease. The data agree with the British findings. Since the incidence of the diseases in question is not uniform in the United States it is suggested that diet surveys are needed in areas where
colon carcinoma
is of low incidence.
...
PMID:Low fiber content of Connecticut diets. 124 80
Recent international publications remark the association about carcinoma of the colon and cholelithiasis. These two entities with similar geographical distribution can be seen frequently in the modern western societies, being the cause as aetiological factors the low content in dietetics fiber. Different studies about the carcinoma of the colon and cholelithiasis pathogenesis had lead the possibility that the abnormal degradation of bile acids for the colonic bacterias, could be responsible of each one of these illness. The exposition of colonic mucosa to products of degradation of bile acids, specially secondary bile acids, may play a role in the etiopathogenic of
colon carcinoma
. It was analysed 135 patients with
colon carcinoma
or adenomatosis polyps, 42 with cholelithiasis or cholecystectomized for the same cause (31.1%), although in the control group, only 2(5%) had cholelithiasis. The female predominated the group of
colon carcinoma
and cholelithiasis, as well as cholecystectomized for that cause. The most frequent associated pathology was the
diverticulosis
.
...
PMID:[Incidence of cholelithiasis in patients with cancer of the colon and adenomatous polyp]. 129 84
CA 72 is a monoclonal antibody (MAb) -defined antigenic determinant expressed on a pancarcinoma antigen (TAG-72) found in more than 85% of human colorectal carcinomas. An immunoradiometric assay has been developed using the murine MAb B72.3 to quantitate CA 72 in human serum. In a simultaneous immunoradiometric assay, the mean CA 72 concentration in 1,099 serum samples from healthy blood donors was 1.83 +/- 2.03 (SD) units/ml. If the upper limit of normal was set at 10 mu/mol of serum, a value including 99% of healthy blood donors, only 4 of 101 serum samples (4%) from patients with benign disease were elevated, whereas 15 of 26 (58%) and 14 of 25 (56%) of rectal and
colon carcinoma
patient sera, respectively, were positive. Serum samples from 84 benign colorectal disease cases were examined; of these, 0 of 28 (0%) colorectal adenoma, 1 of 39 (3%) ulcerative proctocolitis, 0 of 15 (0%)
diverticulosis
, and 0 of 2 (0%) irritable bowel disease sera contained more than 10 mu/ml CA 72. At a reference value of 20 mu/ml, 0 of 101 (0%) benign disease and 2 of 1,060 (0.2%) blood donor sera had elevated values, whereas 10 of 26 (38%) and 9 of 25 (36%) rectal and colon patient sera, respectively, remained positive. The majority of patients with pancreatic and ovarian cancer, and a significant fraction of stomach cancer patient sera, also contained elevated levels of CA 72. The ability of this assay to discriminate between malignant and benign diseases suggests its further evaluation for monitoring and diagnosis in groups at risk for development of cancer.
...
PMID:Monoclonal antibody immunoradiometric assay for an antigenic determinant (CA 72) on a novel pancarcinoma antigen (TAG-72). 242 34
An new latex agglutination system was developed for the detection of occult blood in the feces. Antibodies against human hemoglobin were raised in a goat. Blood in concentrations of 0.1 ml-8.0 ml/100 g feces were detected in vitro. The antibodies were separated and adsorbed to latex particles (0.3 microns). After in vitro standardisation of the new test system we compared the efficacy of the commonly used guaiac slide test for detection of occult blood in the stool (hemoccult-test) with the latex test system. A significant higher sensitivity could be reached with the latex test system. In a clinical study 61 patients were tested. In 31 of them occult blood was found with the latex test system while with the guaiac slide-test system no blood was detected using the same stool specimen. 13 of the 31 patients had a neoplastic lesion of the colon - 4 a
colon carcinoma
and 9 had adenomatous polyps of the large bowel larger than 5 mm in diameter. In the remaining patients the sources of intestinal bleeding were: upper gastro-intestinal bleeding sources in 8 patients and other colonic bleeding sources like
diverticular disease
, inflammatory bowel disease, hemorrhoids and a rectal ulcer in 8 patients. In 2 of the 61 patients the latex test was positive without endoscopic significance for the bleeding source.
...
PMID:[A new latex agglutination test for the immunologic detection of occult blood in stool]. 278 30
The pathogenesis of Crohn's disease may involve altered function of immunoregulatory T cells in the intestine. To investigate this hypothesis, lamina propria lymphocytes were isolated from intestinal specimens resected from patients with active Crohn's disease and control subjects (
colon carcinoma
and
diverticular disease
) using an enzymatic technique. The T-cell phenotypes and function of these lymphocytes were compared with that of peripheral blood lymphocytes. The proportion of Leu-2-positive (suppressor/cytotoxic) cells was similar in peripheral blood and isolated lamina propria lymphocytes, both in Crohn's disease and control patients. Although the proportion of Leu-3-positive (helper/inducer) lymphocytes was lower in lamina propria lymphocytes than peripheral blood lymphocytes, there was no difference comparing Crohn's disease and control patients. Helper T-cell function, as determined by measuring the ability of T cells to increase immunoglobulin synthesis by pokeweed mitogen-stimulated normal peripheral blood B cells, was similar in peripheral blood lymphocytes and lamina propria lymphocytes, and comparing Crohn's disease with control patients. Suppressor T-cell function, as determined by measuring the ability of T cells to inhibit immunoglobulin production by cultures containing pokeweed mitogen-stimulated normal peripheral blood T and B cells, was also similar comparing peripheral blood lymphocytes and lamina propria lymphocytes, and comparing Crohn's disease with control patients: neither peripheral blood lymphocytes nor lamina propria lymphocytes significantly suppressed immunoglobulin synthesis. OKT8 (suppressor/cytotoxic)-enriched lamina propria lymphocytes mediated only marginal suppression, whereas concanavalin A-activated intestinal T cells did mediate significant suppression, in both Crohn's disease and control patients. Thus, patients with active Crohn's disease have no alteration of immunoregulatory T-cell function for polyclonal mitogen-induced immunoglobulin synthesis at the gut mucosal level, despite the presence of an inflammatory process in the intestine.
...
PMID:Immunoregulatory function of lamina propria T cells in Crohn's disease. 285 28
Percutaneous drainage of an intra-abdominal abscess is utilized frequently. To evaluate its effectiveness at our institution over 16 months, 18 patients (mean age 49 years) who underwent radiologically directed percutaneous drainage of intra-abdominal abscesses were retrospectively reviewed. The abscesses were postoperative in 14 patients (laparotomy, 5; appendectomy, 4; colectomy, 3; hysterectomy, 2). Primary abscesses were due to
diverticular disease
(3), perforated appendicitis (3), perforated
colon carcinoma
(1), and perforated peptic ulcer (1). Percutaneous drainage was ultimately established in all patients with complete resolution of the abscesses occurring in 12 patients (67%). The average duration for drainage was 5.5 days (range 1-23). Average length of hospital stay after the establishment of drainage was 14.6 days (range 1-48). Six patients required surgical procedures because of inadequate abscess drainage (4) or continued clinical deterioration (2). There were no deaths. A major complication (colon perforation, enteric fistula) occurred in two patients (11%). Catheter-related problems were common (7/18 patients), and included drain migration (3), inadequate drainage, and catheter obstruction(2). Four patients required multiple percutaneous drainage procedures. Despite technical feasibility and clinical success in the majority of patients, percutaneous drainage of these intra-abdominal abscesses had frequent catheter-related complications. One-third of patients (31.8%) required surgical intervention despite a prolonged period (average 15 days) of percutaneous drainage. Patients demonstrated to have nonresolving abscesses by computer tomography (CT), abscesses associated with colonic
diverticular disease
of colon cancer, and abscesses localized to the left lower quadrant were noted to have less successful percutaneous abscess drainage. Patients with a persistent of rising leukocyte count and/or an elevated APACHE II score prior to drainage should be routinely reevaluated at 4 days. Earlier surgical intervention is felt to be warranted because these two factors in this study were indicative of a low nonoperative success rate. Post-appendectomy abscesses uniformly demonstrated prompt response to percutaneous drainage. CT-directed percutaneous drainage of intra-abdominal abscesses provides an alternative to immediate surgical intervention. The preliminary findings from this study suggest a limited application of this intervention in one-third of patients. Further detailed analysis of this patient group is required to delineate guidelines for identifying those patients where percutaneous drainage is unlikely to be successful.
...
PMID:Nonoperative management for intra-abdominal abscesses. 860 82
The following article contains a short review on gastrointestinal problems of the elderly. The diseases of the esophagus occurring in the elderly are not much different from those in younger patients. Clinically relevant in the stomach are above all bleeding ulcerations and the gastric carcinoma occurring more frequently in advanced age. The pyogenic liver abscess is diagnosed primarily in the elderly and is at a rule the consequence of an infection of the gall bladder and other abdominal sites. The hepatocellular carcinoma does not grow rapidly in the elderly, but its accompanying unfavourable survival rate at five years is also approximately 5 per cent. In the case of symptomatic cholelithiasis, older high risk patients do especially profit from minimally invasive laparoscopic surgical procedures. Today, bile duct calculi are preferably treated by endoscopic papillotomy and following extraction of the calculi. The pancreas is subjected to atrophy, lipomatosis and fibrosis at the advanced age. However, these changes are rarely of clinical relevance. A frequent problem in clinical practice is that of constipation, from which 35% of patients suffer above the age of 65 years. Another typical symptom of the elderly is the incontinence, the different causes are being discussed. In advanced age, gastrointestinal hemorrhages are mostly occurring above the Treitz's ligament. Hemorrhages of the lower gastrointestinal tract occur mostly in the form of diverticle bleedings and those of angiodysplasias in the elderly. The
diverticulosis
is also a disease observed in over 50 per cent of patients above 70 years, but it is symptomatic in only part of the patients. When suspecting an inflammatory bowel disease in the elderly, the possibility of a mesenterial ischemia must always be considered as differential diagnosis. The classical chronic inflammatory bowel diseases can, however, also occur at advanced age. The
colon carcinoma
is one of the most frequent lethal causes in the Western countries 90 per cent of the cases of
colon carcinoma
are found in patients older than 50 years of age. Intensive attention is therefore required in this age group.
...
PMID:[Gastrointestinal problems in elderly patients]. 933 52
The OVX1 tumor marker promises to complement CA125 for detection of early stage ovarian carcinoma. OVX1 has also been shown to be elevated in colon cancer patients. This study is designed to assess serum OVX1 levels in patients with specific stages of colon cancer, colon polyps or other GI disorders. Serum OVX1 and CEA were measured by radioimmunoassay or enzyme immunoassay for 206 patients at the time of colonoscopy or staging for
colon carcinoma
. In patients with stage I, II, III, or IV
colon carcinoma
, serum OVX1 was positive in 37%, 48%, 74% and 63%, respectively. Fifty-three percent of patients with colon polyps had elevated OVX1 levels, while OVX1 levels were positive in only 7% of healthy controls. If both OVX1 and CEA were considered, at least one of these markers was elevated in 36%, 60%, 79% or 89% of patients with stage I, II, III or IV
colon carcinoma
, respectively. The majority of patients with inflammatory bowel disease or
diverticulosis
also had elevated OVX1 levels. Both markers were positive in 27% of patients with
colon carcinoma
, and not in any patients with a normal colonoscopy or with a diagnosis of
diverticulosis
or hemorrhoids. In conclusion, serum OVX1 improves the sensitivity of CEA for detecting colon polyps and colon cancer; however, the use of OVX1 in this setting is hindered by its elevation in non-malignant colonic processes.
...
PMID:OVX1 and CEA in patients with colon carcinoma, colon polyps and benign colon disorders. 1007 88
In colorectal cancer (CRC), a proportion of patients with early stage disease still die of metastatic or recurrent disease within 5 years of "curative" resection. Detection of carcinoma cells in the peripheral circulation at presentation may identify a subgroup of patients with micro-metastatic disease who may benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy or radiotherapy. Our aim was to determine the presence and clinical significance of
colon carcinoma
cells in peripheral blood at the time of surgery. Preoperative peripheral blood samples were collected from 94 patients with CRC and 64 patients undergoing bowel resection for benign conditions (adenoma,
diverticular disease
or Crohn's colitis). Blood was also obtained from 20 normal donors not undergoing bowel surgery. Immunomagnetic beads were used to isolate epithelial cells followed by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis of expression of cytokeratin (CK) 19, CK 20, mucin (MUC) 1 and MUC 2. Nineteen of 94 (20%) CRC patients were positive for epithelial cells in preoperative blood, including 6 with early stage disease. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showed that detection of epithelial cells in preoperative blood was associated with reduced disease-free and overall survival (log-rank test, p = 0.0001). Surprisingly, circulating epithelial cells were detected in 3/30 (10%) patients resected for adenoma, and in 4/34 (12%) patients resected for benign inflammatory conditions, suggesting that cells from nonmalignant colonic epithelium may also gain entry into the bloodstream in the presence of bowel pathology. All 20 normal control bloods were negative for epithelial cells.
...
PMID:Molecular detection of blood-borne epithelial cells in colorectal cancer patients and in patients with benign bowel disease. 1071 24