Literature DB >> 100367

Familial enteropathy: a syndrome of protracted diarrhea from birth, failure to thrive, and hypoplastic villus atrophy.

G P Davidson, E Cutz, J R Hamilton, D G Gall.   

Abstract

We have studied 5 infants with persistent severe diarrhea from birth and marked abnormalities of absorption associated with failure to thrive leading to death in 4 infants. Three had siblings who died and a sibling of a 4th is ill at present, all with a similar illness; 2 were the products of consanguinous marriages. Exhaustive investigation failed to identify a recognized disease entity in any patient. Steatorrhea, sugar malabsorption, dehydration, and acidosis were severe in all patients, whatever the diet fed. Total parenteral nutrition was used, but excessive stool water and electrolyte losses persisted even when nothing was fed by mouth. There was no evidence of a hematological or consistent immunological defect in any infant and no abnormalities of intestinal hormones were noted. In the duodenal mucosa of all infants we saw similar abnormalities characterized by villus atrophy, crypt hypoplasia without an increase in mitoses or inflammatory cell infiltrate in the lamina propria and in villus enterocytes absence of a brush border, increase in lysosome-like inclusions, and autophagocytosis. In 3 infants studied by marker perfusion of the proximal jejunum we found abnormal glucose absorption and a blunted response of Na+ absorption to actively transported nonelectrolytes; in 2 there was net secretion of Na+ and H2O in the basal state. Our patients evidently suffered from a congenital enteropathy which caused profound defects in their capacity to assimilate nutrients. The similar structural lesion seen in the small intestinal epithelium of all of our cases undoubtedly contributed to their compromised intestinal function, but the pathogenesis of this disorder, if indeed it is a single disease, remains obscure.

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Mesh:

Year:  1978        PMID: 100367

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gastroenterology        ISSN: 0016-5085            Impact factor:   22.682


  67 in total

Review 1.  Neonatal congenital microvillus atrophy.

Authors:  N Pecache; S Patole; R Hagan; D Hill; A Charles; J M Papadimitriou
Journal:  Postgrad Med J       Date:  2004-02       Impact factor: 2.401

Review 2.  Plasticity of the brush border - the yin and yang of intestinal homeostasis.

Authors:  Delphine Delacour; Julie Salomon; Sylvie Robine; Daniel Louvard
Journal:  Nat Rev Gastroenterol Hepatol       Date:  2016-02-03       Impact factor: 46.802

3.  Dihydropyrimidinase deficiency and congenital microvillous atrophy: coincidence or genetic relation?

Authors:  B Assmann; G F Hoffmann; L Wagner; C Bräutigam; H W Seyberth; M Duran; A B Van Kuilenburg; R Wevers; A H Van Gennip
Journal:  J Inherit Metab Dis       Date:  1997-09       Impact factor: 4.982

4.  Unusual ultrastructural features in microvillous inclusion disease: A report of two cases.

Authors:  Manrico Morroni; Angela Maria Cangiotti; Alfredo Guarino; Saverio Cinti
Journal:  Virchows Arch       Date:  2006-04-12       Impact factor: 4.064

5.  Abnormal Rab11-Rab8-vesicles cluster in enterocytes of patients with microvillus inclusion disease.

Authors:  Georg F Vogel; Andreas R Janecke; Iris M Krainer; Karin Gutleben; Barbara Witting; Sally G Mitton; Sahar Mansour; Antje Ballauff; Joseph T Roland; Amy C Engevik; Ernest Cutz; Thomas Müller; James R Goldenring; Lukas A Huber; Michael W Hess
Journal:  Traffic       Date:  2017-05-17       Impact factor: 6.215

Review 6.  Trafficking Ion Transporters to the Apical Membrane of Polarized Intestinal Enterocytes.

Authors:  Amy Christine Engevik; James R Goldenring
Journal:  Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol       Date:  2018-01-02       Impact factor: 10.005

7.  Disrupted apical exocytosis of cargo vesicles causes enteropathy in FHL5 patients with Munc18-2 mutations.

Authors:  Georg F Vogel; Jorik M van Rijn; Iris M Krainer; Andreas R Janecke; Carsten Posovszky; Marta Cohen; Claire Searle; Prevost Jantchou; Johanna C Escher; Natalie Patey; Ernest Cutz; Thomas Müller; Sabine Middendorp; Michael W Hess; Lukas A Huber
Journal:  JCI Insight       Date:  2017-07-20

8.  Autophagocytosis of the apical membrane in microvillus inclusion disease.

Authors:  K Reinshagen; H Y Naim; K-P Zimmer
Journal:  Gut       Date:  2002-10       Impact factor: 23.059

9.  A family study of protracted diarrhoea in infancy.

Authors:  F M Howard; C O Carter; D C Candy; J T Harries
Journal:  J Med Genet       Date:  1981-04       Impact factor: 6.318

10.  Loss of MYO5B Leads to Reductions in Na+ Absorption With Maintenance of CFTR-Dependent Cl- Secretion in Enterocytes.

Authors:  Amy C Engevik; Izumi Kaji; Melinda A Engevik; Anne R Meyer; Victoria G Weis; Anna Goldstein; Michael W Hess; Thomas Müller; Hermann Koepsell; Pradeep K Dudeja; Matthew Tyska; Lukas A Huber; Mitchell D Shub; Nadia Ameen; James R Goldenring
Journal:  Gastroenterology       Date:  2018-08-23       Impact factor: 22.682

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