Malabsorption Flashcards

1
Q

What is the most common cause of malabsorption?

A

Coeliac Disease

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2
Q

What are the three pathological subsets of chronic diarrhoea?

A

Osmotic
Secretory
Inflammatory

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3
Q

What defines steatorrhea?

A

Stools with a fat contents of more than 6 g/day. It is offensive smelling and difficult to flush away.

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4
Q

State some clinical features of malabsorption.

A

Muscle Wasting
Loss of Fat
Oedema/Ascites
Anaemia, skin lesions, hair loss, poor wound healing, purpura

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5
Q

What constitutes a balanced diet?

A
FACE MTV
Fats
Amino Acids and Protein
Carbohydrates 
Electrolytes and Water 
Minerals
Trace Elements 
Vitamins
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6
Q

What is the difference between malabsorption and maldigestion?

A

Maldigestion - reduced gastric tissue/secretion, loss of pancreatic tissue, impaired bile secretion, reduction in intestinal brush border enzymes.
Malabsorption - loss of functional enterocytes, pre- and post-mucosal effects, single gene disorders

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7
Q

Describe breath and stool tests for malabsorption.

A

Breath Test: make the patient breathe in something that is radioactively labelled and is metabolised to release carbon dioxide. Measure the amount of radioactive carbon dioxide coming out to determine how much they are absorbing and how much is being broken down.
FECAL PANCREATIC ELASTASE 1 test:
Pancreatic elastase is involved in breaking down lots of things
Low fecal pancreatic elastase (< 200 mcg) indicates exocrine pancreas insufficiency

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8
Q

What is the histological hallmark of coeliac disease?

A

Subtotal villous atrophy with crypt hyperplasia

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9
Q

State two other common causes of malabsorption.

A

Small bowel bacterial overgrowth

Pancreatic insufficiency

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10
Q

State some less common causes of malabsorption.

A

Short bowel syndrome
Lymphoma
Chronic infections

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11
Q

State three common forms of malabsorption of particular nutrients.

A

Lactose
Vitamin B12
Bile Salts

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12
Q

What is short bowel syndrome?

A

Usually occurs after surgery for Crohn’s disease, infarction or trauma.
< 200 cm of small bowel
Results in malabsorption, malnutrition, electrolyte imbalance and progressive weight loss

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13
Q

State some symptoms of coeliac disease.

A

Malaise, fatigue, steatorrhoea, diarrhoea, weight loss, anaemia

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14
Q

What test is used to diagnose coeliac disease?

A

tTG - Tissue Transglutaminase
This is a blood test that uses anti-TTG antibodies to measure the TTG levels. Elevated TTG levels are indicative of Coeliac disease.
You have to first measure whether people have IgA or not before you do this test - hereditary IgA deficiency is quite common.

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15
Q

What populations have a greater prevalence of coeliac disease?

A
T1DM
Thyroid Disease
Anaemic Blood Donors
Irritable Bowel Syndrome
Osteoporosis
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16
Q

What is the action of TTG?

A

tTG is an enzyme that breaks down a particular peptide in gluten. People with Coeliac disease have anti-tTG antibodies.

17
Q

What MHC haplotype increases risk of having coeliac disease?

A
HLA-DQ2
State some complications of coeliac disease.
Slow growth
Anaemia
Lymphoma/adenocarcinoma
Osteoporosis/osteopenia
18
Q

State some complications of coeliac disease.

A

Slow growth
Anaemia
Lymphoma/adenocarcinoma
Osteoporosis/osteopenia