Search results for "Inflammatory bowel diseases"

showing 10 items of 209 documents

Immunotherapeutic approaches to inflammatory bowel diseases

2001

For a long time corticosteroids, aminosalicylic acid preparations and antibiotics have represented the principal approaches in evidence-based drug therapy for chronic inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), e.g., Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), and are able to suppress disease activity in most cases. However, there are cases that do not respond to conventional drug therapy or remain dependent on high doses of steroids associated with severe side effects in the long run. It is generally accepted now that IBD has an immunological basis and results from a hyperresponsive state of the intestinal immune system. Although the primary etiological defect respectively immunogenic agent s…

PharmacologyAminosalicylic acidbusiness.industrymedicine.drug_classClinical BiochemistryAntibioticsDiseaseInflammatory Bowel Diseasesmedicine.diseaseInflammatory bowel diseaseUlcerative colitisdigestive system diseasesMicechemistry.chemical_compoundPharmacotherapyImmune systemchemistryDrug DiscoveryImmunologyEtiologyAnimalsHumansMedicineImmunotherapybusinessExpert Opinion on Biological Therapy
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GABA and GABA receptors in the gastrointestinal tract: from motility to inflammation

2015

Although an extensive body of literature confirmed γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) as mediator within the enteric nervous system (ENS) controlling gastrointestinal (GI) function, the true significance of GABAergic signalling in the gut is still a matter of debate. GABAergic cells in the bowel include neuronal and endocrine-like cells, suggesting GABA as modulator of both motor and secretory GI activity. GABA effects in the GI tract depend on the activation of ionotropic GABAA and GABAC receptors and metabotropic GABAB receptors, resulting in a potential noteworthy regulation of both the excitatory and inhibitory signalling in the ENS. However, the preservation of GABAergic signalling in the gut …

PharmacologyChemistryGABAA receptorGABAB receptorPharmacologyInflammatory Bowel DiseasesInhibitory postsynaptic potentialSettore BIO/09 - FisiologiaGastrointestinal TractMetabotropic receptorReceptors GABAGABA receptorAnimalsHumansGABAergicEnteric nervous systemGastrointestinal MotilityGABA • GABAA receptors • GABAB receptors • Gastrointestinal motility • Inflammationgamma-Aminobutyric Acid5-HT receptorPharmacological Research
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Methodological Problems in RCTs on IBD

2012

Abstract: Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are the gold standard method for developing evidence-based medicine in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Methodological problems in RCTs in IBD concern different aspects such as the definition of the study population due to the extreme variability of patients with IBD, the indices of disease activity, a clearly defined outcome, the environmental risk factors (i.e smoking behaviour) that may influence the randomization, the heterogeneous placebo rate of remission and the different statistical methods used to analyze the results. It is important that trials are designed efficiently, done well and complement clinical practice with a careful subject…

Pharmacologymedicine.medical_specialtySettore MED/09 - Medicina InternaRandomizationbusiness.industryGold standardAlternative medicineGeneral Medicinecontrolled clinical trials.inflammatory bowel disease.methodologyInflammatory Bowel Diseasesmedicine.diseasePlaceboInflammatory bowel diseasedigestive system diseaseslaw.inventionTreatment OutcomeRandomized controlled trialEnvironmental risklawmedicineHumansPopulation studyIntensive care medicinebusinessRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicReviews on Recent Clinical Trials
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Apoptosis of T cells and the control of inflammatory bowel disease: therapeutic implications.

2007

Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs) such as Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis are the result of an imbalanced mucosal T cell response. Despite the identification of a genetic susceptibility region in the NOD2/CARD15 (nucleotide-binding oligomerisation domain 2/caspase recruitment domain 15) gene, the aetiology is still unclear. Thus, the hunt for disease-initiating factors such as defects in the mucosal barrier or pathogenic microorganisms is ongoing. By contrast, the immunopathogenesis in IBDs is better understood. The identification of cytokines that are involved in T cell and monocyte signalling led to specific therapeutic concepts. Recent data have clearly shown that the most powerf…

Programmed cell deathNecrosisCell Survivalmedicine.medical_treatmentT cellT-LymphocytesApoptosisImmune systemCrohn DiseaseNOD2AzathioprinemedicineHumansIntestinal MucosaMesalamineImmunity Mucosalbusiness.industryInterleukin-6Tumor Necrosis Factor-alphaAnti-Inflammatory Agents Non-SteroidalGastroenterologyRecent Advances in Basic ScienceInflammatory Bowel DiseasesInterleukin-12Immunosuppressive drugmedicine.anatomical_structureApoptosisImmunologyTumor necrosis factor alphamedicine.symptombusinessImmunosuppressive AgentsSignal TransductionGut
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QSAR methods for the discovery of new inflammatory bowel disease drugs

2013

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) represents an important class of chronic gastrointestinal tract disease. And although there are already several useful treatments to reduce and control the symptoms, there is still no cure. One drug discovery technique used is the computer-aided (in silico) discovery approach which has largely demonstrated efficacy. Computational techniques, when used in combination with traditional drug discovery methodology, greatly increase the chance of drug discovery in a sustainable and economical fashion.This review aims to provide the most recent and important advances of in silico IBD drug discovery. While this review is mainly focused on QSAR methods, especially th…

Quantitative structure–activity relationshipCrohn's diseaseDrug discoverybusiness.industryIn silicoQuantitative Structure-Activity RelationshipDiseaseInflammatory Bowel Diseasesmedicine.diseaseBioinformaticsUlcerative colitisInflammatory bowel diseaseDrug DiscoverymedicineComputer-Aided DesignHumansMolecular topologybusinessExpert Opinion on Drug Discovery
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Epidemiological trends of pediatric IBD in Italy: A 10-year analysis of the Italian society of pediatric gastroenterology, hepatology and nutrition r…

2022

Introduction: The present study aimed at evaluating Italian epidemiological trends of pediatric inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) over the period 2009–2018. Materials and methods: Data from 1969 patients enrolled in the Italian Society of Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition Registry, by 49 pediatric IBD centers throughout the country, were analyzed, comparing three different time intervals (2009–2012, 2013–2015, 2016–2018). Results: The number of new IBD diagnoses ranged from 175 to 219 per year, evenly distributed over the examined period of time. From 2009 to 2018, the minimal incidence ranged from 1.59 to 2.04 /105 inhabitants aged < 18 years, with an overall slight p…

RegistrieDelayed DiagnosisHepatologyDelayed DiagnosiGastroenterologyPediatric IBDEpidemiological trendInflammatory Bowel DiseasesSettore MED/38 - Pediatria Generale E SpecialisticaCrohn DiseaseItalyEpidemiological trendsHumansColitis UlcerativeRegistriesChildEpidemiological trends; Italy; Pediatric IBDHuman
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Signaling molecules: the pathogenic role of the IL-6/STAT-3 trans signaling pathway in intestinal inflammation and in colonic cancer.

2008

Although the precise etiology of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) still remains unclear, considerable progress has been made in the identification of novel signal transduction pathways that elucidate the immunopathogenesis involved in the perpetuation of the inflammatory process. As both ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease are associated with an increased risk for developing colorectal cancer (CRC) and precancerous dysplastic epithelial changes, further studies have concentrated on finding a common signaling pathway that could serve as a mechanistic link between inflammation and associated colonic cancer in IBD. This review presents the current data concerning the pathogenic role of the…

STAT3 Transcription FactorCell signalingColorectal cancerClinical BiochemistryAnti-Inflammatory AgentsInflammationAntineoplastic AgentsDiseaseSuppressor of cytokine signallingDrug DiscoverymedicineAnimalsHumansAutocrine signallingPharmacologybusiness.industryInterleukin-6medicine.diseaseInflammatory Bowel DiseasesUlcerative colitisdigestive system diseasesCell Transformation NeoplasticColonic NeoplasmsCancer researchMolecular Medicinemedicine.symptomSignal transductionbusinessSignal TransductionCurrent drug targets
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Mouse models of inflammatory bowel disease.

2007

Animal models of intestinal inflammation are indispensable for our understanding of the pathogenesis of Crohn disease and Ulcerative colitis, the idiopathic forms of inflammatory bowel disease in humans. The clinical appearance of human IBD is heterogeneous, a fact that is also reflected by the steadily increasing number of mouse strains displaying IBD like intestinal alterations. The analysis of these models together with genetic studies in humans greatly enhanced our insights into immunoregulatory processes in the gut and led to the generally accepted hypothesis that a deregulated immune response against components of the intestinal microbiota is critically involved in IBD pathophysiology…

STAT3 Transcription FactorPharmaceutical ScienceMice Transgenicdigestive systemInflammatory bowel diseasePathogenesisMiceImmune systemImmunityMedicineAnimalsHumansCrohn's diseasebusiness.industryCrohn diseaseNF-kappa BSTAT4 Transcription Factormedicine.diseaseCadherinsInflammatory Bowel DiseasesUlcerative colitisdigestive system diseasesPathophysiologyImmunity InnateInterleukin-10Disease Models AnimalImmunologybusinessAdvanced drug delivery reviews
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Novel Signal Transduction Pathways: Analysis of STAT-3 and Rac-1 Signaling in Inflammatory Bowel Disease

2006

Although the precise etiology of inflammatory bowel disease still remains unclear, considerable progress has been made in the identification of novel signal transduction pathways that elucidate the immunopathogenesis involved in the perpetuation of the inflammatory process. Augmented T cell resistance against apoptosis is regarded as a pivotal factor in the pathogenesis, as it impairs mucosal homeostasis and leads to unrestrained accumulation of activated T cells, which subsequently lead to the amplification of the inflammatory response. Therefore novel therapeutic strategies aim at restoring mucosal T cell susceptibility to apoptosis through targeting of signal transduction pathways that a…

STAT3 Transcription Factorrac1 GTP-Binding ProteinT-LymphocytesT cellApoptosisTherapeutic ProcedureAzathioprineBiologyInflammatory bowel diseaseGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologystatPathogenesisHistory and Philosophy of ScienceAzathioprinemedicineHumansGeneral NeuroscienceInflammatory Bowel Diseasesmedicine.diseasemedicine.anatomical_structureApoptosisImmunologySignal transductionImmunosuppressive AgentsSignal Transductionmedicine.drugAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
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Probiotics, prebiotics and symbiotics in inflammatory bowel diseases: state-of-the-art and new insights

2013

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) consists of two distinct clinical forms, ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD), with unknown aetiology, which nevertheless are considered to share almost identical pathophysiological backgrounds. Up to date, a full coherent mechanistic explanation for IBD is still lacking, but people start to realize that the pathogenesis of IBD involves four fundamental components: the environment, gut microbiota, the immune system and the genome. As a consequence, IBD development might be due to an altered immune response and a disrupted mechanism of host tolerance to the non-pathogenic resident microbiota, leading to an elevated inflammatory response. Consideri…

Settore BIO/17 - IstologiaPrebioticsMicrobiotaProbioticsHumansProbiotics Prebiotics Synbiotics Inflammatory Bowel DiseaseInflammatory Bowel Diseases
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