Search results for "gastrointestinal system"
showing 9 items of 9 documents
GABAergic System in Action: Connection to Gastrointestinal Stress-related Disorders.
2017
Background: Currently, treatment of stress-related gastrointestinal disorders, such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), is mainly symptomatic since there is no drug on the market that solves effectively diverse disease symptoms and comorbid states. Thus, recently GABA receptors have been identified within gastrointestinal system and it has been recognized that among various GABAergic drugs some of them influence gastrointestinal stress-related diseases. Firstly, benzodiazepines have been investigated due to their diverse effects: neuroimmunomodulatory, relief of visceral pain and anxiolytic action. Conclusion: The present review brings findings on the exp…
Ménétrier's disease in a patient with refractory ulcerative colitis: a clinical challenge and review of the literature
2023
Ménétrier’s disease (MD) is a rare disease of the stomach, characterised by hypertrophic gastric folds leading to protein loss. The association with ulcerative colitis (UC) is rare but has been reported in the literature. We report a case of a 29-year-old male affected by UC with an additional diagnosis of MD 3 years after UC diagnosis. UC was refractory to several treatment lines (thiopurines, infliximab, vedolizumab and ustekinumab), and the patient underwent colectomy. Octreotide was administered for MD normalising blood biochemistry, but it was not effective in inducing endoscopic remission of the stomach. Treatment options in patients with MD and UC are discussed.
Identification of Patulin from Penicillium coprobium as a Toxin for Enteric Neurons
2019
The identification and characterization of fungal commensals of the human gut (the mycobiota) is ongoing, and the effects of their various secondary metabolites on the health and disease of the host is a matter of current research. While the neurons of the central nervous system might be affected indirectly by compounds from gut microorganisms, the largest peripheral neuronal network (the enteric nervous system) is located within the gut and is exposed directly to such metabolites. We analyzed 320 fungal extracts and their effect on the viability of a human neuronal cell line (SH-SY5Y), as well as their effects on the viability and functionality of the most effective compound on primary ent…
THE ENTERIC NERVOUS SYSTEM: NEW DEVELOPMENTS AND EMERGING CONCEPTS
2011
The enteric nervous system (ENS) is an integrative neuronal network, organized in two ganglionated plexuses, myenteric and submucosal, composed of neurons and enteric glial cells, controlling the activity of the smooth muscle of the gut, mucosal secretion and blood flow. The ENS contains as many neurons as the spinal cord, and the functional and chemical diversity of enteric neurons closely resembles that of the central nervous system. This highly integrated neural system is also referred to as the ‘brain-in-the-gut’, because of its capability to function in the absence of nerve inputs from the central nervous system.
Eine Methodik zur fortlaufenden Registrierung postinfusioneller Ödembildungen am Magen-Darm-Kanal des lebenden Versuchstieres
1953
Es wird eine Versuchsanordnung angegeben, die es ermoglicht, am Hund die Odementstehung an einem vitalen und mit dem lebenden Gesamtorganismus noch in Zusammenhang stehenden Abschnitt des Magen-Darm-Kanals kurvenmasig zu verfolgen. Da hierbei die normale Gefas- und Nervenversorgung nicht unterbrochen wird, konnen alle physiologischen Regulationen normal wirksam bleiben und die Durchstromung des Praparates mit der zu prufenden Infusionsflussigkeit erfolgt in physiologischer und in einer den klinischen Verhaltnissen analogen Weise Andererseits konnen alle fur die Odembildung verantwortlichen Faktoren — Storungen der neuro-hormonalen Regulationsmechanismen der Wasserverteilung, Storungen der O…
Identification of Patulin from
2019
The identification and characterization of fungal commensals of the human gut (the mycobiota) is ongoing, and the effects of their various secondary metabolites on the health and disease of the host is a matter of current research. While the neurons of the central nervous system might be affected indirectly by compounds from gut microorganisms, the largest peripheral neuronal network (the enteric nervous system) is located within the gut and is exposed directly to such metabolites. We analyzed 320 fungal extracts and their effect on the viability of a human neuronal cell line (SH-SY5Y), as well as their effects on the viability and functionality of the most effective compound on primary ent…
The management of locally advanced pancreatic cancer: European Society of Digestive Oncology (ESDO) expert discussion and recommendations from the 14…
2014
T. Seufferlein1, J. L. Van Laethem2, E. Van Cutsem3*, J. D. Berlin4, M. Buchler5, A. Cervantes6, K. Haustermans3, M. Hidalgo7, E. M. O’Reilly8, C. Verslype3, W. Schmiegel9 & P. Rougier10 Department of Internal Medicine I, University of Ulm, Ulm, Germany; Department of Gastroenterology, Hopitaux Universitaires Bordet-Erasme, Brussels; Digestive Oncology and Radiation Oncology, University Hospitals and KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium; Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, USA; Department of General, Visceral and Transplantation Surgery, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany; Department of Hematology and Medical Oncology, INCLIVA, University of Valencia, Valencia; Gastro…
The glucagon-like Peptide-2
2011
Multiple peptide hormones produced within the gastrointestinal system act also in the central nervous system and aid in the regulation of energy homeostasis and metabolism. The list of these peptides is progressively increasing and includes glucagon-like peptide 2 (GLP-2) as an anorexigenic factor. GLP-2 is released from enteroendocrine L-cells following food intake and its principal target is represented by the gastrointestinal tract. GLP-2 has been shown to be an important intestinotrophic factor that stimulates epithelial cell proliferation and inhibits apoptosis. GLP-2 increases intestinal blood flow and the activity and expression of epithelial brush-border digestive enzymes and nutrie…
Conventional Radiology in the Evaluation of the Small Bowel
2015
For many years, the small bowel has been considered as the “black box” of the gastrointestinal system because it could not be evaluated through endoscopy. For this reason, the conventional radiological methods, such as small bowel enteroclysis and small bowel follow-through, have been considered the standard approach for the evaluation of the small bowel in the diagnosis and management of Crohn’s disease for years. However, due to technological limits, the study of small bowel through conventional radiology has been focused mainly on its function than on its anatomy. To date, the conventional examination with the study of intestinal transit is now rarely used, if not obsolete, but it has st…