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Uveitis, Non-Infectious  

Courtesy Wikipedia.com
Parathyroid Glands in the Neck. Courtesy Wikipedia.com

What Is Secondary Hyperparathyroidism?

[dropcap]S econdary hyperparathyroidism is a parathyroid disorder resulting from hypocalcemia (low blood calcium level) that is characterized by excessive production of parathyroid hormone in the attempt to normalize the low blood calcium by releasing calcium from bone.

Parathyroid hormone is produced by the four pea sized parathyroid glands that are located on the thyroid gland in the front of the neck. In part, because the thyroid and parathyroid glands share the same anatomic place in the body and because they have similar names, they are often confused although they have completely different actions.

Parathyroid hormone regulates calcium and the opposing mineral phosphorus in the blood. In secondary hyperparathyroidism, calcium blood levels are low to normal while phosphorus levels are increased which stimulates the outpouring of parathyroid hormone.

Q: How does secondary hyperparathyroidism differ from primary hyperparathyroidism?

A: In primary hyperparathyroidism blood calcium is high and phosphorus is low, which is the opposite of secondary hyperparathyroidism.

The most common cause of secondary hyperparathyroidism is kidney disease causing failure to reabsorb calcium followed by vitamin D deficiency and malabsorption.

What Is Secondary Hyperparathyroidism In Celiac Disease and/or Gluten Sensitivity?

Psoriasis

niacin deficiencyWhat Is A Fiery Red, Smooth, Burning Tongue?

[dropcap]A fiery red, smooth, burning tongue is an alteration in tongue tissue that is characteristic of advanced niacin deficiency.1

Q: How does niacin deficiency cause the tongue to be red and sore?

A: Niacin is an essential B vitamin that is required for a healthy tongue and by all body cells as well. Deficiency first shows in tissues with rapid cellular turnover, such as mucosal cells of the tongue.

When absorbed from the small intestines, niacin (the form in food) becomes the active form niacinamide. Niacinamide is converted by the body into co-enzymes which are present in all cells. These enzymes function in oxidation-reduction reactions essential for release of energy from carbohydrates, fats, and proteins and are needed as components for more than 200 enzymes involved in metabolism.

In addition to producing energy, niacinamide is essential for healthy skin and the mucosal lining of the digestive tract, normal functioning of the brain and nervous system, and production of steroid hormones from adrenal glands and hormones from sex glands.

What Is A Fiery Red, Smooth, Burning Tongue In Celiac Disease and/or Gluten Sensitivity?

Sources:
  1. Krause’s Food, Nutrition, & Diet Therapy. 10th Edition. Kathleen Mahan, Sylvia Escott-Stump. 2000. W.B. Saunders Company. []

Vitiligo

Areas of the Pharynx Where Cancer May Occur. Courtesy Wikimedia.
Areas of the Pharynx Where Cancer May Occur. Courtesy Wikimedia.

What Is Cancer Of The Pharynx?

[dropcap]C ancer of the pharynx is a malignant growth of stratified squamous cells that line the pharynx, or throat.

Q: What are stratified squamous cells that line the pharynx?

A: Stratified squamous cells are thin, flat epithelial cells consisting of several layers forming the surface mucosa that protects underlying layers of the pharynx. These cells lie very close together and have no blood vessels.

The pharynx is the upper passageway of the throat where swallowing food and fluids from the mouth first pass on the way to the esophagus and breathing air passes from the nose and mouth to and from the lungs.

The pharynx provides for speech production, adequate taste reception, and proper hearing through equalization of air pressure in the eustachian tubes.

The pharynx has three areas and pharyngeal cancer can occur in any of them: the nasopharynx behind the nose, the oropharynx behind the mouth, and the hypopharynx or laryngopharynx, just above the larynx. Tonsils, adenoids, and other lymph tissue lie at the back of the throat.

Unfortunately, cancers of the pharynx tend not to be detected until late in their course when symptoms become evident. This makes the prognosis poor. See symptom below.

What Is Cancer Of The Pharynx In Celiac Disease and/or Gluten Sensitivity?

Seborrhea Dermatitis

Swollen Tongue Causing Tooth Indentations. GFW
Swollen Tongue Causing Tooth Indentations. Notice the Accompanying Denuded Area Due to Riboflavin Deficiency and Mild Candida Overgrowth. GFW

What Is A Pale, Smooth, Burning Tongue?

[dropcap]A pale, smooth, burning tongue is an alteration in tongue tissue characteristic of iron deficiency. The tongue is also swollen.1

Additionally, the sore tongue surface may be invaded by candida yeast which takes advantage of the sore tissue.

Iron deficiency itself increases susceptibility to infection.

Q: What is iron deficiency?

A: Iron deficiency results when the level within cells is too low to meet metabolic needs of the body for this mineral.

Deficiency is characterized by impaired red blood cell formation, free-radical disposal, oxygenation of cells, immune response to infection, enzyme activity, cognitive performance, digestion, nail structure, and fetal health.2

Iron is an essential mineral that is required for normal body function. Almost two-thirds of iron in the body is found in hemoglobin, the protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen to tissues. Smaller amounts of iron are found in myoglobin, a protein that helps supply oxygen to muscle, and in enzymes that assist biochemical reactions.

Iron is also found in proteins that store iron for future needs and that transport iron in blood. Iron stores are regulated by intestinal iron absorption.3

What Is A Pale, Smooth, Burning Tongue In Celiac Disease and/or Gluten Sensitivity?

Sources:
  1. Krause’s Food, Nutrition, & Diet Therapy. 10th Edition. Kathleen Mahan, Sylvia Escott-Stump. 2000. W.B. Saunders Company. []
  2. Kathleen Mahan and Sylvia Escott-Stump, ed. Krause’s Food, Nutrition & Diet Therapy, 10th Edition. Philadelphia, PA. USA: W.B. Saunders Company, 2000. []
  3. http://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/Iron-HealthProfessional accessed 12/11/12 []

Schizophrenia

Collagenous Colitis.
Microscopic Image Showing a Pink Collagen Band in Collagenous Colitis.

What Is Collagenous Colitis?

[dropcap]C ollagenous colitis is a disease of the large intestine (colon) that is characterized by microscopic inflammation of the surface mucosal lining and an abnormally thickened collagen band of tissue that develops wthin the lining of the colon.

The thicker than normal layer of collagen of at least 10 µm (reference value: 2–7 µm) can vary in different locations. Inflammation occurs with increased numbers of lymphocytes (white blood cells) and plasma cells and epithelial (surface cell) damage. These changes can only be seen under microscopic examination of multiple biopsied tissue samples taken during a colonoscopy procedure.

Q: What is collagen?

A: Collagen is a strong, fibrous protein found in connective tissue of the colon and many other tissues such as tendons. The normal basement membrane in the bowel consists mainly of collagen type IV, laminin, and fibronectin. The increased collagen band observed in collagenous colitis consists basically of collagen type I and III, which are the subtypes produced by repair functions, indicating a reactive origin to some irritant or drug.1

The biopsies should preferably be taken from the ascending colon, since the pathological hallmarks may be absent in the descending colon, and in the normally occurring thicker collagen layer in the rectosigmoid region.1 Inflammation of the ileum (last segment of the small intestine next to colon) is common.2

Endoscopy and radiological (x-ray) examinations are usually normal.3

Autoimmune disorders are frequently seen in adult patients with collagenous colitis.4 In the study below by Koskela et al. concomittent autoimmune diseases were present in 53% of patients with collagenous colitis.5

Importantly, the finding of collagenous colitis in patients with autoimmune diseases may reflect the treatment with NSAIDs (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs), such as Ibuprofin and aspirin, PPIs (proton pump inhibitors), and other drugs. However, if secondary forms of collagenous colitis are not taken into consideration, underlying, treatable diseases may be overlooked, while only the gastrointestinal symptoms are treated symptomatically or with budesonide (a steroid).6

Treatment with budesonide steroid is efficacious irrespective of bile acid malabsorption.7

Budesonide at a mean dose of 4.5 mg/day maintained clinical remission for at least 1 year in the majority of patients with collagenous colitis and preserved health-related quality of life without safety concerns. Treatment extension with low-dose budesonide beyond 1 year may be beneficial given the high relapse rate after budesonide discontinuation.8

See below for nutritional deficiency problems caused by steroid usage and steps to be taken for correction.

What Is Collagenous Colitis In Celiac Disease and/or Gluten Sensitivity?

Sources:
  1. Ohlsson B. New insights and challenges in microscopic colitis. Therap Adv Gastroenterol. 2015 Jan;8(1):37-47. doi: 10.1177/1756283X14550134. [] []
  2. Bjørnbak C, Engel PJ, Nielsen PL, Munck LK. Microscopic colitis: clinical findings, topography and persistence of histopathological subgroups. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2011 Nov;34(10):1225-34. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2036.2011.04865.x. []
  3. Abdo AA, Urbanski SJ, Beck PL. Lymphotcytic and collagenous colitis: the emerging entity of microscopic colitis. An update on pathophysiology, diagnosis and management. Canadian Journal of Gastroenterology. Jul 2003;17(7):425-32. []
  4. Leung ST, Chandan VS, Murray JA, Wu TT. Collagenous gastritis: histopathologic features and association with other gastrointestinal diseases. Am J Surg Pathol. 2009 May;33(5):788-98. doi: 10.1097/PAS.0b013e318196a67f. []
  5. Koskela RM, Niemela SE, Karttunen TJ, Lehtola JK. Clinical characteristics of collagenous and lymphocytic colitis. Scandanavian Journal of Gastroenterology. Sep 2004;39(9):837-45. []
  6. Ohlsson B. New insights and challenges in microscopic colitis. Therap Adv Gastroenterol. 2015 Jan;8(1):37-47. doi: 10.1177/1756283X14550134. []
  7. Bjørnbak C, Engel PJ, Nielsen PL, Munck LK. Microscopic colitis: clinical findings, topography and persistence of histopathological subgroups. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2011 Nov;34(10):1225-34. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2036.2011.04865.x. []
  8. Münch A, Bohr J, Miehlke S, et al. Low-dose budesonide for maintenance of clinical remission in collagenous colitis: a randomised, placebo-controlled, 12-month trial. Gut. 2014 Nov 25. pii: gutjnl-2014-308363. doi: 10.1136/gutjnl-2014-308363. []

Food Allergy – IgE and Non IgE

Baby with Allergic Reaction to Peanuts. GFW
Baby with Allergic Reaction to Peanuts. GFW photo.

What Is Food Allergy?

[dropcap]F[/dropcap]ood allergy is an abnormal immune response to food proteins that may damage the small intestinal  lining and produce malabsorption of food. The reaction is usually delayed which makes it difficult to identify the offending food that is causing symptoms.

Q: How does food allergy develop?

A: The gastrointestinal tract serves not only to digest and absorb foodstuffs but also to protect the body from unwanted substances. When allergic food substances are eaten, the immune response that is triggered in the gut produces inflammation with symptoms such as pain, vomiting and loose bowels.

Inflammation causes swelling of the gut lining that can interfere with the passage of nutrients through it to the body which results in malabsorption. Malabsorption deprives the body of nutrients needed for normal function.

Symptoms other than digestive may involve skin rashes, hives, and respiratory difficulties that can be distressing and life-threatening.

What Is Food Allergy In Celiac Disease and/or Gluten Sensitivity?

Scleroderma (Systemic Sclerosis)

Geographic Tongue Due to Riboflavin Deficiency.
Geographic Tongue Due to Riboflavin Deficiency.

 What Is Geographic Tongue?

[dropcap]G eographic tongue is a painful alteration in tongue tissue that is characteristic of riboflavin (vitamin B2) deficiency.1

Q: How does the tongue surface appear?

A: Areas of inflamed tissue with flattened papillae develop among areas of normal tissue, giving a map-like appearance to the tongue surface. There are often swollen papillae that hurt or sting, such as is seen in the photo to the left.

A diet that does not provide adequate amounts of riboflavin and any condition that 1) interferes with riboflavin absorption from the gut, 2) depletes the vitamin from the body, 3) overuses the vitamin in the body, or 4) adversely affects its use in the body will result in riboflavin deficiency causing geographic tongue.

Riboflavin is essential for converting foodstuffs into energy, maintaining the normal lifespan of red blood cells and maintaining healthy skin, eyes, hair, and nervous system. Riboflavin is converted into its active forms, flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) and flavin mononucleotide (FMN). These enzymes are primarily involved as co-factors in oxidation reduction reactions that are essential for cellular energy production and respiration.

Riboflavin is required for the conversion of pyridoxine (vitamin B6) to its functional form and the production of niacin (vitamin B3) from the amino acid tryptophan. Riboflavin has a role in antioxidant status by activating glutathione reductase, which regenerates used glutathione, a powerful antioxidant.

Respiratory infection, exercise, certain diseases, drugs and hormones can adversely influence riboflavin status.2 Stress is a major depleter of riboflavin.

What Is Geographic Tongue In Celiac Disease and/or Gluten Sensitivity?

Sources:
  1. Krause’s Food, Nutrition, & Diet Therapy. 10th Edition. Kathleen Mahan, Sylvia Escott-Stump. 2000. W.B. Saunders Company. []
  2. Lakshmi AV. Riboflavin metabolism–relevance to human nutrition. Indian J Med Res. 1998 Nov;108:182-90. []

Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy

jejunitis
Copyright © 2014 Sigman et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.1

What Is Chronic Ulcerative Jejunitis?

[dropcap]C hronic ulcerative jejunitis is a disease of the small intestine that is characterized by inflammation and ulceration of the mucosal lining of the jejunum.

Q: How do inflammation and ulceration affect digestion in the jejunum?

A: Inflammation swells the lining and this impairs absorption of nutrients. Together with ulceration the inflamed and swollen jejunum hampers peristalsis, or the rhythmic movement of food by intestinal muscles.

Impaired peristalsis promotes constipation and/or diarrhea. Bacterial overgrowth may develop. Ulcerations may bleed which could cause the development of iron deficiency anemia.

What Is Chronic Ulcerative Jejunitis In Celiac Disease and/or Gluten Sensitivity?

Sources:
  1. Sigman T, Nguyen VH, Costea F, Sant’Anna A, Seidman EG. Ulcerative jejunitis in a child with celiac disease. BMC Gastroenterol. 2014 Feb 13;14:29. doi: 10.1186/1471-230X-14-29. []

Progressive Myoclonic Ataxia 

biliary system primary biliary cirrhosisWhat Is Primary Biliary Cirrhosis?

[dropcap]P rimary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) is a biliary tract disease characterized by chronic cholestasis (build-up of bile) and gradual destruction of bile ducts within the liver, called intrahepatic bile ducts, caused by chronic inflammation.

Primary biliary cirrhosis comes under the umbrella term autoimune liver disease in which the end result is immune-mediated hepatocellular (liver cell) or hepatobiliary (bile duct) injury.1

Q: What is the end result of destruction of bile ducts?

A: The end result of destruction of bile ducts is liver damage.

Injured liver tissue from chronic inflammation and the buildup of bile leads to cirrhosis, a condition in which the liver slowly deteriorates and malfunctions.

Scar tissue replaces healthy liver tissue, partially blocking the flow of blood through the liver. Scarring also impairs the liver’s normal ability to control infections, remove bacteria and toxins from the blood, process nutrients, hormones, and drugs, make proteins that regulate blood clotting, produce bile, and effectively replace its own cells when they become damaged.2

The liver is the largest organ within the body. It lies mostly in the upper part of the abdomen on the right side just under the diaphragm. About 70% of liver tissue is made up of cube shaped cells called hepatocytes that do the main work of the liver. Other cells (epithelial) form structure and are arranged in single layers around blood vessels, sinusoids, and bile ducts.

Bile ducts carry bile, a greenish brown liquid made by the liver to the gall bladder for storage until needed to aid in the digestion and absorption of fat and fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K from the small intestine. Bile emulsifies fat eaten in the diet so that the pancreatic enzyme called lypase can break it down into its fatty acid and glycerol components which can then be absorbed into the body.

Bile also carries away waste products produced by normal metabolism and toxic substances that are removed by the liver for eventual elimination in stool. Bile is continually made by the liver from phospholipids, bile acids, cholesterol, and aging blood cells it removes from circulation. As such, bile must continually flow out of the liver to prevent build-up in the liver.

There is no cure for primary biliary cirrhosis.

What Is Primary Biliary Cirrhosis In Celiac Disease and/or Gluten Sensitivity?

Sources:
  1. Trivedi PJ, Adams DH. Mucosal immunity in liver autoimmunity: a comprehensive review. J Autoimmun. 2013 Oct;46:97-111. doi: 10.1016/j.jaut.2013.06.013. []
  2. http://digestive.niddk.nih.gov/ddiseases/pubs/primarybiliarycirrhosis/ []

Angina Pectoris

What Is Angina Pectoris?Coronary Artery Lesion

[dropcap]A[/dropcap]ngina pectoris, or simply angina, is a coronary syndrome characterized by an oppressive substernal pain (pain under breastbone) or pressure brought on by exertion and relieved by rest that results from failure of coronary arteries to deliver adequate oxygen to heart tissue due to ischemic heart disease.

Q: Why do coronary arteries fail to deliver adequate oxygen to heart tissue?

A: Coronary arteries are the blood vessels that serve the heart. In angina, these vessels fail to deliver adequate oxygen to heart tissue because they are narrowed or blocked by fatty buildups, called atherosclerotic plaques or by a blood clot which impair their ability to carry adequate blood that carries the oxygen. Diseased coronary arteries cannot deliver adequate oxygenated blood pumped by the heart to its own muscle cells.

The heart is a muscular organ that is working all the time without rest, so it needs a constant supply of oxygen. When heart muscle has to work harder, it needs more oxygen. Lack of oxygen causes pain which makes the affected person stop activity and rest.

Angina can be stable or unstable. Unstable angina is much more serious and can be life-threatening.

  • Stable angina produces predictable pain and responds to rest and/or medication. It is less serious than unstable angina but can be very painful or uncomfortable. Anything that makes the heart muscle need more oxygen can cause an angina attack in someone with heart disease, including: smoking, cold weather, exercise, emotional stress, obesity, and large meals. Other causes of angina include: abnormal heart rhythms (usually ones that cause the heart to beat quickly), anemia, coronary artery spasm, heart failure, heart valve disease, and hyperthyroidism (overactive thyroid).1
  • Unstable angina produces unpredictable pain that may occur at rest, lasting more than 20 minutes. It is more severe than stable angina and less responsive to medication. Atherosclerosis is by far the most common cause of unstable angina. Oxidized low-density lipoprotein, so-called bad cholesterol, and oxysterols play an important role in atherogenesis, the development of atherosclerosis. Coronary arteries that are narrowed by atherosclerotic plaques can rupture causing injury to the coronary blood vessel resulting in blood clotting which blocks the flow of blood to the heart muscle. Blood clots may form, partially dissolve, and later form again and angina can occur each time a clot blocks blood flow in an artery. People with unstable angina are at increased risk of having a heart attack.2

What Is Angina In Celiac Disease and/or Gluten Sensitivity?

Sources:
  1. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH0001247/ []
  2. http://www.heart.org/HEARTORG/Conditions/HeartAttack/SymptomsDiagnosisofHeartAttack/Unstable-Angina_UCM_437513_Article.jsp# []