lactoferrin has been researched along with Celiac-Disease* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for lactoferrin and Celiac-Disease
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Utility of a rapid fecal latex agglutination test detecting the neutrophil protein, lactoferrin, for diagnosing inflammatory causes of chronic diarrhea.
The utility of tests for fecal neutrophils in the setting of chronic diarrhea has not been established. The purpose of this study was to determine the causes of chronic diarrhea associated with fecal neutrophils.. One fecal specimen from each of 10 normal subjects, 26 patients with known microscopic colitis, 13 with celiac sprue, eight with Crohn's disease, four with ulcerative colitis, and 103 with chronic diarrhea of unknown origin, as well as 10 fecal specimens from a patient with chronic nongranulomatous enterocolitis were analyzed blindly for the presence of a neutrophil granule protein called lactoferrin using a commercial latex agglutination kit. Diagnostic evaluation of the 103 patients with chronic diarrhea was carried out to determine the diagnostic accuracy of this test for chronic inflammatory bowel disease.. None of the normal control subjects, three of 39 patients with microscopic colitis or celiac sprue, all 10 specimens from the patient with enterocolitis, and all 12 control patients with ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease had a positive fecal lactoferrin test. Eleven of 103 patients with chronic diarrhea presenting without a diagnosis had a positive test, and all were diagnosed with an inflammatory condition of the colon (five-, ulcerative colitis; four-, Crohn's disease; one-, ischemic colitis; and one-, microscopic colitis). Only one patient with inflammatory bowel disease had a negative lactoferrin test. The sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of the fecal lactoferrin test for ulcerative or Crohn's colitis were 90%, 98%, 82%, and 99%, respectively.. The major cause of fecal neutrophils in patients with chronic diarrhea is chronic inflammatory bowel disease of the colon. The latex agglutination test for fecal lactoferrin offers a highly sensitive, specific, and simple means for detection of fecal neutrophils in these patients. Topics: Celiac Disease; Chronic Disease; Colitis, Ulcerative; Crohn Disease; Diarrhea; Feces; Female; Humans; Lactoferrin; Latex Fixation Tests; Male; Neutrophils; Occult Blood; Sensitivity and Specificity | 1998 |
Pancreatic exocrine and endocrine responses in chronic pancreatitis.
To test the discriminatory potential of certain indices of pancreatic function we performed duodenal perfusion studies and measured trypsin, bicarbonate, and lactoferrin outputs, and plasma concentrations of pancreatic polypeptide and motilin in the basal state and during continuous intravenous stimulation with 100 ng kg-1h-1 Ceruletide and 1 CU kg-1h-1 secretin. The following groups were studied: 12 normal volunteers (NV), seven patients with chronic pancreatitis with steatorrhea (CPS), and seven without steatorrhea (CP). Stimulated trypsin outputs, after 45 min of stimulation, were the best discriminant among the groups (NV versus CPS, p less than 0.0005; NV versus CP, p less than 0.005; CP versus CPS, p less than 0.05). Basal trypsin outputs showed similar patterns but failed to discriminate between NV and CP. Bicarbonate outputs were less discriminatory than trypsin outputs. Lactoferrin outputs failed to discriminate, but transient high peak outputs occurred in the initial stimulation period in all four patients with calcific chronic pancreatitis, suggesting a washout phenomenon. Basal motilin levels were elevated in both groups of pancreatitis (p less than 0.05). Stimulated pancreatic polypeptide levels were lower in CPS (NV versus CPS, p less than 0.05) but higher in CP (NV versus CP, p less than 0.005). These differences were also apparent in the basal state. We conclude that the best discrimination among the three groups was achieved by measurement of trypsin outputs, after 45 min of stimulation. In addition, the pancreatic polypeptide response may be used as a marker of residual pancreatic function in chronic pancreatitis. Topics: Adult; Aged; Bicarbonates; Celiac Disease; Ceruletide; Chronic Disease; Female; Humans; Islets of Langerhans; Lactoferrin; Male; Middle Aged; Motilin; Pancreas; Pancreatic Polypeptide; Pancreatitis; Secretin; Trypsin | 1984 |