Publications by authors named "Y Weintraub"

Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs) involve relapsing-remitting immune activation and inflammation. Both immune system activity and digestive tract function exhibit diurnal variations, regulated by the circadian clock. Disruption of this clock is linked to inflammation, suggesting that circadian regulators may play a pivotal role in the inflammatory process of IBD.

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: The natural history and prognosis of mesenteric panniculitis (MP) are not well-described. Despite referral for colonoscopy being common for this indication, colonoscopy findings in MP patients have not been reported. Therefore, we aimed to describe upper and lower gastrointestinal (GI) endoscopy findings in patients with mesenteric panniculitis, compared to matched controls, to investigate their clinical outcomes including incidence of malignancy and mortality.

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The Nancy Histological Index (NHI) is used to score histologic disease activity in patients with ulcerative colitis (UC). Our goal was to assess the utility of NHI at diagnosis in predicting clinical outcomes in pediatric patients with UC, in comparison to clinical and endoscopic scores. We retrospectively reviewed data at diagnosis of 106 children with UC (59 [55.

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Article Synopsis
  • Curcumin and Qing Dai (QD) are herbal treatments found effective for ulcerative colitis (UC) in children, used since 2016 in a combination called CurQD.
  • A study involving 30 pediatric patients showed significant improvements, with over 50% experiencing a substantial reduction in disease activity and fecal calprotectin levels during treatment.
  • Follow-up results indicated that while 33% experienced a flare-up, many regained remission or responded well to adjustments in their treatment regimen, suggesting CurQD is both effective and safe for managing mild to moderate UC.
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The no-biopsy approach to diagnose celiac disease (CD), introduced in the 2012 European Society for Gastroenterology and Hepatology and Nutrition guidelines, requires an anti-endomysial antibody (EMA) confirmatory serology test following a high-positive immunoglobulin A anti-tissue transglutaminase-2 (anti-TG2) antibody ≥10 times the upper limit of normal (ULN). The aim of this retrospective study is to compare EMA positivity and high-positive anti-TG2 in patients who had their confirmatory test within 2 months of their first high-positive anti-TG2 test. Among 933 patients who had high-positive anti-TG2 serology more than 10 times the ULN in their first sample, all had both high-positive anti-TG2 and positive EMA, most of them with very high EMA titers (99.

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