Whipple's disease - current status of diagnostics and therapy.

Eur J Med Res

Department of Rheumatology, University of Giessen, Ludwigstr. 37-39, D-61231 Bad Nauheim, Germany.

Published: July 1998

Whipple's disease is a multisystemic infectious disease whose pathogen, a gram-unstable actinomycete, has been characterized in the meantime by molecular-biological techniques (polymerase chain reaction). This infectious disease which was firstly described in 1907 by G.H. Whipple as intestinal lipodystrophy appears rarely and sporadically and can affect nearly every organ, in the course of which the small intestine is also concerned in the majority of patients. The symptoms and signs are polymorphous and depend on organic involvement and stage. This leads to significant difficulties concerning differential diagnosis and to a delay in diagnosis. Misjudging the syndromes provokes invalidism and death whereas correct therapy leads to a cure in most of the cases.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

whipple's disease
8
infectious disease
8
disease current
4
current status
4
status diagnostics
4
diagnostics therapy
4
therapy whipple's
4
disease multisystemic
4
multisystemic infectious
4
disease pathogen
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!