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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (
malabsorption
)
7,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the assessment of carbohydrate
malabsorption
, it is important to determine if patients with a flat breath
hydrogen
(H2) response to an absorbable carbohydrate challenge are capable of producing H2. We compared the reliability of a rapid faecal incubation system with the lactulose breath test to assess in vivo H2 production in 64 children. Overall, 70% of subjects were in vivo H2-producers, with breath H2 peaks greater than 10 parts per million within 3 h of ingesting 10 g of the non-absorbable disaccharide lactulose. Faecal specimens from the 64 children had a mean (SE) pH of 5.0 (0.077). Faecal homogenates were incubated with lactulose at both the initially measured faecal pH and at neutral pH. In predicting a normal in vivo H2-producing ability (sensitivity), the faecal H2 test was correct in only 22% (faecal pH) to 44% (pH7) of cases. In predicting an abnormal lactulose breath test result (specificity), faecal homogenate analysis was correct in 53% of cases, at both faecal and neutral pH. These findings indicate that the faecal
hydrogen
test is unsuitable as a screening test for in vivo H2 production.
...
PMID:Comparison of an in vitro faecal hydrogen test with the lactulose breath test: assessment of in vivo hydrogen-producing capability in Burmese village children. 138 94
Breath
hydrogen
tests were performed after a rice meal (3 g of cooked rice/kg of body weight, equivalent to 1 g of carbohydrate/kg of body weight) on 256 village children (age range 1-59 months) who were known
hydrogen
(H2) producers. Anthropometric measurements were made every three months and growth rates were calculated. A breath H2 excretion pattern that suggested small bowel bacterial overgrowth (SBBO), which was recognized as a transient maximum level of 10 ppm or more at 20-, 40-, or 60-min breath samples following the rice meal, was present in 53 (20.7%) children, and was more frequent in children 36-47 and 48-59 months old. This breath H2 excretion pattern was detected in 48 (33.3%) of 144 children who were rice malabsorbers (greater than 10 ppm H2 above baseline values in one of the breath samples taken between 90 and 240 min), and in only five (4.5%) of 112 rice absorbers. Children who had SBBO had a high relative risk (10.7) of being rice malabsorbers. Rice malabsorbers have a high relative risk (59.7) of having faltered growth, accompanied by a large etiologic fraction (94%). This same risk (6.68) and an etiologic fraction of 62% exist in children with untreated SBBO. These findings emphasize the need for interventions aimed at reducing the prevalence of SBBO or similar conditions as detected by the breath H2 excretion pattern to prevent rice
malabsorption
and growth faltering.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of small bowel bacterial overgrowth and rice carbohydrate malabsorption in Burmese (Myanmar) village children. 138 2
Lactose malabsorption was investigated in 169 Chinese children aged between two and 16 years using the breath
hydrogen
test. The challenge was either lactose solution (1 g/kg) or cow's milk (10 ml/kg). Overall, 68% of the children showed a significant increase in breath
hydrogen
following the lactose challenge while only 17% showed an increase after the cow's milk challenge and 13% after both challenges. The number of malabsorbers increased significantly (p less than 0.001) with age and no associated gastrointestinal symptoms or signs were found in any of the children following the challenges, suggesting a gradual and partial loss of intestinal lactase activity. We conclude that the prevalence of lactose
malabsorption
in Hong Kong children is very high using the standard lactose tolerance test but when a more realistic amount of lactose and a natural medium such as a glass of milk is used as the challenge, the number of malabsorbers becomes small and clinically insignificant.
...
PMID:The status of lactose absorption in Hong Kong Chinese children. 139 83
The alpha-glucosidase inhibitors acarbose and miglitol have been successfully used to control postprandial hyperglycaemia in diabetics. They probably work by slowing carbohydrate digestion and absorption, but their effect on mouth to caecum transit time has not been studied. The effect acarbose (100 mg), miglitol (100 mg), and placebo on mouth to caecum transit time (380 kcal breakfast with 20 g of lactulose) was investigated in 18 normal volunteers using breath
hydrogen
analysis. Both miglitol and acarbose significantly increased breath
hydrogen
excretion (F2,34 = 6.31, p = 0.005) and shortened the mouth to caecum transit time (F2,34 = 3.49, p = 0.04) after breakfast compared with placebo. There was a significant negative correlation between breath
hydrogen
excretion and mouth to caecum transit time suggesting that with shorter transit times significantly more carbohydrates were spilled into the colon. These results indicate that alpha-glucosidase inhibitors accelerate mouth to caecum transit time by inducing carbohydrate
malabsorption
.
...
PMID:Effects of alpha-glucosidase inhibitors on mouth to caecum transit time in humans. 142 79
It is possible to point out subjects consuming considerable quantities of fructose and sorbitol, and the intake seems to be increasing both from added and natural sources. Studies of the absorption of fructose in animals are inconsistent, and the mechanisms of fructose uptake seem to vary in accordance with the species. In most species fructose absorption takes place by a specific carrier (facilitated transport), but it may be active in the rat. In vitro studies of human intestine are very scarce; there is no evidence of active intestinal fructose transport in the human intestine. By means of
hydrogen
breath tests, a very low absorption capacity for fructose given as the free monosaccharide has been found in humans. Fructose given as sucrose or in equimolar combinations with glucose is well absorbed, and only fructose in excess of glucose is malabsorbed. On this basis it is hypothesized that two different uptake mechanisms for fructose are present in the human intestine. One of these may be a disaccharidase-related uptake system. Sorbitol ingestion may aggravate
malabsorption
of fructose given as the monosaccharide; it is not known whether a specific mechanism is involved. In children and adults with functional bowel distress the absorption capacities for fructose may not differ from those of healthy individuals, but
malabsorption
of fructose and/or sorbitol may be the cause of or aggravate abdominal symptoms. Fructose polymers (fructans) are also subject to increasing nutritional interest. Fructans are not absorbed in the small intestine but are strongly fermented in the large bowel. Fructans may be of potential benefit for large-bowel function and blood glucose regulation.
...
PMID:Fructose and related food carbohydrates. Sources, intake, absorption, and clinical implications. 143 34
Bacterial fermentation of carbohydrate in the colon, producing short-chain fatty acids (SCFA)--and especially butyrate--has been shown possibly to impede cell proliferation and regulate cell differentiation of colonocytes. In patients with diverticular disease or benign polyps in the colon a hyperabsorption of potato starch in the small intestine has been found. We have investigated the absorption of wheat starch in 15 patients radically resected for cancer in the descending or sigmoid colon, and the results were compared with those of 15 healthy controls. The starch
malabsorption
was quantified by the
hydrogen
breath test. The patients malabsorbed 2-14 g (median, 8 g) of 100 g wheat starch ingested, and the control group malabsorbed 3-11 g (median, 6 g) (P greater than 0.1). Mouth-to-cecum transit time for wheat starch and lactulose and the
hydrogen
production capacity after the lactulose standards were also similar in patients and controls. The results do not support the theory that hyperabsorption of starch is characteristic of patients with malignant disease in the large intestine.
...
PMID:Absorption of wheat starch in patients resected for left-sided colonic cancer. 143 45
Thirty children infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) (18 P1 and 12 P2, according to the classification system of the Centers for Disease Control) and 54 noninfected children were evaluated for lactose
malabsorption
with use of the
hydrogen
breath test after different lactose loads. Lactose malabsorption after load of 2 g/kg occurred in 75% of P2, 67% of P1, and in 46% of noninfected children. With a lower lactose load (1 g/kg), the prevalence of
malabsorption
was significantly higher among P2 children than P1 and noninfected cases. A similar figure was obtained after the lowest load (0.5 g/kg). Infected children with lactose
malabsorption
were significantly younger than noninfected malabsorbers (mean age +/- SD; 50.3 +/- 22 vs. 63.5 +/- 20.9 months) when the load of 2 g/kg was used. The use of lower lactose loads seems to be helpful in finding the dose that can be tolerated. This finding could have nutritional importance and could lead to better dietary management.
...
PMID:Malabsorption of different lactose loads in children with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 146 21
Pancreatic insufficiency due to chronic pancreatitis may lead to symptomatic
malabsorption
of both starch and fat. The absorption capacity of wheat starch has not been studied previously in patients with chronic pancreatitis, although this carbohydrate is a quantitatively important component of the Western diet. We studied the absorption of wheat starch and the effect of pancreatic enzyme substitution in seven patients with chronic pancreatitis and steathorrea. The
malabsorption
was determined from
hydrogen
breath tests with lactulose standards as reference. Without enzyme substitution, wheat starch (50 g) was absorbed to a lesser extent than in healthy controls (p less than 0.05). The mouth-to-cecum transit time was prolonged and correlated positively to the fat excretion before substitution with pancreatic enzymes (sigma = 1). The enzyme substitution increased the absorption of wheat starch to values seen in healthy controls (p less than 0.05) and reduced the mouth-to-cecum transit time by 19.8%.
...
PMID:Assimilation of wheat starch in patients with chronic pancreatitis. Positive effect of enzyme replacement. 152 77
Hydrogen
breath tests were performed in Gabon (Central Africa) after a loading dose of lactose in 67 well-nourished African children (50 with intestinal parasites and 17 unparasitized) and in 18 unparasitized young adults. All had normal nutritional status, and none had diarrhea or digestive symptoms. Parasites that were found included Ascaris lumbricoides in 76% of the parasitized children, Trichuris trichiura in 58%, Giardia in 24%, Entamoeba histolytica in 20%, Schistosoma intercalatum in 16%, and Necator Americanus in 14%. A similar proportion of parasitized (64%) or unparasitized (62.8%) subjects were lactose malabsorbers. Giardia infection was associated with a higher, but not significantly different, proportion of lactose intolerance (10 of 12, 83.3%). The presence of infection with A. lumbricoides or T. trichiura did not increase the percentage of lactose
malabsorption
. These data indicate that a decrease of lactase activity in well-nourished African children is not related to the presence or the importance of Ascaris or other intestinal parasites if the nutritional status is normal.
...
PMID:Influence of intestinal parasitism on lactose absorption in well-nourished African children. 153 47
An assessment was made of the efficacy of a beta-galactosidase, obtained from Aspergillus niger and added to intact milk, in decreasing lactose
malabsorption
and intolerance. Sixteen adult patients with
malabsorption
and intolerance to this sugar were studied in a double-blind crossover study vs. placebo. A 5-hour
hydrogen
breath test was used to assess
malabsorption
of lactose contained in 400 ml milk. When compared with placebo, the addition of exogenous lactase to intact milk caused a statistically significant reduction in the maximum breath H2 concentration (P less than 0.01) and in the cumulative H2 excretion (P less than 0.005). In the same way, the cumulative index for gastrointestinal intolerance was significantly lower (P less than 0.005) after the ingestion of lactase-added milk. This study demonstrates that enzyme replacement therapy, with beta-galactosidases obtained from Aspergillus niger, is effective in decreasing lactose
malabsorption
and its consequent intolerance in adult subjects with lactase deficiency.
...
PMID:beta-Galactosidase from Aspergillus niger in adult lactose malabsorption: a double-blind crossover study. 154 16
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