Artigo Revisado por pares

A blood test for intestinal permeability and function: A new tool for the diagnosis of chronic intestinal disease in dogs

1997; Elsevier BV; Volume: 264; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/s0009-8981(97)00077-6

ISSN

1873-3492

Autores

S. H. Sørensen, F.Janice Proud, H. C. Rutgers, Peter J. Markwell, Alex Adam, Roger M. Batt,

Tópico(s)

Congenital gastrointestinal and neural anomalies

Resumo

We demonstrate that rhamnose, 3-O-methyl-d-glucose, d-xylose and lactulose may be quantified accurately in blood by HPLC and pulsed amperometric detection, thus enabling studies of intestinal permeability and function to be carried out using plasma samples. Prior to HPLC, the endogenous glucose was enzymatically modified to gluconic acid and the protein precipitated. The precision of the quantification of the sugars in plasma (C.V.: 2.2–5.7%; 8.7–10.6% at very low concentrations) compared well with the quantification in urine. The results for groups of 8 dogs with small intestinal bacterial overgrowth and 12 dogs with inflammatory bowel disease were shown to be significantly different from a group of 20 normal control dogs (P<0.001), demonstrating the test's value as a diagnostic tool. The normal ranges in blood 2 h post oral administration were determined to be 0.05–0.17 for the lactulose/rhamnose ratio and 0.45–0.65 for the xylose/3-O-methylglucose ratio. This method may be employed advantageously when the collection of urine in intestinal permeability and function tests is difficult.

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