Artigo Revisado por pares

Effect of glutamine in short-bowel syndrome

2001; Elsevier BV; Volume: 20; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1054/clnu.2001.0433

ISSN

1532-1983

Autores

James S. Scolapio, Kai McGreevy, Gary S. Tennyson, Omer L. Burnett,

Tópico(s)

Pancreatic and Hepatic Oncology Research

Resumo

Animal studies have reported positive effects of glutamine on intestinal absorption and morphology; human studies have been less convincing. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of glutamine and diet on intestinal morphology, motility, and absorption.A randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled crossover study in 8 patients with short-bowel on a high carbohydrate, low fat (HCLF) diet, was performed. Active treatment was oral glutamine (0.45 g kg(-1)day(-1)) for eight weeks. Intestinal morphology was evaluated by light microscopy. Gastrointestinal transit was measured by dual gamma camera scintigraphy. D-xylose and fecal fat collection was used to evaluate intestinal absorption. Results of active treatment versus placebo were compared by the signed-rank test.Morphology analysis, reported as median active treatment versus placebo, was villus height: 0.48 mm versus 0.50 mm, P=1.0, and crypt depth: 0.11 mm versus 0.10 mm, P=0.469. Percent D-xylose absorption, reported as median active treatment versus placebo, was 7% versus 10.5%, P=0.109. There was not a significant difference in wet weight or fat absorption compared to placebo, P>0.05. Likewise, gastrointestinal transit was not different compared to placebo.The results of this controlled study would support that 8 weeks of treatment with oral glutamine and a HCLF diet does not significantly improve intestinal morphology, gastrointestinal transit, D-xylose absorption and stool losses in short bowel patients.

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