Maldigestion and malabsorption of dietary lipid during severe childhood malnutrition
Maldigestion and malabsorption of dietary lipid during severe childhood malnutrition
Background: diets rich in lipid are used to provide energy density in treating children with severe malnutrition, but the extent to which their digestion and absorption can cope with the load effectively is uncertain.
Aim: to determine the extent of impaired digestion or absorption, in three groups of eight malnourished children (aged 5–23 months) using isotopic probes of the predominant fatty acids in coconut and corn oil used to fortify the diet.
Methods: each child received oral doses of one of three 13C labelled triglycerides (trilaurin, triolein, or trilinolein). The recovery of 13C label in stool either as triglyceride (TAG) or fatty acid (FA), was used to assess digestion and absorption. In a separate test, the recovery of label in stool following an oral dose of [13C]-glycocholate was measured to assess bile salt malabsorption.
Results: the median recovery of label in stool was 9% (range 1–29%) of administered dose. Following treatment there was a reduction in stool 13C excretion for the labelled TAG (<1%). In half the subjects, label was recovered as TAG in stool (median 0.6%, range 0–44%). Most label in stool was recovered as FA (median 30%, range 0–100%). Following [13C]-glycocholate, label was recovered in excess in about one third of studies.
Conclusion: abnormalities in the gastrointestinal handling of lipid were observed in over 50% of children with severe malnutrition, reflecting problems in absorption, although impaired solubilisation or hydrolysis could also be contributory factors. The underlying lesion improves as treatment progresses, leading to concomitant improvement in function.
lipid, malnutrition, gastrointestinal tract, digestion, absorption
522-525
Murphy, J.L.
99e7863d-f870-438a-b4f5-bec8a2e78ebd
Badaloo, A V.
93aee8b5-7136-4115-b4d1-58b49e3decfe
Chambers, B.
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Forrester, T.E.
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Wootton, S.A.
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Jackson, A.A.
c9a12d7c-b4d6-4c92-820e-890a688379ef
2002
Murphy, J.L.
99e7863d-f870-438a-b4f5-bec8a2e78ebd
Badaloo, A V.
93aee8b5-7136-4115-b4d1-58b49e3decfe
Chambers, B.
5690d294-fe47-4b5d-8fe3-311a497931c4
Forrester, T.E.
bb3a3675-9204-4743-b4e0-f8d0ddd55932
Wootton, S.A.
bf47ef35-0b33-4edb-a2b0-ceda5c475c0c
Jackson, A.A.
c9a12d7c-b4d6-4c92-820e-890a688379ef
Murphy, J.L., Badaloo, A V., Chambers, B., Forrester, T.E., Wootton, S.A. and Jackson, A.A.
(2002)
Maldigestion and malabsorption of dietary lipid during severe childhood malnutrition.
Archives of Disease in Childhood, 87 (6), .
Abstract
Background: diets rich in lipid are used to provide energy density in treating children with severe malnutrition, but the extent to which their digestion and absorption can cope with the load effectively is uncertain.
Aim: to determine the extent of impaired digestion or absorption, in three groups of eight malnourished children (aged 5–23 months) using isotopic probes of the predominant fatty acids in coconut and corn oil used to fortify the diet.
Methods: each child received oral doses of one of three 13C labelled triglycerides (trilaurin, triolein, or trilinolein). The recovery of 13C label in stool either as triglyceride (TAG) or fatty acid (FA), was used to assess digestion and absorption. In a separate test, the recovery of label in stool following an oral dose of [13C]-glycocholate was measured to assess bile salt malabsorption.
Results: the median recovery of label in stool was 9% (range 1–29%) of administered dose. Following treatment there was a reduction in stool 13C excretion for the labelled TAG (<1%). In half the subjects, label was recovered as TAG in stool (median 0.6%, range 0–44%). Most label in stool was recovered as FA (median 30%, range 0–100%). Following [13C]-glycocholate, label was recovered in excess in about one third of studies.
Conclusion: abnormalities in the gastrointestinal handling of lipid were observed in over 50% of children with severe malnutrition, reflecting problems in absorption, although impaired solubilisation or hydrolysis could also be contributory factors. The underlying lesion improves as treatment progresses, leading to concomitant improvement in function.
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Published date: 2002
Keywords:
lipid, malnutrition, gastrointestinal tract, digestion, absorption
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Local EPrints ID: 25839
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/25839
ISSN: 0003-9888
PURE UUID: a23ea52a-fc97-4faf-be87-64024218407d
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Date deposited: 11 Apr 2006
Last modified: 22 Jul 2022 20:32
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Contributors
Author:
J.L. Murphy
Author:
A V. Badaloo
Author:
B. Chambers
Author:
T.E. Forrester
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