DISORDERS ASSOCIATED WITH MALABSORPTION
A very large number of disorders may result in intestinal malabsorption of varying degrees of severity. Some but not all of these have been listed in as examples of the potential causes of the syndrome. This section will discuss only two of these entities, celiac sprue and the bacterial overgrowth syndrome. Other specific disorders are discussed elsewhere in this book or are discussed in detail in the appended references.
Celiac Sprue (Gluten-sensitive Enteropathy, nontropical Sprue). Celiac sprue is a chronic, seemingly familial disorder associated with a lifelong sensitivity to dietary gluten, a protein found in wheat and wheat products. When this protein (or certain peptides derived from it) is ingested, a diffuse mucosal injury results that is characteristic but nonspecific. The villi are shortened and blunted with decreased absorptive surface area, the crypts are hyperplastic, and the lamina propria is usually heavily infiltrated with lymphocytes.
Pathogenesis. The pathogenesis of the injury has not been established, although the best evidence suggests an immunological mechanism. Patients with celiac sprue have a high prevalence of certain histocompatibility types (HLA-B8 and Dw3), suggesting a linkage on chromosome 6 and strengthening the possibility of an immunological origin. On careful examination as many as 10 percent of firstdegree relatives of patients with celiac sprue may have the disorder. A second hypothesis postulates that an incomplete hydrolysis of peptides derived from gluten leads to the accumulation of toxic intermediates that directly injure the mucosal cell and that the immunological phenomena are secondary to this direct cell injury. Whatever the cause, it is known that the lesion is locally produced, disappears when gluten is withdrawn, and recurs within a few days when gluten is reintroduced. The pathogenesis of the resulting malabsorption is largely that of a diffuse mucosal abnormality. It has also been suggested that the abnormal mucosa has a reduced ability to secrete secretin and cholecystokinin-pancreozymin and therefore that pancreatic and biliary functions are secondarily impaired.
Symptoms and Signs. The symptoms and signs of celiac sprue are largely those that have been described for malabsorption in general. Symptoms tend to be more severe in childhood, diminishing after adolescence. Once again it must be emphasized that the gastrointestinal symptoms may be very mild and the patient may present with other manifestations such as anemia [iron or folate deficiency), a bleeding diathesis (vitamin K deficiency), or metabolic bone disease (vitamin D or calcium deficiency).
Diagnosis. Patients with sprue usually exhibit fat malabsorption, an abnormal xylose test, and an abnormal pattern of dilated intestinal loops with thickened mucosal folds and flocculation of barium on radiographic examination. The Schilling test is usually normal but may be abnormal if the disorder extends to the ileum. Peroral biopsy shows the characteristic but not pathognomonic lesion. Finally, and most importantly, there is a clinical and histological response to a gluten-free diet.
Treatment and Prognosis. Treatment is by lifelong adherence to a gluten-free diet. Corn flour and rice products can safely be substituted for wheat, barley, and oats. A clinical response usually begins within a few weeks and the patient may continue to improve over a number of months. Reversion to a regular diet usually leads to a rapid return of symptoms. The long-term prognosis is excellent, although patients with celiac sprue appear to have a higher incidence of nonHodgkin’s lymphoma in later life.
Bacterial Overgrowth Syndrome. The small intestine usually harbors very few microorganisms (<104 colonies per ml). This comparatively sterile sanctuary is thought to result from the combined effects of gastric acidity, the rapid sweeping action of normal intestinal motility, and the secretion into the intestine of immunoglobulins. When bacteria are present in increased numbers in the small intestine, malabsorption is a frequent consequence. Loss of the normal sweeping function of the gut due to motility disorders or to "blind loops" (e.g., spontaneous or surgically created diverticula) is the most common cause of upper intestinal bacterial overgrowth.
Pathogenesis. As noted previously the malabsorption associated with bacterial overgrowth may result from three mechanisms: (a) deconju-gation of bile salts, leading to impaired micelle formation; (b) a patchy injury to mucosal cells thought to be due to direct injury by bacteria or bacterial products; and (c) direct utilization of nutrients by bacteria, best established for vitamin
Conditions Associated with Bacterial Over, growth. A large number of disorders may be associated with bacterial overgrowth. In addition to such gross structural derangements as blind loops, fistulas, or strictures, this syndrome may be found in the impaired intestinal motility of systemic sclerosis, amyloidosis, diabetes mellitus, and chronic pseudo-obstruction. It may also occur in hypogammaglobulinemia and in pancreatic insufficiency.
Diagnosis. The initial approach to a patient with malabsorption of any cause has been described above and in Figure 36-2. If bacterial overgrowth is suspected based on anatomical abnormalities or on the finding of an abnormal xylose test in the presence of a normal jejunal biopsy, this can be confirmed in one of several ways: (a) by an abnormal bile acid breath test (if there is no ileal disease), (b) by a positive three-stage Schilling test, (c) by direct culture of jejunal fluid (usually >107 organisms/ml with a mixed culture of anaerobes for significant bacterial overgrowth), or (d) more simply by a 10- to 14-day therapeutic trial using a broad-spectrum antibiotic.
Treatment. The treatment depends upon the anatomical and functional cause of the impaired sweeping function of the intestine. Sometimes surgery is indicated. More often patients will require chronic or intermittent antibiotic therapy on an indefinite basis. The most frequently used agents are tetracycline, ampicillin, and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. In some forms of malabsorption, parenteral nutrition may be required. This form of therapy will not be described in this introductory textbook.
- DIAGNOSTIC APPROACH TO HEPATIC NEOPLASMS
- Texas MedicareRX
- Metabolism of Drugs in Patients with Renal Insufficiency
- CARDIOVASCULAR RESPONSE TO EXERCISE
- RHEUMATIC FEVER
- Outcome and Prognosis
- Conjugated Hyperbilirubinemia
- LABORATORY TESTS OF LIVER FUNCTION AND DISEASE
- Differential Diagnosis and Evaluation of the Patient
- VENTILATION
- NAUSEA AND VOMITING
- Renal Biopsy and Other Diagnostic Tests
- THE FAMILIAL POLYPOSIS SYNDROMES
- Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE)
- CLINICAL PRESENTATION
- APPROACH TO THE PATIENT WJTH SUSPECTED MALDIGESTION AND/OR MALABSORPTION
- Renal Artery Occlusion
- Screening and Prevention
- THROMBOANGIITIS OBLITERANS
- PULMONARY GAS EXCHANGE
- CLINICAL SYMPTOMS OF ESOPHAGEAL DISEASE
- Clinical Manifestations
- Resuscitation
- HEPATIC NEOPLASMS
- Community Acquired Pneumonia
- VENTRICULAR RHYTHM DISTURBANCES
- Laboratory Evaluation of Anemia
- Health
- APPROACH TO THE PATIENT WITH SUSPECTED OR CONFIRMED ARRHYTHMIAS
- RISK FACTORS
- Pneumonia in the Immunocompromised Host
- Outcomes of Dialysis
- THE BLOOD VESSELS STRUCTURE
- MYOCARDIAL METABOLISM
- Membranous Glomerulopathy