Follow-up of treated coeliac patients: sugar absorption test and intestinal biopsies compared
OBJECTIVE:To determine whether the sugar absorption test (SAT) during follow-up of patients with coeliac disease on a gluten-free diet (GFD) correlates with improvement of the villous architecture of the small intestine. METHODS:The SAT was performed in coeliacs at diagnosis and during follow-up wit...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European journal of gastroenterology & hepatology 1996-03, Vol.8 (3), p.219-224 |
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Zusammenfassung: | OBJECTIVE:To determine whether the sugar absorption test (SAT) during follow-up of patients with coeliac disease on a gluten-free diet (GFD) correlates with improvement of the villous architecture of the small intestine.
METHODS:The SAT was performed in coeliacs at diagnosis and during follow-up with GFD. For the SAT, a solution of lactulose (L) and mannitol (M) was given to the fasting patient and the L-M ratio calculated in a 5-hour urine sample by gas chromatographyratios >0.089 are considered abnormal. The solution was made hyperosmolar by adding sucrose (1560 mmol/l).
RESULTS:The L-M ratio was 2–3 times higher at diagnosis than either at 8 months to 2 years gluten free, or beyond 2 years gluten free, consecutively. The L-M ratio (mean, range) was significantly higher in cases of biopsies with (sub)total villous atrophy (VA) (0.388, 0.062–0.804, n = 28), partial VA (0.240, 0.062–0.841, n=18) and villous irregularity (0.143, 0.017–0.322, n = 29) than in case of normalized histology after GFD (0.085, 0.021–0.230, n = 19). The rate of normalization of functional integrity was slower in adults than in children, demonstrated by a combination of histology and SAT.
CONCLUSION:The SAT correlates well with the degree of VA. It is important for daily clinical practice that the simple and non-invasive SAT can be used as an indicator of intestinal damage, thus influencing need for and timing of intestinal biopsies. |
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ISSN: | 0954-691X 1473-5687 |
DOI: | 10.1097/00042737-199603000-00006 |