13C-sucrose breath test: novel use of a noninvasive biomarker of enviromental gut health
Ritchie, Brett K., Brewster, David R., Davidson, Geoffrey P., Tran, Cuong D., McNeil, Yvette, Hawkes, Joanna S., and Butler, Ross N. (2009) 13C-sucrose breath test: novel use of a noninvasive biomarker of enviromental gut health. Pediatrics, 124 (2). pp. 620-626.
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Environmental enteropathy syndrome may compromise growth and predispose to infectious diseases in children in the developing world, including Australian Aboriginal children from remote communities of the Northern Territory. In this study, we described the use of a biomarker 13C-sucrose breath test (SBT) to measure enterocyte sucrase activity as a marker of small intestinal villus integrity and function.
METHODS: This was a hospital-based prospective case-control study of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children with and without acute diarrheal disease. Using the SBT, we compared 36 Aboriginal case subjects admitted to a hospital (18 diarrheal and 18 nondiarrheal disease), with 7 healthy non-Aboriginal control subjects. Intestinal permeability using the lactulose/rhamnose (L/R) ratio on a timed 90-minute blood test was performed simultaneously with the SBT. The SBT results are expressed as a cumulative percentage of the dose recovered at 90 minutes.
RESULTS: Aboriginal children with acute diarrheal disease have a significantly decreased absorptive capacity, as determined by the SBT, with a mean of 1.9% compared with either Aboriginal children without diarrhea (4.1%) or non-Aboriginal (6.1%) control subjects. The mean L/R ratio in the diarrhea group was 31.8 compared with 11.4 in Aboriginal children without diarrhea. There was a significant inverse correlation between the SBT and the L/R ratio.
CONCLUSIONS: The SBT was able to discriminate among Aboriginal children with diarrhea, asymptomatic Aboriginal children with an underlying environmental enteropathy, and healthy non-Aboriginal controls. This test provides a noninvasive, easy-to-use, integrated marker of the absorptive capacity and integrity of the small intestine and could be a valuable tool in evaluating the efficacy of interventions aimed at improving gut health.
Item ID: | 5354 |
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Item Type: | Article (Research - C1) |
ISSN: | 1098-4275 |
Keywords: | environmental enteropathy; tropical enteropathy; tropic sprue; gut function; sucrose breath test; Australian Aborigines; intestinal permeability |
Date Deposited: | 24 Feb 2010 05:23 |
FoR Codes: | 11 MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES > 1117 Public Health and Health Services > 111701 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health @ 50% 11 MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES > 1114 Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine > 111403 Paediatrics @ 50% |
SEO Codes: | 92 HEALTH > 9203 Indigenous Health > 920301 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health - Determinants of Health @ 50% 92 HEALTH > 9205 Specific Population Health (excl. Indigenous Health) > 920501 Child Health @ 50% |
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