Ueno Tomio
Affiliate Master
Yamaguchi University
Effect of Enteral Nutrition on Intestinal Permeability in Critically III Patients -Preliminary Report-
The bulletin of the Yamaguchi Medical School Volume 42 Issue 3-4
Page 99-103
published_at 1995-12
Title
Effect of Enteral Nutrition on Intestinal Permeability in Critically III Patients -Preliminary Report-
Creators
Suzuki Takashi
Creators
Soejima Yoshiyuki
Creators
Murakami Fujio
Creators
Ueda Toshiko
Creators
Tateishi Akiko
Source Identifiers
Creator Keywords
Enteral nutrition
Intestinal permeability
Endotoxin
Endotoxemia
Lactulose-mannitol differential sugar absorption
It has been reported that intravenous injection of endotoxin increases intestinal permeability in human, and that total parenteral nutrition promotes bacterial translocation from the gut. In the present study, the effect of enteral nutrition on intestinal permeability and its relationship to plasma endotoxin levels were evaluated. Intestinal permeability was assessed in six stressed patients who were intubated for acute respiratory failure. The examination was performed before and after 7 days of feeding using the dual-sugar intestinal permeability test, with lactulose and mannitol as markers. Plasma endotoxin levels were also measured by the endotoxin-specific colorimetric limulus test before and after an enteral diet. The mean±SD lactulose to mannitol excretion ratio (L/M ratio), a permeability index, before enteral nutrition was 0.108±0.111, which was extremely high compaired to reported value of healthy volunteers. This value was declined to 0.042±0.067 after enteral nutrition, although p value (0.068) was not reached statistical significance. The mean plasma endotoxin level, which may have been related to concomitant respiratory infection, was 10.08±2.80 pg/ml before, and 18.48±12.39 pg/ml after enteral feeding (p=0.075). Despite the elevation of endotoxin, there was a tendency to meke intestinal permeability improve after enteral feeding. This suggests that the increased progression of intestinal permeability due to endotoxemia, fasting, and acute stress might be prevented by enteral feeding.
Languages
eng
Resource Type
departmental bulletin paper
Publishers
Yamaguchi University Graduate School of Medicine
Date Issued
1995-12
File Version
Version of Record
Access Rights
open access
Relations
[ISSN]0513-1812
[NCID]AA00594272
Schools
医学部