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  • Title: [Increased intestinal permeability to 51 Cr-EDTA among children with persistent diarrhea].
    Author: Sawamura R, Fernandes MI, Troncon LE, Iazigi N.
    Journal: Arq Gastroenterol; 1997; 34(1):55-61. PubMed ID: 9458961.
    Abstract:
    Persistent diarrhea, a condition highly prevalent in developing countries, causes different morphological and functional alterations of the mucosa of the small intestine, including increased permeability to different test molecules. In the present study we investigate for the first time the intestinal permeability to 51Cr-EDTA of Brazilian children with persistent diarrhea. The test of 51Cr-EDTA absorption was performed in 13 control children and in 14 children with persistent diarrhea by offering 50 microCi of the test substance by the oral route, with later detection of radioactivity excreted in 24-hour urine. There was a statistically significant difference between the control group (median = 1.26; range = 0.20-3.31%) and the group with persistent diarrhea (median = 4.68; range = 1.40-10.29%). Using the minimum and maximum values detected in the control group as the normal reference standard for the test of urinary 51Cr-EDTA absorption, we observed that 61.5% of the patients with persistent diarrhea showed altered results. Among the patients with persistent diarrhea, 51Cr-EDTA excretion was significantly higher in the group fed a protein hydrolysate diet and/or total parenteral nutrition than in the group that did not receive this diet. In four patients with persistent diarrhea, the test was performed after clinical recovery, with a fall in the excretion levels in all cases. On the basis of these data, we may conclude that: 1) in persistent diarrhea there must be alteration of intestinal permeability that might permit an increased entry of local alimentary antigens, with subsequent sensitization and allergic enteropathy, contributing to the perpetuation of the diarrhea, malabsorption and malnutrition cycle; 2) the 51Cr-EDTA test may be useful as an indicator of severity in persistent diarrhea; 3) alteration of intestinal permeability is a secondary phenomenon in persistent diarrhea, with normalization occurring after reconstruction of the intestinal barrier.
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