Malabsorption-lecture
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Transcript Malabsorption-lecture
Non-neoplastic intestinal disease
Malabsorption
Paul L. Crotty
Department of Pathology
Tallaght Hospital
October 2007
Outline of lecture
Review normal digestion/absorption
How diseases interfere with the process
Tests for malabsorption
Coeliac disease
Chronic pancreatitis
Bacterial overgrowth
Malabsorption/Maldigestion
diverse disease processes
final common pathway of interference
with normal digestion and absorption of
nutrients
similar/overlapping clinical presentations
understanding normal digestion and
absorption is central to understanding
diseases that interfere with same
Normal digestion and absorption
(1) Luminal phase
(2) Mucosal phase
(3) Removal phase
As example: Triglycerides
Luminal phase: in small intestine
Pancreatic lipase: enzymatic hydrolysis into
mono-acyl glycerol and free fatty acids
Solubilisation: incorporation into micelles
with bile salts
Mucosal phase: in enterocyte cytoplasm
assembly into chylomicra with apoproteins
Removal phase: in lymphatics
Normal process of fat digestion
and absorption
Diseases interfering with
luminal phase
Pancreatic exocrine insufficiency
chronic pancreatitis
Bile salt deficiency
liver disease, especially cholestatic
bacterial overgrowth
terminal ileal disease
Other: post-gastrectomy, Zollinger-Ellison
Diseases interfering with
mucosal phase
Small bowel disease
Coeliac disease
Tropical sprue
Whipple’s disease
Crohn’s disease
Post-small bowel resection
Specific enzyme deficiency,transport protein
defects, abetalipoproteinaemia
Diseases interfering with
removal phase
Lymphatic blockage
Primary lymphangiectasia
Obstruction
Major disease entities
Coeliac disease
Chronic pancreatitis
Bacterial overgrowth
Consequences of malabsorption
Effects of excess fat in stool
Steatorrhoea: bulky, pale, foul-smelling
Nutrient deficiencies: global/specific
Energy, Protein (failure to thrive, short
stature, weight loss)
Specific deficiencies esp. fat soluble
vitamins A, D, E and K, also iron
Quantitation of fat in stool
Normal stool fat <6g/day (over range of
dietary fat from 60 to 200g)
With diarrhoea of any cause: stool fat can
rise up to 14g/day
With fat malabsorption: stool fat much
higher: 50-100g/day range
Standard: 3-5 day collection
D-xylose test
5 carbon sugar: absorbed by passive diffusion
D-xylose test is a measure of functional surface
area of small bowel
After overnight fast: 25g D-xylose given p.o
Measure serum level at 1h (normal >20mg/dl)
5h urine collection (normal >4g)
FP: incomplete collection/dehydration/renal
disease
What do you expect the result
of a D-xylose test will be in…
Chronic pancreatitis?
Coeliac disease?
Cholestatic liver disease?
Bacterial overgrowth?
Key role of duodenal biopsy
Biopsy diagnosis of specific diseases
Giardia infestation, Whipple’s disease
abetalipoproteinaemia, lymphangiectasia
Significantly blunted villi or flat mucosa
(partial or complete villous atrophy)
classically seen in untreated coeliac disease
but can also be seen in other food allergies,
rarely in viral infection, Crohn’s disease,
tropical sprue
Normal mucosa
Patient with malabsorption
with a normal duodenal biopsy
Any disease interfering with luminal phase
of absorption
chronic pancreatitis
bile salt deficiency
...but also in any primary small bowel
disease with focal involvement
Aretaeus:
The Greek work "koiliakos" used by Aretaeus had originally
meant "suffering in the bowels" when used to describe people.
Passing through Latin, 'k' became 'c' and 'oi' became 'oe'.
Dropping the Greek adjectival ending 'os' gave us the word
coeliac.
"The Coeliac Diathesis" [by Aretaeus] describes fatty diarrhoea
(steatorrhoea) for the first time and then proceeds to give an
account of several other features of the condition including loss
of weight, pallor, chronic relapsing and the way in which it
affects children as well as adults.
"If the stomach be irretentive of the food and if it pass through
undigested and crude, and nothing ascends into the body, we
call such persons coeliacs".
17 centuries later...
1888: Samuel Gee, using an identical title to Francis
Adams' translation of Aretaeus’ writings , "The
Coeliac Affection", gave the classic description of the
condition.
"to regulate the food is the main part of treatment ...
The allowance of farinaceous foods must be small ...
but if the patient can be cured at all, it must be by
means of diet."
“a child…was fed upon a quart of Dutch mussels
daily, throve wonderfully but relapsed when the
season for mussels was over. Next season, he could
not be prevailed upon to take them.”
1924: Haas: Popularised the banana diet: Essentially
a diet low in carbohydrate except for ripe bananas.
1950: Dicke: In Holland during WW2, severe bread
shortage until Swedish airplanes airdropped bread.
Coeliacs relapsed in parallel with the bread drops:
Dicke systematically showed how coeliac children
benefited dramatically when wheat, rye and oats
flour were excluded from the diet. As soon as these
were excluded, the children's appetite returned and
their absorption of fat improved so that the fatty
diarrhoea disappeared.
1950: Paulley identified villous abnormality
Later shown that the histological abnormality
normalised after gluten withdrawal and recurred
after gluten challenge
Alpha-Gliadin
Alpha-GLIADIN PEPTIDES (SYNTHETIC) FOR WHICH
THERE IS IN VIVO EVIDENCE OF ACTIVITY
31 L-G-Q-Q-Q-P-F-P-P-Q-Q-P-Y-P-Q-P-Q-P-F 49
31 L-G-Q-Q-Q-P-F-P-P-Q-Q-P-Y 43
44 P-Q-P-Q-P-F-P-S-Q-Q-P-Y 55
Ingestion of gluten (or alpha-gliadin or even
synthetic peptides) by a patient with coeliac disease
causes symptoms in few hours and villous
abnormality in 8-12 hours
Why are gliadins toxic in some patients and not in
others?
Genetic factors
First degree relatives: 10% risk
MZ twin concordance: 70-90%
HLA-identical sibs: 30-50% concordance
In Europe: Coeliac patients >95% HLA-DQ2+
(vs. 25% in non-coeliacs)
>99% of DQ2+ individuals do not have coeliac
disease
But significant component of genetic risk is
accounted for by other non-HLA genes
Immunological factors
Increased immunoglobulin production in small
intestine
Most have circulating antibodies to alpha-gliadin
...but is this cause or an effect of the disease ?
Antibodies to alpha-gliadin also seen in other
intestinal diseases
Other circulating antibodies also found in coeliacs
Current hypothesis
T-cell-mediated immunity of primary importance
in pathogenesis
Increased intraepithelial CD8+ T lymphocytes
Increased CD4+ T lymphocytes in lamina
propria
Evidence of T-cell activation
Theory of pathogenesis
In a patient with a genetic predisposition...
Some initial trigger?
Adenoviral infection early in life??
Immune response including presence of T cells
with specific ability to respond to alpha-gliadin
peptides
Theory of pathogenesis
So later when any gluten-containing food is
ingested….
Rapid T cell activation with Th1 pattern of
cytokine release causing enterocyte apoptosis
Enterocyte apoptosis leads to villous
blunting/flattening
Loss of surface area for absorption of nutrients
clinically reflected as malabsorption
Antibodies
Sensitivity
Specificity
IgA
89%
95%
IgG
99%
86%
EMA
>95%
>95%
tTG (IgA/IgG)
>95%
>95%
AGA
IgA tests negative in the 2-3% of coeliacs with IgA deficiency
Presentation
Any age: failure to thrive/short stature/wt loss
Steatorrhoea, fat-soluble vitamin deficiency
Diagnosis based on:
Clinical suspicion
Endoscopy with biopsy
Serology: circulating antibodies
Response to gluten withdrawal
Complications
Long term effects of malabsorption: chronic
vitamin deficiencies
Refractory sprue, ulcerative jejunoileitis,
enteropathy-associated T cell lymphoma:
all stages in a monoclonal lymphoid
proliferation/lymphoma
Controversial whether there is a small increase
in risk of carcinoma or not
dermatitis herpetiformis
Dermatitis herpetiformis
Chronic pancreatitis
Exocrine pancreas
Pancreatic secretions: 2-3 litres/day
Secretion co-ordinated with presence of
food in duodenum (via intestinal CCK)
Proteases (trypsin, chymotrypsin,
aminpeptidase)
Pancreatic amylase
Pancreatic lipases
How does pancreas protect
itself from self-digestion?
Secreted as inactive pro-enzymes
compartmentalised in granules
Activation of pro-enzymes requires presence of
activated trypsin
Duodenal-derived enterokinase is required to
activate trypsin
Pancreas also secretes trypsin inhibitors
Pancreatitis
Acute (mild to severe necrotising/haemorrhagic)
Chronic (result of repeated episodes of mild
acute pancreatitis)
Main causes: Alcohol, Gallstone disease
Other: medications, trauma, hypercalcaemia,
hyperlipidaemia, post-instrumentation, blockage
of duct by parasites or tumour
Pathogenesis of pancreatitis
Gallstone disease: Duct obstruction
Alcohol:
? Directly toxic to pancreas
? Altered secretions: leads to plugging of duct
? Sphincter of Oddi: alternate spasm/relaxation
In both: pancreatic self-destruction by enzymes
If chronic: scarring and loss of exocrine function
Tests of pancreatic function
Direct measure of enzymes in duodenal aspirate
Indirect tests:
Bentiromide test: NBT-PABA bond cleaved by
chymotrypsin: measure urinary PABA
metabolites
Pancrealauryl test: Fluorescein dilaurate cleaved
by pancreatic arylesterase: detect fluorescein in
urine
Malabsorption due to
pancreatic dysfunction
Clinical diagnosis
Exclusion of primary small bowel disease
Usually don’t need direct tests of pancreatic
exocrine function
Treatment: Oral enteric-coated pancreatic
enzymes
Small bowel bacterial overgrowth
Normal small bowel: Low bacterial count
Factors maintaining low count:
Bacterial input from stomach is low due to
stomach acidity
Continuous peristaltic activity
Secreted IgA
Intact ileo-caecal sphincter
Small bowel bacterial overgrowth
Factors responsible for overgrowth:
Stasis: strictures, fistulas, blind loops,
dysmotility
Achlorhydria
Immune defects
Small bowel bacterial overgrowth
How does overgrowth causes malabsorption?
Main mechanism is by inactivation of bile salts
by direct deconjugation, dehydroxylation:
interferes with micelle formation
? Also by directly inactivating enzymes
?? Competition for nutrients
Small bowel bacterial overgrowth
Tests for bacterial overgrowth:
Jejunal aspirate: bacterial count
Hydrogen breath tests: basal or after CHO load
14-C D-xylose: Urine xylose low: breath 14-CO2
Fairly common: Easily treatable
Antibiotics: Tetracycline
Outline of lecture
Review normal digestion/absorption
How diseases interfere with the process
Tests for malabsorption
Coeliac disease
Chronic pancreatitis
Bacterial overgrowth