2458 PART 10 Disorders of the Gastrointestinal System
Other unusual causes of this form of gastritis include sarcoidosis, idiopathic granulomatous gastritis, and eosinophilic granulomas involving
the stomach. Establishing the specific etiologic agent in this form of
gastritis can be difficult, at times requiring repeat endoscopy with
biopsy and cytology. Occasionally, a surgically obtained full-thickness
biopsy of the stomach may be required to exclude malignancy.
Russell body gastritis (RBG) is a mucosal lesion of unknown etiology that has a pseudotumoral endoscopic appearance. Histologically, it
is defined by the presence of numerous plasma cells containing Russell
bodies (RBs) that express kappa and lambda light chains. Only 10 cases
have been reported, and 7 of these have been associated with H. pylori
infection. The lesion can be confused with a neoplastic process, but it
is benign in nature, and the natural history of the lesion is not known.
There have been cases of resolution of the lesion when H. pylori was
eradicated.
Immune checkpoint inhibitor–induced enterocolitis and gastritis
are recognized sequelae of these oncologic therapies. The gastritis
typically occurs later in the course of therapy. The diagnosis is made
by the histologic findings on gastric mucosal biopsies obtained endoscopically. This is an important diagnosis to make since therapy with
glucocorticoids and potentially IL-6 receptor blockers will be required.
Moreover, this side effect will have an effect on the oncologic therapy
prescribed.
■ MÉNÉTRIER’S DISEASE
Ménétrier’s disease (MD) is a very rare gastropathy characterized by
large, tortuous mucosal folds. MD has an average age of onset of
40–60 years with a male predominance. The differential diagnosis
of large gastric folds includes ZES, malignancy (lymphoma, infiltrating carcinoma), infectious etiologies (CMV, histoplasmosis, syphilis,
tuberculosis), gastritis polyposa profunda, and infiltrative disorders
such as sarcoidosis. MD is most commonly confused with large or
multiple gastric polyps (prolonged PPI use) or familial polyposis syndromes. The mucosal folds in MD are often most prominent in the
body and fundus, sparing the antrum. Histologically, massive foveolar
hyperplasia (hyperplasia of surface and glandular mucous cells) and a
marked reduction in oxyntic glands and parietal cells and chief cells are
noted. This hyperplasia produces the prominent folds observed. The
pits of the gastric glands elongate and may become extremely dilated
and tortuous. Although the lamina propria may contain a mild chronic
inflammatory infiltrate including eosinophils and plasma cells, MD is
not considered a form of gastritis. The etiology of this unusual clinical
picture in children is often CMV, but the etiology in adults is unknown.
Overexpression of the growth factor TGF-α has been demonstrated in
patients with MD. The overexpression of TGF-α in turn results in overstimulation of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) pathway
and increased proliferation of mucus cells, resulting in the observed
foveolar hyperplasia.
The clinical presentation in adults is usually insidious and progressive. Epigastric pain, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, peripheral edema,
and weight loss are signs and symptoms in patients with MD. Occult GI
bleeding may occur, but overt bleeding is unusual and, when present,
is due to superficial mucosal erosions. In fact, bleeding is more often
seen in one of the common mimics of MD, gastric polyposis. Twenty
to 100% of patients (depending on time of presentation) develop a
protein-losing gastropathy due to hypersecretion of gastric mucus
accompanied by hypoalbuminemia and edema. Gastric acid secretion
is usually reduced or absent because of the decreased parietal cells.
Large gastric folds are readily detectable by either radiographic (barium meal) or endoscopic methods. Endoscopy with deep mucosal
biopsy, preferably full thickness with a snare technique, is required
to establish the diagnosis and exclude other entities that may present
similarly. A nondiagnostic biopsy may lead to a surgically obtained
full-thickness biopsy to exclude malignancy. Although MD is considered premalignant by some, the risk of neoplastic progression is not
defined. Complete blood count, serum gastrin, serum albumin, CMV
and H. pylori serology, and pH testing of gastric aspirate during endoscopy should be included as part of the initial evaluation of patients with
large gastric folds.
TREATMENT
Ménétrier’s Disease
Medical therapy with anticholinergic agents, prostaglandins, PPIs,
prednisone, somatostatin analogues (octreotide), and H2
receptor
antagonists yields varying results. Ulcers should be treated with
a standard approach. The discovery that MD is associated with
overstimulation of the EGFR pathway has led to the successful
use of the EGF inhibitory antibody, cetuximab, in these patients.
Specifically, four of seven patients who completed a 1-month trial
with this agent demonstrated near complete histologic remission
and improvement in symptoms. Cetuximab is now considered the
first-line treatment for MD, leaving partial or total gastrectomy for
severe disease with persistent and substantial protein loss despite
therapy with this agent.
■ FURTHER READING
Bindu S et al: Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs)
and organ damage: A current perspective. Biochem Pharmacol
180:114147, 2020.
Bjarnason I et al: Mechanisms of damage to the gastrointestinal
tract from nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Gastroenterology
154:500, 2018.
Brandi ML et al: Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1: Latest insights.
Endocr Rev 42:133, 2021.
Chey WD et al: ACG clinical guideline: Treatment of Helicobacter
pylori infection. Am J Gastroenterol 112:212, 2017.
Engevik AC et al: The physiology of the gastric parietal cell. Physiol
Rev 100:573, 2019.
Jensen RT, Ito T: Gastrinoma; Endotext [internet]. South Dartmouth,
MA, 2020. https://europepmc.org/article/NBK/nbk279075.
Kavitt RT et al: Diagnosis and treatment of peptic ulcer disease. Am
J Med 132:447, 2019.
Pennelli G et al: Gastritis: Update on etiological features and histological practice approach. Pathologica 112:153, 2020.
Savarino V et al: Proton pump inhibitors: Use and misuse in the clinical setting. Expert Rev Clin Pharmacol 11:1123, 2018.
Yao X, Smolka AJ: Gastric parietal cell physiology and Helicobacter
pylori-induced disease. Gastroenterology 156:2158, 2019.
325 Disorders of Absorption
Deborah C. Rubin
A wide range of diseases affect gastrointestinal (GI) absorptive function and may result in malabsorption syndromes. These disorders
affect one or more of the three phases of enteral nutrient processing.
Luminal digestion is initiated by lingual and gastric lipase and gastric pepsin, and continues in the small bowel by the actions of pancreatic enzymes and bile salts. Small intestinal mucosal digestion
and absorption are mediated by enterocyte brush border enzymes
including disaccharidases, enterokinases, and peptidases, which digest
nutrients upon contact, and by mixed micelles containing lipids and
bile salts. Protein and carbohydrate digestive products are transported
into the enterocyte by carriers and transporters, and lipids enter by
diffusion mediated by micelles. Once in the enterocyte, nutrients may
be reprocessed for post mucosal absorption and entry into lymphatics
(long-chain triglycerides as part of chylomicrons) or are transported
into the bloodstream. Malabsorptive diseases or syndromes can be
classified by their effects on one or more of these three phases of
absorption (Table 325-1).
2459 Disorders of Absorption CHAPTER 325
and present with isolated iron deficiency, or may cause diffuse intestinal mucosal disease, affecting the absorption of multiple nutrients and
causing a constellation of symptoms and clinical presentations.
Definition of Diarrhea Diarrhea is the most common symptom
associated with disorders of absorption. For most patients, diarrhea as
a symptom is defined as an increase in stool number or frequency, or a
change in consistency. Because normal bowel patterns may vary from
as many as two to four bowel movements per day to one stool per week,
it is critical to use an objective measure of diarrhea to help direct evaluation. In health, stool volume or weight is <200 mL or <200 g respectively in 24 h. Collection of stool for weight/volume determination is
one of the most useful tools for an evaluation of diarrhea. In particular,
a 72-h collection for weight/volume and fecal fat determination is the
gold standard for documenting the presence of steatorrhea, or fatty
stool. Steatorrhea, defined as increased stool fat excretion to >7% of
dietary fat, is a common manifestation of malabsorption. Steatorrhea
often results in large, bulky, and malodorous stools. Malabsorption
of single nutrients like lactose may result in an osmotic diarrhea, in
which the osmotically active unabsorbed nutrient causes fluid to be
drawn into the GI tract lumen. Malabsorptive diarrhea frequently is
precipitated by eating and resolves or significantly decreases at night,
with fasting, and thus can frequently be distinguished from secretory
diarrheas, for example from infectious causes such as bacterial enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli. In this circumstance, intestinal fluid and
electrolyte secretion is stimulated by enterotoxin and will continue
even during fasting.
OVERVIEW: NUTRIENT DIGESTION
AND ABSORPTION
Luminal digestive processes begin in the mouth and proceed throughout the GI tract, mediated by salivary amylase, lingual and gastric
lipases, gastric acid, pancreatic enzymes, and bile salts. As nutrients are
digested in the lumen of the proximal GI tract, they are further processed by enterocyte brush border enzymes including disaccharidases
such as lactase and sucrase-isomaltase, which produce monosaccharides, and peptidases, which hydrolyze polypeptides into tripeptides
and dipeptides and amino acids. Lipids in mixed micelles are then
absorbed into enterocytes.
The surface area of the small bowel, which is normally 6–12 ft
long, is further enhanced by circular folds, villi, and microvilli. Following uptake into enterocytes, nutrients are further processed and
transported into the lymphatics or into the portal circulation for use
by other cells throughout the body. The intestine is also presented
with 7–9 L of fluid daily, a volume comprising dietary fluid intake
(1–2 L/day) and salivary, gastric, pancreatic, biliary, and intestinal
fluid (6–7 L/day). In health, almost all of this fluid is reabsorbed by the
small bowel and colon, resulting in a normal stool volume of <200 mL
or stool weight of <200 g.
■ SPECIFIC NUTRIENTS
Lipids Lipid absorption is a complex process that requires hydrolysis by pancreatic enzymes and bile salts for physiochemical dispersion
of fats, followed by absorption of processed lipid nutrients dispersed
in bile salt–mixed micelles across the intestinal epithelium. Bile acids
are synthesized in the liver, secreted into the intestinal lumen, and
constantly recirculated by absorption in the ileum. The ileum expresses
fibroblast growth factor 19 (FGF19), which is a physiologic bile acid
sensor. FGF19 is secreted from the ileum into the bloodstream in
response to bile acid flux and negatively regulates hepatic bile acid
synthesis by affecting the transcription of hepatic CYP7A1.
Thus assimilation of dietary lipid requires three integrated processes: an intraluminal or digestive phase, a mucosal or absorptive
phase, and a delivery or postabsorptive phase (Table 325-2).
Gastric lipases begin the lipolytic process. Following entry into
the small bowel, long-chain triglycerides, with carbon lengths >12
and that are the major component of dietary lipid, are hydrolyzed by
pancreatic lipases into fatty acids and monoglyceride during a process
TABLE 325-1 Classification of Malabsorption Syndromes
Inadequate digestion
Postgastrectomya
Deficiency or inactivation of pancreatic lipase
Exocrine pancreatic insufficiency
Chronic pancreatitis
Pancreatic carcinoma
Cystic fibrosis
Pancreatic insufficiency—congenital or acquired
Gastrinoma—acid inactivation of lipase
Drugs—orlistat
Reduced intraduodenal bile-acid concentration/impaired micelle formation
Liver disease
Parenchymal liver disease
Cholestatic liver disease
Bacterial overgrowth in small intestine:
Anatomic stasis Functional stasis
Afferent loop Diabetesa
Stasis/blind Sclerodermaa
Loop/strictures/fistulae Intestinal pseudo-obstruction
Interrupted enterohepatic circulation of bile salts
Ileal resection
Crohn’s disease
Drugs (binding or precipitating bile salts)—neomycin, cholestyramine, calcium
carbonate
Impaired mucosal absorption/mucosal loss or defect
Intestinal resection or bypassa
Inflammation, infiltration, or infection:
Crohn’s diseasea Celiac disease
Amyloidosis Collagenous sprue
Sclerodermaa Whipple’s diseasea
Lymphomaa Radiation enteritisa
Eosinophilic enteritis Folate and vitamin B12 deficiency
Mastocytosis Infections—giardiasis
Tropical sprue Graft vs host disease
Genetic disorders
Disaccharidase deficiency
Agammaglobulinemia
Abetalipoproteinemia
Hartnup disease
Cystinuria
Impaired nutrient delivery to and/or from intestine:
Lymphatic obstruction Circulatory disorders
Lymphomaa Congestive heart failure
Lymphangiectasia Constrictive pericarditis
Mesenteric artery atherosclerosis
Vasculitis
Endocrine and metabolic disorders
Diabetesa
Hypoparathyroidism
Adrenal insufficiency
Hyperthyroidism
Carcinoid syndrome
a
Malabsorption caused by more than one mechanism.
Disorders of absorption also have diverse clinical presentations. For
example, the deficiency of a single brush border membrane protein
such as lactase causes symptoms of diarrhea by affecting the absorption
of one nutrient, lactose. Celiac sprue may be localized to the duodenum
2460 PART 10 Disorders of the Gastrointestinal System
called lipolysis (Fig. 325-1). Long-chain free fatty acids are dispersed
by bile salts into mixed micelles, which contact the brush border and
permit fatty acid absorption into enterocytes across this specialized
apical membrane. The other two types of fatty acids that compose fats,
medium-chain and short-chain fatty acids, are soluble in the unstirred
water layer. Medium-chain triglycerides with carbon chain lengths of
8–12 are found in coconut oil. Long-chain fatty acids are re-esterified
to triglycerides in enterocytes, packaged into chylomicrons that contain apolipoproteins on the surface, which are subsequently secreted
into the extracellular space, and because of their size, are excluded
from capillaries and enter the lymphatics. Medium-chain triglycerides
do not require micelle formation or pancreatic lipolysis as they are
directly absorbed intact from the small bowel into the bloodstream,
and short-chain fatty acids (carbon length <8) are produced by and
absorbed in the colon.
Carbohydrates Dietary carbohydrate consists of starch, sucrose,
lactose, maltose, and monosaccharides such as glucose and fructose.
Starch is digested by salivary α-amylase in the mouth, followed by
pancreatic amylase. The main products include maltotriose, maltose,
and α-dextrins. These are further digested on the brush border membrane by disaccharidases such as glucoamylase and sucrase-isomaltase.
Dietary lactose is digested by brush border lactase, sucrose by sucrase,
and trehalose by trehalase. The final digested products are glucose,
fructose, and galactose, which are transported into the enterocyte by
transporters such as SLCA5 (formerly SGLT-1), which transports glucose or galactose in a sodium-dependent manner, and GLUT-5, which
transports fructose by facilitated diffusion. Glucose, galactose, and
fructose exit the cell via GLUT-2. Triglycerides
Lipolysis Micellar
Solubilization
with Bile Acid
Absorption
Fatty acids
To tissues
for utilization
of fat Cholesterol
Phospholipid
β–Lipoprotein
Triglycerides
β-Monoglyceride
β-Monoglyceride
Fatty acids
Delivery
Pancreas Liver Jejunal Mucosa
(1) Esterification
Lymphatics
(2) Chylomicron
formation
FIGURE 325-1 Schematic representation of lipid digestion and absorption. Dietary lipid is in the form of
long-chain triglycerides. The overall process can be divided into (1) a digestive phase that includes both
lipolysis and micelle formation requiring pancreatic lipase and conjugated bile acids, respectively, in the
duodenum; (2) an absorptive phase for mucosal uptake and re-esterification; and (3) a postabsorptive phase
that includes chylomicron formation and exit from the intestinal epithelial cell via lymphatics. (Courtesy of
John M. Dietschy, MD; with permission.)
TABLE 325-2 Defects in Lipid Digestion and Absorption in Steatorrhea
PHASE, PROCESS
PATHOPHYSIOLOGIC
DEFECT DISEASE EXAMPLE
Digestive
Lipolysis formation Decreased lipase
secretion
Chronic pancreatitis
Micelle formation Decreased intraduodenal
bile acids
Absorptive
Mucosal uptake and
re-esterification
Mucosal dysfunction Celiac disease
Postabsorptive
Chylomicron formation Absent β-lipoproteins Abetalipoproteinemia
Delivery from intestine Abnormal lymphatics Intestinal
lymphangiectasia
Proteins Dietary protein digestion begins in the stomach by pepsin.
Pancreatic proteases including endopeptidases, exopeptidases, and
trypsin are activated in the small-bowel lumen. Trypsinogen is activated by brush border enterokinase to generate active trypsin. Trypsin
in turn activates chymotrypsinogen to chymotrypsin, proelastase to
elastase, and procarboxypeptidases to carboxypeptidases A and B.
These enzymes digest protein into di peptides, tripeptides, larger polypeptides, or free amino acids. At the brush border, peptidases digest
larger peptides into dipeptides and tripeptides or free amino acids,
which enter the enterocyte via specialized carriers. Most dipeptides
and tripeptides are further metabolized intracellularly by cytoplasmic
peptidase into amino acids, which directly enter the bloodstream via
carriers in the basolateral membrane. Small amounts of dipeptides and
tripeptides may also enter the bloodstream.
■ LUMINAL PHASE OF DIGESTION
The luminal phase of digestion begins in the mouth, starting with
mastication and lipase secretion by the tongue and salivary glands.
The stomach continues the luminal digestive process, via gastric acid,
gastric lipase, and pepsin secretion as well as mechanical trituration
of contents. In the small-bowel lumen, pancreatic enzymes (amylase,
lipases, carboxypeptidase, trypsin, and other endopeptidases) contribute to carbohydrate, lipid, and protein digestion, respectively. Bile salts
produced by the liver are secreted into the intestinal lumen (and reabsorbed in the ileum via the enterohepatic circulation) and are required
for efficient lipid absorption.
Disorders That Affect the Luminal Phase of Digestion The
luminal phase may be disrupted by disorders of gastric and intestinal
motility including the sequelae of gastric surgery, systemic diseases
such as scleroderma, or endocrine disorders such as diabetes mellitus, pancreatic diseases leading to pancreatic insufficiency with
reduced pancreatic enzyme secretion, or luminal bile salt deficiency
caused by hepatobiliary disease, ileal disease, or small-bowel bacterial
overgrowth.
Gastric Resection Surgical procedures that remove or bypass part
of the stomach and duodenal bulb such as Roux-en-Y gastric bypass for
weight loss, or resection of the gastric antrum and duodenal bulb with
creation of a Billroth II anastomosis for treatment of peptic ulcer disease, result in rapid gastric emptying into the jejunum, which leads to
diarrhea and weight loss due to inadequate mixing of luminal nutrients
with bile and pancreatic secretions.
Disordered Intestinal Motility Hyperthyroidism may cause
diarrhea and malabsorption due to increased intestinal motility with
rapid transit, also resulting in inadequate nutrient mixing with pancreaticobiliary secretions. Long-standing diabetes mellitus may result
in damage to the enteric nervous system resulting
in increased motility and diarrhea, or reduced
motility and constipation. Disorders that affect
the intestinal smooth muscle such as connective
tissue disorders including scleroderma may have
profound effects on GI motility.
Pancreatic Disorders Chronic pancreatitis
(see Chap. 348) may result in a marked reduction in pancreatic enzyme secretion and pancreatic insufficiency, with subsequent fat, protein,
and carbohydrate malabsorption. Patients with
chronic pancreatitis present with steatorrhea, or
fatty stools, which are often voluminous, bulky,
and malodorous. Patients with steatorrhea also
develop deficiency of fat-soluble vitamins including vitamins A, E, and most commonly, vitamins
D and K, which depend on the same lipid absorption mechanisms, and thus are malabsorbed
along with dietary fat. Weight loss is common.
For a discussion of causes of acute and chronic
pancreatitis, please see Chap. 348.
2461 Disorders of Absorption CHAPTER 325
Disorders That Result in Luminal Bile Salt Deficiency Bile
acid synthesis and the enterohepatic circulation (Fig. 325-2): Bile
acids are synthesized from cholesterol in the liver. The two primary
bile acids are cholic acid and chenodeoxycholic acid. These are conjugated in the liver to taurine and glycine and are secreted into bile
ducts, stored in the gallbladder, and then delivered to the intestinal
lumen. Conjugation prevents bile acids from passive diffusion in the
small-bowel lumen, retaining bile acid concentrations required for
lipid absorption. Bile acids emulsify fats and fat-soluble vitamins to
facilitate their absorption. Bile acids are efficiently reabsorbed in the
ileum into the portal circulation and are extracted by the liver in a
process called enterohepatic circulation (Fig. 325-2). Small amounts
are deconjugated in the ileum by bacteria, or pass into the colon and
are deconjugated and metabolized by colonic bacteria to become secondary bile acids. The two major secondary bile acids are lithocholic
acid and deoxycholic acid.
Processes that affect any of the above pathways may result in luminal
bile salt deficiency and malabsorption. Thus, hepatobiliary diseases,
intestinal ileal resection, extensive disease such as Crohn’s disease, and
small-bowel bacterial overgrowth may result in luminal bile salt deficiency and malabsorption (Table 325-3).
Hepatobiliary Disease Hepatic disorders that result in decreased
bile acid synthesis due to hepatocyte dysfunction or reduced secretion
of bile into the gut lumen caused by diseases of the bile ducts such as
primary sclerosing cholangitis or primary biliary cirrhosis may result
in luminal bile salt deficiency and fat malabsorption. These are discussed in Chap. 346.
Ileal Resection or Ileal Disease Diseases that involve the ileal
mucosa or that result in ileal resection may lead to reduced recycling of
bile acids by the enterohepatic circulation and increased entry into and
concentration of bile acids in the colon, which produces a secretory
diarrhea, or malabsorption due to inadequate bile acid concentrations
in the small-bowel lumen. In general, resection or disease involving
<100 cm of ileum results in bile acid spillage into the colon; resections of >100 cm result in loss of bile acids that exceed liver synthetic
capacity, and malabsorption becomes the dominant pathophysiologic
mechanism for diarrhea, due to bile acid deficiency (Table 325-4). The
most common disorder of the GI tract that targets the ileum is Crohn’s
disease (Chap. 326), which is a chronic inflammatory disorder that
may involve the entire GI tract, but most commonly the ileum and
colon. If severe or refractory to treatment, Crohn’s disease may lead to
chronic inflammation, marked epithelial dysfunction, and structuring
and fibrosis, and surgical resection may be required to treat smallbowel obstruction or refractory disease.
Primary Bile Acid Diarrhea A subset of patients with functional
diarrhea or irritable bowel syndrome with diarrhea have been recently
shown to have bile acid malabsorption. Although the mechanisms are
still being elucidated, reduced FGF19 secretion by ileal enterocytes has
been observed. FGF19 regulates serum 7alpha-hydroxy-4-cholesten3-one (C4) levels; reductions in circulating FGF19 lead to increased
hepatic bile acid synthesis via increased C4 expression. Chronic diarrhea results from increased bile acid spillage into the colon, which
induces a secretory diarrhea.
Treatment Bile acid sequestrants are effective in reducing diarrhea
by binding bile acids to prevent spillage into the colon. Hepatic synthesis of bile acids is sufficient to maintain intraluminal concentrations
that are adequate for fat absorption.
Small-Bowel Bacterial Overgrowth The intestine contains a
rich microbiome. Bacterial titers increase along the horizontal axis of
the gut from duodenum to ileum. However, intestinal disorders affecting motility or causing stasis of bowel contents may lead to small-bowel
bacterial overgrowth. These include scleroderma bowel, chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction, the creation of blind surgical loops such as
Billroth II anastomosis, small-bowel strictures, or fibrosis from inflammatory disorders such as Crohn’s disease, and diffuse diverticulosis
(Fig. 325-3). Surgical resection of the ileocecal valve increases ileal
bacterial counts from the colon. Bacterial overgrowth causes deconjugation of bile acids, which facilitates their absorption in the proximal
bowel and results in luminal bile acid deficiency, which in turn causes
malabsorptive diarrhea with steatorrhea. Bacterial overgrowth may
also damage the brush border and result in carbohydrate maldigestion
and short-chain fatty acid production in the colon, with diarrhea and
gas. These patients are also at risk for B12 deficiency due to bacterial
metabolism of B12 resulting in macrocytic anemia and peripheral neuropathy. In contrast, elevated serum folate levels may also be observed,
derived from bacterial synthesis of folate.
Small-bowel bacterial overgrowth has also been observed in patients
with diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome. The underlying
Cholesterol
Bile acids
0.5 g synthesized
per day
NORMAL
Bile acid
pool size
4.0 g
[Bile acids]
>4 mM
Jejunum
Ileum
Na
0.5 g
Bile acids
excreted per day
COLON
FIGURE 325-2 Schematic representation of the enterohepatic circulation of bile
acids. Bile-acid synthesis is cholesterol catabolism and occurs in the liver. Bile
acids are secreted in bile and are stored in the gallbladder between meals and
at night. Food in the duodenum induces the release of cholecystokinin, a potent
stimulus for gallbladder contraction resulting in bile-acid entry into the duodenum.
Bile acids are primarily absorbed via an Na-dependent transport process that is
located only in the ileum. A relatively small quantity of bile acids (~500 mg) is not
absorbed in a 24-h period and is lost in stool. Fecal bile-acid losses are matched by
bile-acid synthesis. The bile-acid pool (the total amount of bile acids in the body) is
~4 g and is circulated twice during each meal or six to eight times in a 24-h period.
TABLE 325-3 Defects in Enterohepatic Circulation of Bile Acids
PROCESS
PATHOPHYSIOLOGIC
DEFECT DISEASE EXAMPLE
Synthesis Decreased hepatic
function
Cirrhosis
Biliary secretion Altered canalicular
function
Primary biliary cirrhosis
Maintenance of
conjugated bile acids
Bacterial overgrowth Jejunal diverticulosis
Reabsorption Abnormal ileal function Crohn’s disease
TABLE 325-4 Comparison of Bile Acid and Fatty Acid Diarrhea
BILE ACID DIARRHEA FATTY ACID DIARRHEA
Extent of ileal disease Limited Extensive
Ileal bile-acid absorption Reduced Reduced
Fecal bile-acid excretion Increased Increased
Fecal bile-acid loss
compensated by hepatic
synthesis
Yes No
Bile-acid pool size Normal Reduced
Intraduodenal (bile acid) Normal Reduced
Steatorrhea None or mild >20 g
Response to cholestyramine Yes No
Response to low-fat diet No Yes
2462 PART 10 Disorders of the Gastrointestinal System
mechanisms are unclear, but treatment of bacterial overgrowth leads
to resolution of symptoms in a subset of irritable bowel syndrome
patients.
Diagnosis Duodenal aspirate for bacterial titers is the gold standard
but is not generally available to most practitioners. Breath hydrogen
testing with administration of lactulose, a nondigestible disaccharide, is widely available but must be interpreted carefully to avoid
false-positive results. Many clinicians choose to treat empirically with
antibiotics (see Treatment) and observe for resolution of symptoms.
Treatment When possible, surgical correction of blind loops,
endoscopic or surgical treatment of strictures, and removal of large
diverticula can be pursued for definitive therapy, in addition to treatment of underlying disorders such as Crohn’s disease to avoid recurrent
stricture formation or fibrosis. Other disorders such as scleroderma or
other diffuse motility disorders may not be easily treated. In these circumstances, treatment with the nonabsorbable antibiotic, rifaximin, or
with other antibiotics such as metronidazole, doxycycline, amoxicillinclavulinic acid, or cephalosporins for several weeks is often pursued.
Patients may require retreatment or even chronic therapy with rotating
antibiotics depending on the severity of symptoms.
■ MUCOSAL PHASE OF DIGESTION
AND ABSORPTION
The intestinal epithelium (also known as the mucosa) plays a critical
role in continued digestion of nutrients and absorption from the intestinal lumen into the bloodstream and lymphatics.
The small-bowel epithelial or mucosal digestive and absorptive
phase is mediated by enterocytic brush border enzymes, including
peptidases and hydrolases. Brush border enterokinase is required for
the conversion of pancreatic trypsinogen to trypsin, which further
activates trypsinogen and other pancreatic protease proenzymes. The
brush border membrane of the small-bowel epithelium expresses
a wide variety of disaccharidases, peptidases, and other hydrolases
that continue the digestive process for carbohydrates and proteins,
with enzymatic digestion of disaccharides to monosaccharides and
dipeptidases to amino acids, which are then absorbed by specific
transporters. Long-chain fatty acids are re-esterified to triglycerides in
enterocytes, packaged into chylomicrons with apolipoproteins on the
surface, which are subsequently secreted into the extracellular space,
and because of their size, are excluded from capillaries and enter the
lymphatics.
INTESTINAL MUCOSAL DISORDERS
■ DISORDERS OF ENTEROCYTE CARBOHYDRATE
TRANSPORTERS AND ENZYME DEFICIENCIES
Lactose Intolerance Due to Lactase Deficiency This is the
most common brush border disaccharidase deficiency and is a frequent
cause of diarrhea, abdominal pain, gassiness, and bloating. Lactose is
present in many dairy products but is also a “hidden” component of a
vast number of processed foods.
Lactose malabsorption can result from lactase deficiency, which is
regulated by primary genetic mechanisms (adult-type hypolactasia)
or secondary due to damage to the epithelial (mucosal) lining of the
gut, from infections (viral, bacterial, or parasitic) or from intestinal
mucosal diseases. Congenital lactase deficiency is very rare and is an
autosomal recessive disorder. Hypolactasia in adulthood is very common throughout the world and is considered to be the genetic wildtype; lactase persistence results from a C to T mutation (LACTASE
LCT-13910CT and LCT-13910TT) and adults with hypolactasia have
absence of this “persistence” allele. Lactose is metabolized by lactase
FIGURE 325-3 Barium contrast small-intestinal radiologic examinations. A. Normal individual. B. Celiac disease. C. Jejunal diverticulosis. D. Crohn’s disease. (Courtesy of
Morton Burrell, MD, Yale University; with permission.)
2463 Disorders of Absorption CHAPTER 325
into glucose and galactose, which are both absorbed by transporters at
the enterocyte surface. Patients who are lactase deficient have elevated
luminal lactose levels upon ingestion of lactose. The mechanism for
diarrhea in lactase deficiency is complex. Undigested lactose acts as an
osmotic substance to draw fluid into the small-bowel lumen. In addition, when unabsorbed lactose enters the colon, luminal bacteria ferment lactose producing intestinal gas (hydrogen, carbon dioxide, and
methane), bloating, and abdominal pain. Luminal lactose is metabolized by bacteria into short-chain fatty acids that can be absorbed by
the colon, but watery diarrhea may occur when a large lactose load
exceeds the colon’s absorptive capacity.
Diagnosis When lactose intolerance is suspected, a common initial
approach is to institute a lactose-exclusion diet and assess for resolution
of symptoms. This is a rapid and generally effective diagnostic and therapeutic method. Patients are provided with a list of lactose-containing
foods and lactose-free alternatives. Patients are also counseled on
alternative calcium sources, because dairy-containing foods are a
major source of dietary calcium, which is important for osteoporosis
prevention.
Should the results of dietary exclusion be ambiguous, a lactosetolerance test or breath hydrogen test may prove useful. For the lactose-tolerance test, patients ingest a standardized liquid lactose solution (usually 50 g of lactose) followed by timed measurements of serum
glucose for 90 min. If lactose digestion is normal, glucose levels should
rise by >20 mg/L. Serum glucose rise <20 mg/L plus the presence of
symptoms of lactose intolerance (abdominal discomfort, gassiness,
and diarrhea) is considered a positive test. A breath hydrogen test is
performed by measuring breath hydrogen levels following ingestion of
a standardized lactose load. Breath hydrogen levels should not exceed
>20 ppm above the fasting baseline. Generally the peak occurs between
2–4 h. Both methods may be inaccurate if the patient has abnormal
gastric emptying or abnormal intestinal transit. Breath hydrogen measurements may be abnormal in the setting of bacterial overgrowth,
which may cause very similar symptoms.
Treatment Patients may elect to completely eliminate lactose from
their diets. It is very important to consider calcium and vitamin D
supplementation because elimination of milk and soft cheeses removes
important dietary sources. They also may need to consult a dietitian
for guidance about hidden lactose in prepared or other foods. An alternative is to consider using lactase supplementation, which is available
over the counter, but which may need to be titrated to avoid symptoms.
Glucose Galactose Malabsorption This rare congenital disorder is an autosomal recessive disease in which mutations occur in
the SLC5A1 gene (also known as SGLT1). SLC5A1 is a brush border
protein and member of the sodium-dependent glucose transporter
family; mutations in this gene result in malabsorption of glucose and
galactose. Gene sequencing has shown that most patients have loss
of function single-nucleotide variations. SLC5A1 actively transports
glucose or galactose coupled to sodium cotransport; patients who are
homozygous for these loss-of-function variants have severe congenital
diarrhea and death if unrecognized. Treatment focuses on eliminating
glucose- and galactose-containing foods and substituting fructosecontaining foods. Fructose is absorbed by the brush border transporter
GLUT5 by facilitated diffusion and is not dependent on SLC5A1.
Abetalipoproteinemia Abetalipoproteinemia is a rare disorder of
lipid metabolism associated with abnormal erythrocytes (acanthocytes),
neurologic symptoms, and steatorrhea (see Chap. 407). Lipolysis,
micelle formation, and lipid uptake are all normal in patients with
abetalipoproteinemia, but the re-esterified triglyceride cannot exit the
epithelial cell because of the failure to produce chylomicrons. This
disorder results from mutation of microsomal triglyceride transfer
protein, which catalyzes the transfer of triglyceride onto nascent apolipoprotein B containing particles. Mutations in MTP decrease this
transfer and decrease formation of chylomicrons. Small-intestinal
biopsy samples obtained from these rare patients in the postprandial
state reveal lipid-laden small-intestinal epithelial cells that become
normal in appearance after a 72- to 96-h fast.
■ INTESTINAL MUCOSAL DISORDERS THAT RESULT
IN MALABSORPTION OF MULTIPLE NUTRIENTS
Celiac Disease Celiac disease, also known as celiac sprue or
gluten-sensitive enteropathy, is a small intestinal enteropathy that
results from an immune response to gluten ingestion and is characterized by autoantibodies to tissue transglutaminase. Gluten is found in
foods produced from wheat, rye, barley, and some varieties of oats, and
it is a common additive to prepared foods and pharmaceuticals. Tissue
transglutaminase is involved in the pathogenesis of this disorder, as it
deamidates glutamine residues of gluten-derived peptides, facilitating
their presentation by antigen-presenting cells.
Epidemiology and Genetics The incidence and prevalence of
celiac disease have been increasing worldwide. Increased awareness
among clinicians and patients has led to increases in detection, but
there is evidence that the true incidence appears to be increasing as
well. Global prevalence has been measured at 1.4%. In the United
States, data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination survey showed seroprevalence of 0.2% in non-Hispanic black populations,
0.3% in Hispanic individuals, and 1.0% in white populations.
The prevalence of celiac disease is 10–15% in first-degree relatives.
Host genetic factors include histocompatibility locus antigens HLADQ2
and DQ8; the presence of one of the two haplotypes is necessary but
not sufficient for developing celiac disease. HLADQ2 and DQ8 are
found in 25–35% of the general population; because most carriers
never develop celiac disease, detection of these alleles is not useful for
diagnosis. However, a negative test is very useful for ruling out celiac
disease, with a negative predictive value of >99%. This is particularly
helpful in patients who self-discontinued gluten ingestion prior to
serologic or endoscopic testing.
Presentation Patients with celiac disease have a wide variety of
disease manifestations, ranging from being asymptomatic, to having
isolated iron-deficiency anemia due to duodenal disease, to severe
diarrhea, weight loss, and malabsorption of multiple nutrients with
more diffuse disease. Celiac disease primarily affects the proximal
small intestine; it may involve the duodenum only or may cause widespread jejunal disease resulting in severe symptoms.
Diarrhea, weight loss, and growth failure in children are common
presenting complaints, but additional signs and symptoms have become
increasingly recognized to be associated with celiac disease, including
bloating and irregular bowel habits, migraine headaches, and ataxia. In
addition, patients may be identified after presenting with osteoporosis,
iron-deficiency anemia, or detection of abnormal liver enzymes.
Mechanism of Diarrhea Patients with celiac disease have villus
atrophy in the proximal small intestine and thus develop steatorrhea
from mucosal malabsorption and may have lactase deficiency. However,
they also develop a secretory component due to crypt hyperplasia and
fluid hypersecretion from the crypt epithelium.
Associated Diseases Patients with celiac disease have a higher
incidence of other autoimmune disorders such as type 1 diabetes
mellitus and autoimmune thyroid disease. Dermatitis herpetiformis is
a skin disorder that is highly associated with celiac disease, characterized by a vesicular rash mediated by IgA deposits in the skin. Down
syndrome and Turner syndrome patients also have an increased risk
of celiac disease.
Diagnosis Patients are screened for celiac disease first by testing
for serum antibodies, including tissue transglutaminase IgA, antiendomysial, and deamidated anti-gliadin antibodies. Serum IgA levels are measured to detect false-negative results from IgA deficiency.
Deamidated anti-gliadin IgG antibodies or tissue transglutaminase
IgG antibodies are detectable and diagnostic in IgA-deficient patients.
The diagnosis in adults with positive antibody levels is confirmed by
endoscopy with small-intestinal biopsy. Biopsies typically show characteristic villus blunting, crypt hyperplasia, and inflammation, including
increased intraepithelial lymphocytes. The Marsh classification categorizes different types of celiac disease–related lesions and is currently
used to quantify severity of disease involvement.
2464 PART 10 Disorders of the Gastrointestinal System
Family members of patients with celiac disease are screened if symptomatic; recommendations regarding screening asymptomatic family
members are still controversial.
Complications Complications of celiac disease include refractory
celiac disease, enteropathy-associated T-cell lymphoma, hyposplenism,
and small-bowel adenocarcinoma.
Refractory Celiac Disease This complication is most common
in patients with ongoing active celiac disease, found in about 10% of
patients with persistent active disease. Patients have ongoing diarrhea
and weight loss with persistent villus atrophy on biopsy after 1 year of
following a strict gluten-free diet. These patients also have negative
celiac serology, confirming their adherence to the gluten-free diet.
Type 1 refractory celiac disease has a normal intraepithelial lymphocyte population whereas type 2 disease has clonal expansion of CD3+
intraepithelial lymphocytes that also contain a monoclonal rearrangement of the gamma chain of the T-cell receptor. Type 2 refractory
celiac disease has a worse prognosis due to its association with T-cell
lymphoma, which occurs in 33–50% of cases after 5 years. The therapy
for celiac disease–related lymphoma is intense and includes high-dose
chemotherapy and sometimes stem cell transplantation.
Small-bowel adenocarcinoma is a very rare cancer in the general
population but is increased in celiac disease patients.
Therapy and Follow-up The mainstay of celiac disease treatment
is institution of a strict gluten-free diet. This is challenging for patients
because of the widespread presence of gluten in both raw and prepared
foods, inaccurate food labeling, and cross-contamination during food
preparation. Patients must receive rigorous dietary instruction from a
dietitian and adhere lifelong to a gluten-free diet.
For those patients whose symptoms resolve, serologic follow-up
is generally recommended to confirm compliance with a gluten-free
diet. A follow-up biopsy to document complete healing of villus atrophy is also generally recommended. However, subsequent biopsies
are not recommended unless symptoms recur. For patients without
symptom resolution, a biopsy is required to determine the degree of
disease activity and to rule out other causes of persistent diarrhea and
complications such as refractory celiac disease or T-cell lymphoma.
The most common cause of residual disease activity is dietary nonadherence or inadvertent gluten exposure. These patients pursue repeat
consultation with a dietitian and efforts to reduce restaurant or other
out-of-the-home exposure or cross-contamination at home. If biopsies
are negative but symptoms persist, other causes of abdominal pain
and diarrhea that are associated with celiac disease are considered,
including irritable bowel syndrome, microscopic colitis, small-bowel
bacterial overgrowth, and lactose or fructose intolerance.
Nonceliac Gluten Sensitivity Recently a subset of patients has
been described with symptoms consistent with celiac disease but with
negative serology and negative biopsies. Upon discontinuation of gluten, they have relief of abdominal pain, diarrhea, headaches/migraines,
and other celiac disease–type symptoms. The etiology of this disorder
is unknown.
■ WHIPPLE’S DISEASE
Whipple’s disease is a chronic, multiorgan disease caused by Tropheryma whipplei, a gram-positive non-acid-fast, periodic acid–Schiff
(PAS) positive rod, which is ubiquitous in the environment. Whipple’s
disease most commonly occurs in middle-aged men. Classic Whipple’s
disease is defined by the presence of arthralgias, weight loss, diarrhea,
and abdominal pain. Other manifestations including central nervous
system (CNS) and cardiac involvement are common and occur later in
the disease. T. whipplei can be detected by polymerase chain reaction
on involved tissue and is difficult to detect in the bloodstream. The
intestinal lesion is also characterized by PAS-positive macrophages.
Clinical Presentation Arthralgias and arthritis are present for an
average of 6 years before the GI symptoms begin, consistent with a persistent and substantial lag in diagnosis, which is still a problem today.
Joint disease is present in >80% of patients. GI manifestations include
diarrhea, abdominal pain, and weight loss from malabsorption. CNS
involvement is common and may include symptoms such as psychiatric manifestations or memory problems. Dementia and encephalitis
may occur in later stages. Cardiac involvement may include endocarditis, pericarditis, and myocarditis.
Diagnosis For patients with GI manifestations, endoscopy with
biopsies is performed and tissue is tested for T. whipplei by polymerase
chain reaction. Tissue is also stained for PAS-positive macrophages and
immunohistochemistry may also be performed to detect T. whipplei.
Treatment Prolonged antibiotics are recommended although the
optimal regimen is still uncertain. Relapses are common, and often
associated with the first manifestations of CNS involvement.
■ TROPICAL SPRUE
Tropical sprue is a poorly understood syndrome that is manifested by
chronic diarrhea, steatorrhea, weight loss, and nutritional deficiencies,
including both folate and vitamin B12. Malabsorption of two unrelated
substances is required for diagnosis. This disease occurs in 8–20% of
people who have had an attack of infectious gastroenteritis in India,
and is considered by some to be a postinfectious complication. It is
prevalent in some but not all tropical areas, including southern India,
Pakistan, the Philippines, Puerto Rico, Haiti, and Cuba. It occurs in
residents of as well as visitors to these areas.
Chronic diarrhea in a tropical environment is most often caused
by infectious agents, including Giardia lamblia, Yersinia enterocolitica,
Entamoeba histolytica, C. difficile, Cryptosporidium parvum, Isospora
belli, Strongyloides stercoralis, and Cyclospora cayetanensis. Tropical
sprue should not be entertained as a possible diagnosis until the presence of cysts and trophozoites has been excluded in three stool samples. Chronic infections of the GI tract and diarrhea are discussed in
Chaps. 46, 133, 134, 163–168, and 223.
In the past few years, the term environmental enteropathy has been
introduced as the diagnosis of many patients (especially infants and
children) who had previously been diagnosed as tropical sprue. However, exact delineation of this newly designated entity is lacking.
Etiology Because tropical sprue responds to antibiotics, the consensus is that it may be caused by one or more infectious agents. Nonetheless, the etiology and pathogenesis of tropical sprue are uncertain.
First, its occurrence is not evenly distributed in all tropical areas; it is
rarely observed in Africa, Jamaica, or Southeast Asia. Second, an occasional individual does not develop symptoms of tropical sprue until
long after having left an endemic area. For this reason, celiac disease
(often referred to as celiac sprue) was originally called nontropical sprue
to distinguish it from tropical sprue. Third, multiple microorganisms
have been identified in jejunal aspirates, with relatively little consistency among studies. Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter cloacae, and
E. coli have been implicated in some studies of tropical sprue, while
other studies have favored a role for a toxin produced by one or more
of these bacteria. Fourth, the incidence of tropical sprue appears to
have decreased substantially during the past two or three decades,
perhaps in relation to improved sanitation in many tropical countries
during this time. Some have speculated that the reduced occurrence is
attributable to the wider use of antibiotics in acute diarrhea, especially
in travelers to tropical areas from temperate countries. Fifth, the role
of folic acid deficiency in the pathogenesis of tropical sprue requires
clarification. Folic acid is absorbed exclusively in the duodenum and
proximal jejunum, and most patients with tropical sprue have evidence
of folate malabsorption and depletion. Although folate deficiency can
cause changes in small-intestinal mucosa that are corrected by folate
replacement, several earlier studies reporting that tropical sprue could
be cured by folic acid did not provide an explanation for the “insult”
that was initially responsible for folate malabsorption.
The clinical pattern of tropical sprue varies in different areas of
the world (e.g., India vs Puerto Rico). Not infrequently, individuals in
southern India initially report the occurrence of acute enteritis before
the development of steatorrhea and malabsorption. In contrast, in
Puerto Rico, a more insidious onset of symptoms and a more dramatic
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