Intestinal permeability, mucosal injury, and growth faltering in Gambian infants
- PMID: 1681266
- DOI: 10.1016/0140-6736(91)91772-m
Intestinal permeability, mucosal injury, and growth faltering in Gambian infants
Abstract
There is controversy over whether children in developing countries can catch up on their growth rates after bouts of diarrhoea. A factor influencing catch-up growth is the extent and duration of mucosal injury. To explore the relation between intestinal disease and growth performance, a non-invasive test of intestinal integrity, the lactulose:mannitol permeability test, was done regularly on children aged 2-15 months, whose growth was monitored over a mean of 7.5 months. The study revealed persistent abnormalities in the small bowel mucosa of 2-15 month old Gambian infants and a negative correlation between these abnormalities and growth. Up to 43% of observed growth faltering can be explained on the basis of these long-term intestinal lesions.
Comment in
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Diarrhoea and malnutrition.Lancet. 1991 Oct 12;338(8772):921-2. Lancet. 1991. PMID: 1681274 No abstract available.
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Intestinal permeability, diet, and growth.Lancet. 1991 Nov 30;338(8779):1403-4. Lancet. 1991. PMID: 1682770 No abstract available.
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