Small bowel review: Part I
- PMID: 9347167
- DOI: 10.1155/1997/101569
Small bowel review: Part I
Abstract
Significant advances have been made in the study of the small bowel. Part I of this two-part review of the small bowel examines carbohydrates, including brush border membrane hydrolysis and sugar transport; amino acids, dipeptides, proteins and food allergy, with a focus on glutamine, peptides and macromolecules, and nucleosides, nucleotides and polyamines; salt and water absorption, and diarrhea, including antidiarrheal therapy and oral rehydration treatment; lipids (digestion and absorption, fatty acid binding proteins, intracellular metabolism, lipoproteins and bile acids); and metals (eg, iron) and vitamins.
Similar articles
-
Small bowel review: normal physiology part 1.Dig Dis Sci. 2001 Dec;46(12):2567-87. doi: 10.1023/a:1012794505897. Dig Dis Sci. 2001. PMID: 11768247 Review.
-
Is intestinal peptide transport energized by a proton gradient?Am J Physiol. 1985 Aug;249(2 Pt 1):G153-60. doi: 10.1152/ajpgi.1985.249.2.G153. Am J Physiol. 1985. PMID: 2992286 Review.
-
Superficial or membrane digestion of peptides in dinitrophenol-inhibited rat small intestine.Clin Sci (Lond). 1979 Aug;57(2):217-20. doi: 10.1042/cs0570217. Clin Sci (Lond). 1979. PMID: 573188
-
[The lipid metabolism of the small intestine and its correlation to the lipid and lipoprotein metabolism of the total organism].Acta Med Austriaca Suppl. 1975;2:1-49. Acta Med Austriaca Suppl. 1975. PMID: 1065179 German.
-
Nucleosides are efficiently absorbed by Na(+)-dependent transport across the intestinal brush border membrane in veal calves.J Dairy Sci. 2002 Sep;85(9):2308-14. doi: 10.3168/jds.S0022-0302(02)74311-7. J Dairy Sci. 2002. PMID: 12362464