Patients with Functional Bowel Disorder have Disaccharidase Deficiency: A Single-Center Study from Russia

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Abstract

Background Functional bowel disorder (FBD) may be caused by a decrease in disaccharidase activity. Thus, the timely diagnosis of disaccharidase deficiency could lead to a better prognosis in patients with this condition. Aim To determine the potential value of intestinal disaccharidases glucoamylase, maltase, sucrase, and lactase in understanding the etiology and pathogenesis of Methods A total of 82 FBD patients were examined. According to the Rome IV criteria (2016), 23 patients had diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), 33 had functional diarrhea, 10 had constipation-predominant IBS, 4 had functional constipation, and 12 had mixed IBS. The Dahlqvist method was used to measure disaccharidase activity in the brush-border membrane of mature enterocytes of the small intestine, in duodenal biopsies obtained during esophagogastroduodenoscopy. Results Lactase deficiency was detected in 86.5% of patients, maltase deficiency in 48.7%, sucrase deficiency in 50%, and glucoamylase deficiency in 84.1%. The activities of all enzymes were reduced in 31.7% of patients, and carbohydrase deficiency was detected in 63.5% of patients. The low activity of enzymes involved in membrane digestion in the small intestine was found in 95.2% of patients. Conclusion In 78 of the 82 patients with FBD, gastrointestinal symptoms were associated with disaccharidase deficiency.

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Dbar, S., Akhmadullina, O., Sabelnikova, E., Belostotskiy, N., Parfenov, A., Bykova, S., … Makarova, A. (2021). Patients with Functional Bowel Disorder have Disaccharidase Deficiency: A Single-Center Study from Russia. World Journal of Clinical Cases, 9(17), 4178–4187. https://doi.org/10.12998/wjcc.v9.i17.4178

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