Affiliation:
1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Atlanta Georgia U.S.A.
2. Asociación Benéfica PRISMA Lima Peru
3. Department of Family Medicine University of Washington Seattle Washington U.S.A.
4. Instituto de Salud del Niños Lima Peru
5. Department of Enteric Infections Walter Reed Army Institute of Research Washington, D.C. U.S.A.
6. Department of Nutrition Sciences University of California Davis California U.S.A.
Abstract
ABSTRACTBackground:The relationship between intestinal permeability and acute secretory diarrheal syndromes caused by rotavirus and Cryptosporidium parvum in infants less than 36 months of age was studied using the lactulose–mannitol excretion assay.Methods:An oral solution containing 0.4 g/kg lactulose and 0.1 g/kg mannitol was administered to 15 infants with rotavirus, 7 with Cryptosporidium infection and a control group of 7 with secretory diarrhea admitted to the Oral Rehydration Unit of the National Children's Hospital in Lima, Peru. Urinary sugar excretion was measured using an enzymatic spectrophotometric method. The ratio of urinary excretion of lactulose to mannitol was used to measure intestinal mucosal permeability, with higher ratios indicative of increased intestinal permeability. Infants in all three groups were retested 20 days after the initial test.Results:The (mean ± SE) lactulose:mannitol (L:M) excretion ratios during the acute phase (day 1) of diarrhea in infants with rotavirus or Cryptosporidium and control infants were 0.67 ± 0.1, 0.76 ± 0.16, and 0.26 ± 0.04, respectively. In the convalescent phase (day 20) the ratios were 0.19 ± 0.02, 0.28 ± 0.05, and 0.29 ± 0.07, respectively. Significant reductions in L:M ratios were noted in rotavirus patients between days 1 and 20 (paired t‐test;P < 0.01), Cryptosporidium patients between days 1 and 20 (paired t‐test;P < 0.05), and between control subjects on day 1 and rotavirus patients on day 1 and Cryptosporidium patients on day 1 (unpaired t‐tests;P < 0.05 for both). There were no significant differences in control subjects between days 1 and 20, control subjects and rotavirus patients on day 20, or control subjects and Cryptosporidium patients on day 20.Conclusions:The results indicate that increased intestinal permeability caused by rotavirus or cryptosporidium infections in Peruvian infants less than 36 months of age is a significant but reversible phenomenon. The temporal relationship observed in the current study and the contribution of such alterations in intestinal mucosal integrity to the burden of diarrheal disease and the development of malnutrition in developing countries is discussed.
Reference34 articles.
1. The magnitude of the global problem of diarrhoeal disease: A ten‐year update;Bern C;Bull World Health Org,1992
2. A two‐year study of bacterial, viral, and parasitic agents associated with diarrhea in rural Bangladesh;Black RE;J Infect Dis,1980
3. Incidence and etiology of infantile diarrhea and major routes of transmission in Huascar, Peru;Black RE;Am J Pub Health,1989
4. Global seasonality of rotavirus infections;Cook SM;Bull World Health Org,1990
5. Altered jejunal permeability to macromolecules during viral enteritis in the piglet;Keljo DJ;Gastroenterology,1985