4.4 Article Proceedings Paper

Interpretation of the lactulose:mannitol test in rural Malawian children at risk for perturbations in intestinal permeability

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 243, Issue 8, Pages 677-683

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/1535370218768508

Keywords

Environmental enteric dysfunction; dual sugar absorption test; lactulose:mannitol test; paracellular permeability; gut health

Funding

  1. United States Agency for International Development (USAID), as part of Feed the Future
  2. U.S. Government's global hunger and food security initiative [EDH-A-00-07-00005-00]
  3. Children's Discovery Institute of Washington University
  4. Children's Discovery Institute of St. Louis Children's Hospital

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The dual sugar absorption test, specifically the lactulose:mannitol test, is used to assess gut health. Lactulose absorption is said to represent gut damage and mannitol absorption is used as a measure of normal small bowel function and serves as normalizing factor for lactulose. A underappreciated limitation of this common understanding of the lactulose:mannitol test is that mannitol is not absorbed to any substantial extent by a transcellular process. Additionally, this interpretation of lactulose:mannitol is not consistent with current understanding of paracellular pathways, where three pathway types exist: pore, leak, and unrestricted. Pore and leak pathways are regulated biological constructions of the small bowel barrier, and unrestricted pathways represent micropathological damage. We analyzed 2334 lactulose:mannitol measurements rigorously collected from 622 young rural Malawian children at high risk for poor gut health in light of the pathway model. An alternative method of normalizing for gut length utilizing autopsy data is described. In our population, absorbed lactulose and mannitol are strongly correlated, r=0.68 P <0.0001, suggesting lactulose and mannitol are traversing the gut barrier via the same pathways. Considering measurements where pore pathways predominate, mannitol flux is about 14 times that of lactulose. As more leak pathways are present, this differential flux mannitol:lactulose falls to 8:1 and when increased numbers of unrestricted pathways are present, the differential flux of mannitol:lactulose is 6:1. There was no substantial correlation between the lactulose:mannitol and linear growth. Given that mannitol will always pass through a given pathway at a rate at least equal to that of lactulose, and lactulose absorption is a composite measure of flux through both physiologic and pathologic pathways, we question the utility of the lactulose:mannitol test. We suggest using lactulose alone is as informative as lactulose:mannitol in a sugar absorption testing in subclinical gut inflammation.

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