Published in:
01-10-2013 | Review Article
Recycling rate of bile acids in the enterohepatic recirculation as a major determinant of whole body 75SeHCAT retention
Authors:
A. Michael Peters, Julian R. F. Walters
Published in:
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging
|
Issue 10/2013
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Abstract
Measurement of the whole body retention of orally administered 75SeHCAT is used to investigate patients with unexplained diarrhoea. Retention values of <15 % at 7 days post-administration are taken to indicate bile acid malabsorption (BAM). Whilst idiopathic BAM is frequently diagnosed with 75SeHCAT, functional and morphological studies of the terminal ileum rarely show any abnormality, so the disorder may be more appropriately termed bile acid diarrhoea (BAD). In addition to malabsorption, excess bile acid may reach the colon, where the events leading to diarrhoea take place, as a result firstly of increased bile acid synthesis and secondly of an increased recycling rate of bile acids. Increased recycling has been largely ignored as a cause of BAD, but, as shown in this study, can readily result in excess bile acids reaching the colon even when ileal absorption efficiency is normal (i.e. 95–97 %). There needs to be a re-evaluation of the causes of BAD in patients without a history of previous intestinal resection or evidence of ileal pathology, such as Crohn’s disease.