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Published in: International Journal of Colorectal Disease 8/2011

01-08-2011 | Original Article

Reduced hydrophobicity of the colonic mucosal surface in ulcerative colitis as a hint at a physicochemical barrier defect

Authors: Annika Braun, Ulrike Schönfeld, Thilo Welsch, Martina Kadmon, Benjamin Funke, Daniel Gotthardt, Alexandra Zahn, Frank Autschbach, Peter Kienle, Michael Zharnikov, Michael Grunze, Wolfgang Stremmel, Robert Ehehalt

Published in: International Journal of Colorectal Disease | Issue 8/2011

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Abstract

Purpose

There is increasing evidence that a defect of the gastrointestinal mucosal barrier is important for the development of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). The hydrophobicity of the colonic mucosal surface is a measure of its resistance to luminal antigens, e.g. of bacterial origin. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to determine this parameter in patients suffering from IBD.

Methods

Nineteen patients with ulcerative colitis (UC), ten patients with Crohn’s disease (CD) and 20 controls were examined. All underwent colonic surgery at the University Hospital Heidelberg. Clinical disease activity was determined. From every subject, colonic tissue specimens were obtained, and hydrophobicity of the mucosal surface was determined with a goniometer by multiple plateau contact angle measurements. Histological evaluation of disease activity was performed in directly adjacent tissue specimens.

Results

Hydrophobicity of the colonic mucosal surface, expressed as plateau contact angles, was significantly reduced in patients with UC (mean ± SEM, 47.8° ± 3.4°) compared to those with CD (72.0° ± 5.2°) and controls (72.5° ± 5.6°; over-all P = 0.0004; UC versus controls, P < 0.001; UC versus CD, P < 0.05; CD versus controls, P > 0.05). Between mucosal hydrophobicity and clinical disease activity, as well as mucosal hydrophobicity and histological disease activity, no significant correlation was found.

Conclusions

The results suggest a defective physicochemical barrier as an essential factor in the pathogenesis of UC, but not CD. The fact that no correlation was found between mucosal hydrophobicity and disease activity may indicate that the loss of mucosal hydrophobicity in UC is not exclusively a secondary effect due to inflammation.
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Metadata
Title
Reduced hydrophobicity of the colonic mucosal surface in ulcerative colitis as a hint at a physicochemical barrier defect
Authors
Annika Braun
Ulrike Schönfeld
Thilo Welsch
Martina Kadmon
Benjamin Funke
Daniel Gotthardt
Alexandra Zahn
Frank Autschbach
Peter Kienle
Michael Zharnikov
Michael Grunze
Wolfgang Stremmel
Robert Ehehalt
Publication date
01-08-2011
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
International Journal of Colorectal Disease / Issue 8/2011
Print ISSN: 0179-1958
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1262
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00384-011-1190-z

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