Authors
Luca Miele, Venanzio Valenza, Giuseppe La Torre, Massimo Montalto, Giovanni Cammarota, Riccardo Ricci, Roberta Masciana, Alessandra Forgione, Maria L Gabrieli, Germano Perotti, Fabio M Vecchio, Gianlodovico Rapaccini, Giovanni Gasbarrini, Chris P Day, Antonio Grieco
Publication date
2009/6
Journal
Hepatology
Volume
49
Issue
6
Pages
1877-1887
Publisher
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company
Description
The role played by the gut in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is still a matter of debate, although animal and human studies suggest that gut‐derived endotoxin may be important. We investigated intestinal permeability in patients with NAFLD and evaluated the correlations between this phenomenon and the stage of the disease, the integrity of tight junctions within the small intestine, and prevalence of small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO). We examined 35 consecutive patients with biopsy‐proven NAFLD, 27 with untreated celiac disease (as a model of intestinal hyperpermeability) and 24 healthy volunteers. We assessed the presence of SIBO by glucose breath testing (GBT), intestinal permeability by means of urinary excretion of 51Cr‐ethylene diamine tetraacetate (51Cr‐EDTA) test, and the integrity of tight junctions within the gut by immunohistochemical analysis of zona occludens‐1 (ZO‐1 …
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