Literature DB >> 18440672

Citrulline as a biomarker of intestinal failure due to enterocyte mass reduction.

Pascal Crenn1, Bernard Messing, Luc Cynober.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND & AIMS: In human, citrulline (plasma concentration about 40 micromol/L) is an amino acid involved in intermediary metabolism and that is not incorporated in proteins. Circulating citrulline is mainly produced by enterocytes of the small bowel. For this reason plasma or serum citrulline concentration has been proposed as a biomarker of remnant small bowel mass and function. This article reviews this concept and its metabolic basis.
METHODS: Conditions in which there is a significantly reduced small bowel enterocyte mass and function and a plasma or serum citrulline were measured in adults and children. These studies included patients with a short bowel syndrome, villous atrophy states, Crohn's disease, during monitoring of digestive toxicity of chemotherapy and radiotherapy or follow-up of patients after small bowel transplantation.
RESULTS: In all these situations, with more than 500 studied patients a decreased level of plasma citrulline correlated with the reduced enterocyte mass independently of nutritional and inflammatory status. A close correlation between small bowel remnant length and citrullinemia was found. In addition, diagnosis of intestinal failure was assessed through plasma citrulline levels in severe small bowel diseases in which there is a marked enterocyte mass reduction. DISCUSSION: The threshold for establishing a diagnosis of intestinal failure is lower in villous atrophy disease (10mumol/L) than in short bowel syndrome (20mumol/L). Compromised renal function is an important factor when considering plasma citrulline levels as a marker of intestinal failure as this potentially can increase circulating citrulline values.
CONCLUSIONS: Reduced plasma citrulline levels are an innovative quantitative biomarker of significantly reduced enterocyte mass and function in different disease states in humans.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18440672     DOI: 10.1016/j.clnu.2008.02.005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Nutr        ISSN: 0261-5614            Impact factor:   7.324


  108 in total

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3.  Safety and Efficacy of Teduglutide (Gattex) in Patients With Crohn's Disease and Need for Parenteral Support Due to Short Bowel Syndrome-associated Intestinal Failure.

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4.  Citrulline as a Biomarker for Gastrointestinal-Acute Radiation Syndrome: Species Differences and Experimental Condition Effects.

Authors:  K Bujold; M Hauer-Jensen; O Donini; A Rumage; D Hartman; H P Hendrickson; J Stamatopoulos; H Naraghi; M Pouliot; A Ascah; M Sebastian; M K Pugsley; K Wong; S Authier
Journal:  Radiat Res       Date:  2016-06-28       Impact factor: 2.841

5.  Plasma citrulline as surrogate marker of intestinal inflammation in pediatric and adolescent with Crohn's disease: preliminary report.

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9.  Total Body Irradiation in the "Hematopoietic" Dose Range Induces Substantial Intestinal Injury in Non-Human Primates.

Authors:  Junru Wang; Lijian Shao; Howard P Hendrickson; Liya Liu; Jianhui Chang; Yi Luo; John Seng; Mylene Pouliot; Simon Authier; Daohong Zhou; William Allaben; Martin Hauer-Jensen
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10.  Consumption of pasteurized human lysozyme transgenic goats' milk alters serum metabolite profile in young pigs.

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Journal:  Transgenic Res       Date:  2009-10-22       Impact factor: 2.788

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