Literature DB >> 25424581

Hydrogen breath test in patients with severe constipation: the interference of the mixing of intestinal content.

M Di Stefano1, C Mengoli, M Bergonzi, E Miceli, E Pagani, G R Corazza.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The diagnostic accuracy of the hydrogen (H2 ) breath test might be reduced by the release of preformed H2 , trapped in hard stools. Test solution ingestion might induce the mixing of colonic content and a false positive result. We studied severely constipated patients, at diagnosis and after the normalization of bowel function, to clarify whether this mechanism affects test results.
METHODS: Twenty functional constipated patients, 10 consecutive patients with functional diarrhea and 10 healthy volunteers underwent (i) a H2 breath test after lactulose, to exclude differences among the groups in fermenting capacity; (ii) breath H2 excretion monitoring after non-absorbable, non-fermentable PEG-electrolyte solution, to exclude the role of the delivery to the colon of preexisting fermentable substrates or of the release of preformed H2 entrapped in the feces; (iii) H2 measurement during a 7-h fasting period, to exclude the role of spontaneous variations of breath gas excretion; and (iv) breath H2 excretion monitoring after PEG, after normalization of bowel function. KEY
RESULTS: All the subjects excreted similar amounts of H2 after lactulose. After PEG, only severely constipated patients showed significant breath H2 excretion, theoretically able to induce a false positivity of the lactose breath test in 70% of patients and a false positivity of glucose breath tests in 50% of patients. Breath H2 excretion after PEG disappeared if fecal consistency improved after therapy. CONCLUSIONS & INFERENCES: Severely constipated patients may harbor preformed gas in hard stools which can be released when mixing of the intestinal content is induced. This mechanism may interfere with breath test results.
© 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  constipation; hydrogen breath test; intestinal gas production

Mesh:

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25424581     DOI: 10.1111/nmo.12456

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurogastroenterol Motil        ISSN: 1350-1925            Impact factor:   3.598


  4 in total

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