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Study Title:

High prevalence of abnormal gastrointestinal permeability in moderate-severe asthma.

Study Abstract

PURPOSE:

Abnormal gastrointestinal permeability (GIP) has been implicated in a number of diseases, including chronic intestinal inflammatory disorders such as Crohn's as well as non-intestinal immunologic diseases such as diabetes and multiple sclerosis. Although evidence in the literature demonstrates mucosal abnormalities of the digestive barrier in asthma, previous studies have assessed only colonic permeability, while ignoring the mucosal-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) rich areas of the small intestine. Alterations in GIP may lead to increased entry of allergenic proteins from the gut lumen into the systemic circulation, thus priming and activating the adaptive immune system and leading to inappropriate allergen sensitization and/or deregulated extra-intestinal inflammation. This study examines GIP in adults with moderate to severe asthma.
METHODS:

Patients ingested a mixed-sugar solution and urine was collected. GIP was assayed using high-performance liquid chromatography. Demographics, atopy (assessed by allergen skin testing) and sputum cell counts were also assessed.
RESULTS:

Fourteen patients with moderate to severe asthma were studied, half of whom were found to have abnormal GIP. Abnormal GIP did not correlate with sputum cell counts and there was no apparent association between atopy and intestinal permeability.
CONCLUSION:

This study demonstrated our ability to identify abnormal GIP in the MALT-rich, immunogenic small intestine of patients with asthma. The absence of a correlation between airway inflammation and increased GIP suggests that these two parameters are not causally linked, but rather define distinct entities that could separately or sequentially be involved with the development and propagation of asthma over time.

Study Information


High prevalence of abnormal gastrointestinal permeability in moderate-severe asthma.
Clin Invest Med.
2014 April

Full Study

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24690419
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