揭开碳水化合物消化不良的神秘面纱:临床综述。

Brooks D Cash,Daksesh Patel,Kate Scarlata
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摘要

碳水化合物不耐受是一种鲜为人知且可能被忽视的原因,可导致无法解释的胃肠道症状,特别是在肠-脑相互作用紊乱的患者中。与碳水化合物不耐受相关的症状是由于未吸收的碳水化合物的细菌发酵导致胃肠道内气体和渗透负荷增加。这种机制在各种碳水化合物中都有,包括乳糖、蔗糖、麦芽糖、果糖和可发酵的低聚糖、双糖、单糖和多元醇。初级形式的碳水化合物消化不良通常影响一种特定类型的碳水化合物,由特定刷缘酶或运输机制的遗传缺陷引起,而继发性或后天形式的碳水化合物消化不良可由影响胰腺和小肠的结构完整性或功能的条件引起。虽然确认双糖酶缺乏并不意味着临床相关性,但获得仔细的患者病史,适当使用呼气试验、十二指肠双糖酶测定和对饮食调整的反应,可以帮助确定症状与碳水化合物消化不良相关的患者,并可能从治疗中受益。饮食调整仍然是治疗碳水化合物不耐受患者的基石,应该集中于确定最自由的饮食,使患者的症状得到控制。鉴于这一过程的复杂性和耗时性,鼓励临床医生在可能的情况下寻求具有肠脑相互作用疾病治疗专业知识的营养师的帮助。酶替代疗法也可以作为饮食管理的重要辅助手段,糖甙酶可以改善蔗糖异麦芽糖酶缺乏症的症状,并帮助患者自由饮食。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Demystifying Carbohydrate Maldigestion: A Clinical Review.
Carbohydrate intolerance is a poorly understood and potentially overlooked cause of unexplained gastrointestinal symptoms, particularly among patients with disorders of gut-brain interaction. Symptoms related to carbohydrate intolerance arise from bacterial fermentation of unabsorbed carbohydrates leading to increased gases and osmotic load within the gastrointestinal tract. This mechanism is shared across various carbohydrates, including lactose, sucrose, maltose, fructose, and fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides, and polyols. Primary forms of carbohydrate maldigestion typically affect one specific type of carbohydrate and result from inherited defects in specific brush-border enzymes or transport mechanisms, whereas secondary, or acquired, forms of carbohydrate maldigestion can arise from conditions that affect the structural integrity or function of the pancreas and small intestine. Although confirmation of a disaccharidase deficiency does not imply clinical relevance, obtaining a careful patient history with appropriate use of breath testing, duodenal disaccharidase assay, and response to dietary modification can help identify patients whose symptoms are associated with carbohydrate maldigestion and who may benefit from treatment. Dietary modification remains the cornerstone of therapy for patients with carbohydrate intolerance and should focus on determining the most liberal diet for patients that allows symptom control. Given the complexity and time-consuming nature of this process, clinicians are encouraged to engage the help of dietitians with expertise in the treatment of disorders of gut-brain interaction where available. Enzyme replacement therapy can also be an important adjunct to dietary management, with sacrosidase improving symptoms in sucrase-isomaltase deficiency and helping patients to liberalize their diet.
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