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Breath Hydrogen Gas Concentration Linked to Intestinal Gas Distribution and Malabsorption in Patients with Small-bowel Pseudo-obstruction

BACKGROUND: The patient with colonic obstruction may frequently have bacterial overgrowth and increased breath hydrogen (H2) levels because the bacterium can contact with food residues for longer time. We experienced two cases with intestinal obstruction whose breath H2 concentrations were measured...

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Autores principales: Urita, Yoshihisa, Watanabe, Toshiyasu, Maeda, Tadashi, Sasaki, Yosuke, Ishihara, Susumu, Hike, Kazuo, Sanaka, Masaki, Nakajima, Hitoshi, Sugimoto, Motonobu
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Libertas Academica 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2716679/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19652759
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author Urita, Yoshihisa
Watanabe, Toshiyasu
Maeda, Tadashi
Sasaki, Yosuke
Ishihara, Susumu
Hike, Kazuo
Sanaka, Masaki
Nakajima, Hitoshi
Sugimoto, Motonobu
author_facet Urita, Yoshihisa
Watanabe, Toshiyasu
Maeda, Tadashi
Sasaki, Yosuke
Ishihara, Susumu
Hike, Kazuo
Sanaka, Masaki
Nakajima, Hitoshi
Sugimoto, Motonobu
author_sort Urita, Yoshihisa
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The patient with colonic obstruction may frequently have bacterial overgrowth and increased breath hydrogen (H2) levels because the bacterium can contact with food residues for longer time. We experienced two cases with intestinal obstruction whose breath H2 concentrations were measured continuously. CASE 1: A 70-year-old woman with small bowel obstruction was treated with a gastric tube. When small bowel gas decreased and colonic gas was demonstrated on the plain abdominal radiograph, the breath H2 concentration increased to 6 ppm and reduced again shortly. CASE 2: A 41-year-old man with functional small bowel obstruction after surgical treatment was treated with intravenous administration of erythromycin. Although the plain abdominal radiograph demonstrated a decrease of small-bowel gas, the breath H2 gas kept the low level. After a clear-liquid meal was supplied, fasting breath H2 concentration increased rapidly to 22 ppm and gradually decreased to 9 ppm despite the fact that the intestinal gas was unchanged on X-ray. A rapid increase of breath H2 concentration may reflect the movement of small bowel contents to the colon in patients with small-bowel pseudo-obstruction or malabsorption following diet progression. CONCLUSIONS: Change in breath H2 concentration had a close association with distribution and movement of intestinal gas.
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spelling pubmed-27166792009-08-03 Breath Hydrogen Gas Concentration Linked to Intestinal Gas Distribution and Malabsorption in Patients with Small-bowel Pseudo-obstruction Urita, Yoshihisa Watanabe, Toshiyasu Maeda, Tadashi Sasaki, Yosuke Ishihara, Susumu Hike, Kazuo Sanaka, Masaki Nakajima, Hitoshi Sugimoto, Motonobu Biomark Insights Case Report BACKGROUND: The patient with colonic obstruction may frequently have bacterial overgrowth and increased breath hydrogen (H2) levels because the bacterium can contact with food residues for longer time. We experienced two cases with intestinal obstruction whose breath H2 concentrations were measured continuously. CASE 1: A 70-year-old woman with small bowel obstruction was treated with a gastric tube. When small bowel gas decreased and colonic gas was demonstrated on the plain abdominal radiograph, the breath H2 concentration increased to 6 ppm and reduced again shortly. CASE 2: A 41-year-old man with functional small bowel obstruction after surgical treatment was treated with intravenous administration of erythromycin. Although the plain abdominal radiograph demonstrated a decrease of small-bowel gas, the breath H2 gas kept the low level. After a clear-liquid meal was supplied, fasting breath H2 concentration increased rapidly to 22 ppm and gradually decreased to 9 ppm despite the fact that the intestinal gas was unchanged on X-ray. A rapid increase of breath H2 concentration may reflect the movement of small bowel contents to the colon in patients with small-bowel pseudo-obstruction or malabsorption following diet progression. CONCLUSIONS: Change in breath H2 concentration had a close association with distribution and movement of intestinal gas. Libertas Academica 2009-01-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2716679/ /pubmed/19652759 Text en © 2009 by the authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 This article is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Case Report
Urita, Yoshihisa
Watanabe, Toshiyasu
Maeda, Tadashi
Sasaki, Yosuke
Ishihara, Susumu
Hike, Kazuo
Sanaka, Masaki
Nakajima, Hitoshi
Sugimoto, Motonobu
Breath Hydrogen Gas Concentration Linked to Intestinal Gas Distribution and Malabsorption in Patients with Small-bowel Pseudo-obstruction
title Breath Hydrogen Gas Concentration Linked to Intestinal Gas Distribution and Malabsorption in Patients with Small-bowel Pseudo-obstruction
title_full Breath Hydrogen Gas Concentration Linked to Intestinal Gas Distribution and Malabsorption in Patients with Small-bowel Pseudo-obstruction
title_fullStr Breath Hydrogen Gas Concentration Linked to Intestinal Gas Distribution and Malabsorption in Patients with Small-bowel Pseudo-obstruction
title_full_unstemmed Breath Hydrogen Gas Concentration Linked to Intestinal Gas Distribution and Malabsorption in Patients with Small-bowel Pseudo-obstruction
title_short Breath Hydrogen Gas Concentration Linked to Intestinal Gas Distribution and Malabsorption in Patients with Small-bowel Pseudo-obstruction
title_sort breath hydrogen gas concentration linked to intestinal gas distribution and malabsorption in patients with small-bowel pseudo-obstruction
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2716679/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19652759
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