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[Diagnosis of bacterial contamination of the small intestine using the 1 g [14C] xylose breath test in various gastrointestinal diseases].
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1992
Year
Healthy SubjectsGastroenterologyPathologyDigestive TractCeliac DiseaseIrritable Bowel SyndromeFunctional Gastrointestinal DisorderBacterial ContaminationUlcerative ColitisAbnormal ResultsVarious Gastrointestinal DiseasesMicrobiomeClinical MicrobiologyMicrobial ContaminationSmall IntestineGastrointestinal PathologyMicrobiologyMedicineDiagnostic Microbiology
The prevalence of the small intestine bacterial overgrowth syndrome has been assessed in 109 in-patients affected by various gastrointestinal disorders using the 1 g [14C]-xylose breath test; 18 healthy subjects acted as a control group: none of them showed abnormal results (100% specificity). None of 14 patients with colonic disease had abnormal results, whereas in 44 patients with ileal diseases the test was positive in 12% to 39% of the cases. Abnormal results were found in 46% of patients who underwent partial gastric resection greater than 20 years before, 29% of patients with irritable bowel syndrome without diarrhoea (faecal wet weight less than or equal to 600 g/72 h), 56% of those with diarrhoea of obscure origin, and 25% of celiac patients. Eight out of 8 patients with altered results showed normalization of the test after antibiotic therapy. Despite its high diagnostic value in the setting of clinical research, the 1 g [14C]-xylose breath test cannot as yet be proposed as a routine investigation.