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Carbohydrate digestion requires a functioning pancreas and small bowel brush border enzymes. Normal protein digestion requires adequate gastric and pancreatic function and small bowel brush border enzymes. Fat digestion requires normal hepatic, biliary, exocrine, pancreatic, and small bowel function. An anatomic classification of malabsorption based on abnormalities of the liver, biliary tree, pancreas, stomach, and small intestine aids the radiologist in understanding malabsorption ( Table 29.1 ).
Organ | Disease or Condition | Pathophysiology |
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Stomach | Zollinger-Ellison syndrome | Pancreatic enzyme inactivation by acid |
Postgastrectomy | Rapid transit of nutrients, dilution of pancreatic enzymes | |
Pernicious anemia | Intrinsic factor deficiency (vitamin B 12 malabsorption) | |
Pancreas | Chronic pancreatitis, cystic fibrosis, pancreatic cancer | Decreased pancreatic enzyme and bicarbonate secretion |
Liver, biliary tree | Severe parenchymal liver disease | Decreased bile salt formation |
Cholestatic liver disease (primary biliary cirrhosis, drug-induced cholestasis), bile duct obstruction (bile duct carcinoma, pancreatic cancer, gallstones, sclerosing cholangitis) | Decreased bile salt delivery to duodenum | |
Small intestine | Jejunal diverticulosis, scleroderma, small intestinal fistulas, stricture in Crohn’s disease, diabetes, pseudo-obstruction | Stasis with bacterial overgrowth, bile salt deconjugation |
Crohn’s disease, small intestinal resection, cholecystocolonic fistula | Increased bile salt loss | |
Lactase deficiency, Crohn’s disease | Disaccharidase deficiency | |
Celiac disease, tropical sprue, Whipple’s disease, eosinophilic gastroenteritis, radiation enteropathy, Crohn’s disease, intestinal ischemia, ileal resection | Loss of normal epithelial cells | |
Abetalipoproteinemia | Lack of formation of chylomicrons | |
Lymphangiectasia, lymphoma, tuberculosis, carcinoid | Lymphatic obstruction | |
Diabetes mellitus, giardiasis, adrenal insufficiency, hyperthyroidism, hypogammaglobulinemia, amyloidosis, AIDS | Multiple causes |
Bile salt insufficiency caused by biliary obstruction or decreased hepatic synthesis can lead to malabsorption. Any disease resulting in loss of pancreatic exocrine tissue decreases bicarbonate and pancreatic enzyme secretion, but maldigestion does not occur until 90% of pancreatic exocrine tissue has been lost. The most common pancreatic cause of maldigestion is alcohol-related pancreatitis. Patients with cystic fibrosis have malabsorption, but this disease is much less common.
Diseases of the stomach may cause mild malabsorptive states. Patients with pernicious anemia have decreased production of intrinsic factor, leading to vitamin B 12 deficiency. Patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome have inflammation and ulceration of the duodenum and proximal jejunum, causing diarrhea without malabsorption. About one-third of patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome also have diarrhea because of gastric hypersecretion and intestinal mucosal damage. Mild malabsorption results from inactivation of pancreatic enzymes by excess acid entering the duodenum.
Small bowel disorders cause malabsorption through a wide variety of mechanisms involving the small bowel lumen or wall or even the small bowel mesentery (see Table 29.1 ).
Any disease that causes small bowel stasis can lead to bacterial overgrowth and subsequent malabsorption ( Box 29.1 ). Stasis may be caused by chronic small bowel obstruction (SBO) from conditions such as Crohn’s disease and adhesions or by small bowel hypomotility from conditions such as diabetes, scleroderma, and jejunal diverticulosis. Stasis and bacterial overgrowth may also occur in surgically created blind small bowel loops or in the afferent loop of a gastrojejunostomy.
GENETIC DISORDERS |
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COLLAGEN-VASCULAR DISORDERS |
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ENDOCRINE DISORDERS |
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NEUROLOGIC DISEASES |
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DRUGS |
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OTHER |
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a Disorders typically causing a malabsorptive state are highlighted in bold. Data from Rubesin SE. Diseases of the small bowel causing malabsorption. In: Taveras JM, Ferrucci JT, eds. Radiology: Diagnosis, Imaging, Intervention . Philadelphia: JB Lippincott; 1993:1–17.
Bacterial overgrowth causes malabsorption by several mechanisms, including intraluminal bacterial deconjugation of bile salts and fermentation of carbohydrates. Concomitant epithelial cell dysfunction may be present. Bacterial digestion of malabsorbed fat forms compounds that can stimulate small bowel or colonic secretion. Solutes of malabsorbed carbohydrates and deconjugated bile salts are also osmotically active, resulting in water and electrolyte loss.
Brush border enzyme deficiencies or transport mechanism deficiencies may cause osmotic diarrhea, malabsorption, or both. The most common example of osmotic diarrhea caused by brush border disaccharidase deficiency is so-called lactase deficiency (lactose-phlorizin hydrolase deficiency) with lactose intolerance. Brush border lactose-phlorizin hydrolase levels normally decline in older children and adolescents to 5% to 10% of early childhood levels, resulting in a high frequency of lactase-phlorizin hydrolase deficiency by adulthood. Ingestion of dairy products therefore causes diarrhea, flatulence, and crampy abdominal discomfort in most adults.
Inflammation or necrosis of crypt cells and immature villous cells causes secretory diarrhea, whereas blood, pus, or mucus in the intestinal lumen leads to osmotic diarrhea. Widespread epithelial damage is therefore characterized by a combination of secretory and osmotic diarrhea and nutrient malabsorption. Diseases that destroy proximal small bowel epithelium cause generalized malabsorption of fats, proteins, carbohydrates, iron, and folate, whereas diseases that damage distal ileal mucosa primarily cause malabsorption of fat because of bile salt loss and vitamin B 12 deficiency. Mucosal diseases causing malabsorption typically involve long segments of small bowel. These conditions, which are relatively uncommon, include celiac disease, tropical sprue, Whipple’s disease, and eosinophilic enteritis.
Any disorder that obstructs lacteals in small bowel villi or lymphatics in the small bowel mesentery may cause fat malabsorption. In primary lymphangiectasia, for example, abnormal formation of lymphatics results in impaired absorption of chylomicrons and fat-soluble vitamins and loss of lymph into the intestinal lumen from lymphoenteric fistulas.
Malabsorption is often multifactorial. In amyloidosis, for example, malabsorption is attributed to stasis with bacterial overgrowth, mucosal ischemia, and disruption of nutrient absorption by amyloid deposition in the lamina propria. In contrast, malabsorption in hyperthyroidism is attributed to rapid small bowel transit.
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