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Malabsorption syndromes

From Surgopaedia

Pathophysiology of malabsorption

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  • Impaired absorption of nutrients, either congenital or acquired
  • Four steps for normal nutrient absorption:
    • Intra-luminal digestion (cholestasis, pancreatic insufficiency, bacterial overgrowth, anatomical)
    • Luminal and brush border processing
    • Absorption into the intestinal mucosa via trans-epithelial transport (coeliac, IBD, short bowel syndrome, radiation damage)
    • Transport into the circulation via lymphatic vessels

Presentation

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  • Diarrhoea
  • Flatus
  • Abdominal pain
  • Weight loss

Investigation

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  • Bloods including nutritional screening
  • Faecal fat excretion
    • Most common indicator of global malabsorption
    • Based on stool of three days
    • Should not be >6g/day
  • Coeliac serology
  • Lactose breath hydrogen test
  • Scopes
  • Pill cam
  • MRE