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Digestive Diseases and Sciences 2019-05

Villus Growth, Increased Intestinal Epithelial Sodium Selectivity, and Hyperaldosteronism Are Mechanisms of Adaptation in a Murine Model of Short Bowel Syndrome.

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Peggy Berlin
Johannes Reiner
Jakob Wobar
Karen Bannert
Änne Glass
Michael Walter
Manuela Bastian
Holger Willenberg
Brigitte Vollmar
Ernst Klar

Keywords

Abstract

Short bowel syndrome results from extensive small bowel resection and induces adaptation of the remaining intestine. Ileocecal resection (ICR) is the most frequent situation in humans. Villus hypertrophy is one hallmark of mucosal adaptation, but the functional mechanisms of mucosal adaptation are incompletely understood.The aim of the study was to characterize a clinically relevant model of short bowel syndrome but not intestinal failure in mice and to identify outcome predictors and mechanisms of adaptation.Male C57BL6/J mice underwent 40% ICR and were followed for 7 or 14 days. Small bowel transection served as control. All mice underwent autopsy. Survival, body weight, wellness score, stool water content, plasma aldosterone concentrations, and paracellular permeability were recorded.Unlike controls, resected mice developed significant diarrhea with increased stool water. This was accompanied by sustained weight loss throughout follow-up. Villus length increased but did not correlate positively with adaptation. Plasma aldosterone concentrations correlated inversely with body weight at day 14. After ICR, intestinal epithelial (i.e., tight junctional) sodium permeability was increased.40% ICR results in moderate to severe short bowel syndrome. Successful adaptation to the short bowel situation involves villus elongation but does not correlate with the degree of villus elongation alone. In addition, increased intestinal epithelial sodium permeability facilitates sodium-coupled solute transport. Hyperaldosteronism correlates with the severity of weight loss, indicates volume depletion, and counterregulates water loss.

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