Ejderhamn J, Strandvik B
Department of Pediatrics, Karolinska Institute, Huddinge Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.
Digestion. 1991;50(3-4):162-9. doi: 10.1159/000200757.
Serum concentrations of primary bile acids were determined at different disease activities in juvenile ulcerative colitis and in healthy age-matched controls. In patients with ulcerative colitis in clinical remission, serum levels of bile acids were also studied after long-term intake (6 months) of dietary fibers (wheat fiber and ispaghula, respectively) in a double-blind randomized cross-over study. Blood samples were taken in the morning after an overnight fasting and for 4 h postprandially after a standardized test meal. Determinations of bile acids were made by radioimmunoassays. Patients with total colitis in the active phase had significantly higher serum levels of cholic and chenodeoxycholic acids 4 h postprandially compared with control children. After long-term intake of ispaghula, significantly higher (although not different from controls) serum levels of cholic acid were found 2 and 3 h postprandially, whereas wheat fibers did not affect serum bile acid concentrations. These results may suggest an increased absorption of unconjugated bile acids in the diseased colon and a minimal influence of dietary fibers on serum bile acid concentrations.