1. The effect of diet on bile acid kinetics and biliary lipid secretion in gallstone patients treated with ursodeoxycholic acid.
- Author
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Frenkiel PG, Lee DW, Cohen H, Gilmore CJ, Resser K, Bonorris GG, Marks JW, and Schoenfield LJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Cholelithiasis drug therapy, Cholelithiasis physiopathology, Cholesterol metabolism, Cholesterol, Dietary administration & dosage, Dietary Fiber therapeutic use, Female, Glycine metabolism, Humans, Kinetics, Male, Middle Aged, Phospholipids metabolism, Taurine metabolism, Triglycerides administration & dosage, Bile metabolism, Bile Acids and Salts metabolism, Cholelithiasis diet therapy, Deoxycholic Acid analogs & derivatives, Lipid Metabolism, Ursodeoxycholic Acid therapeutic use
- Abstract
Effects of specific dietary alterations in patients with radiolucent gallstones treated with ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA, 750 mg at bedtime) were investigated. Patients were allocated randomly to one of four diets: standard (500 mg cholesterol/day), low-cholesterol (250 mg/day), added-bran (30 g/day), or substituted medium-chain triglycerides (MCT) oil (20% of fat). Dietary intake and good compliance were verified by computerized analysis of dietary diaries. Bile-acid kinetics (26 patients) or secretion of biliary lipids (23 other patients) were determined at enrollment and at 6 and 9 mo, respectively, during treatment. Although MCT further decreased the UDCA-induced decrease in the synthesis of chenodeoxycholic acid, it did not lessen desaturation of bile. Otherwise, compared to the standard diet, no experimental diet significantly altered the UDCA-induced increase of the pools of total bile acids and UDCA or the UDCA-induced decrease in synthesis of bile acids and in biliary secretion or saturation of cholesterol. If these dietary manipulations facilitate dissolution of gallstones by UDCA, they do so by other mechanisms.
- Published
- 1986
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