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Lactose Malabsorption Among the Pima Indians of Arizona

Authors :
William V. Robertson
Ruth Hurwitz
Frederick J. Simoons
Norman Kretchmer
Frank R. Sinatra
Adenike Grange
Charles H. Mitchell
Philip Sunshine
John D. Johnson
Peter H. Bennett
Source :
Gastroenterology. 73:1299-1304
Publication Year :
1977
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 1977.

Abstract

Lactose loading tests and other means were used to determine the pattern of primary "adult" lactose malabsorption (LM) and milk use among 171 subjects, including 122 children and 49 adults, almost all of them Pima Indians of Arizona. LM develops at quite young ages in full-blooded Pima children: already in the 3- to 4-year age group, 40% had LM. Of 62 full-blooded Indians (greater than or equal to 4 years of age), 59 (95%) had LM. Of 41 Indians (greater than or equal to 4 years) who were of mixed Indian-northern European ancestry, however, only 25 (61%) had LM, and, among them, prevalence of LM correlated with degree of northern European admixture. Whereas only 21% of Pima lactose absorbers reported symptoms after the loading test, 72% of malabsorbers did so, with older malabsorbers more likely to experience symptoms. In their everyday lives, only 23% of malabsorbers recognized symptoms brought on by milk consumption, but the percentage of malabsorbers making such an association increased with age. Nevertheless the Pima, adults as well as children, continue to drink reasonable quantities of milk. Family pedigrees are consistent with the hypothesis that adult lactose absorption is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait. Over-all results of this study, moreover, support the geographic hypothesis advanced to explain ethnic or racial differences in prevalence of LM, rather than the induction hypothesis.

Details

ISSN :
00165085
Volume :
73
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gastroenterology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5106216a9b3fa59088c49e7318d029ad