Publications by authors named "C Gruy-Kapral"

Objective: Hydroxyethyl starch (HES) is mainly eliminated via the kidneys. Any information about extrarenal elimination obtained so far has been either incomplete or contradictory. The objective of this study was to quantify the intestinal excretion of infused HES with a mean molecular weight of 200,000 and a molar substitution of 0.

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Background & Aims: Although fat malabsorption in the short-bowel syndrome is caused in part by decreased bile acid secretion, bile acid replacement therapy is not used because of the belief that ingested bile acids would worsen diarrhea, outweighing the benefits of improved fat absorption. This study compared the effect of a natural conjugated bile acid mixture from ox bile with that of cholylsarcosine, a synthetic conjugated bile acid, on fat absorption and diarrhea in a patient with the short-bowel syndrome. Cholylsarcosine is resistant to bacterial metabolism and has no cathartic activity.

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Hyperkalemia in patients with renal failure is frequently treated with a cation exchange resin (sodium polystyrene sulfonate, hereafter referred to as resin) in combination with a cathartic, but the effect of such therapy on serum potassium concentration has not been established. This study evaluates the effect of four single-dose resin-cathartic regimens and placebo on 5 different test days in six patients with chronic renal failure. Dietary intake was controlled.

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Gut lavage by ingestion of large volumes of electrolyte solutions has been shown to be an effective method of cleansing the colon before colonoscopy, barium enema or surgery. Absorption of water and electrolytes, which might be hazardous to patients who are unable to readily excrete an additional sodium and/or water load, is prevented by addition of non-absorbable substances to the solutions, but systematic studies are lacking. We have evaluated the influence of three solutions for gut lavage with different electrolyte composition (sodium concentration 67 mmol/l and 125 mmol/l) and addition of different non-absorbable substances (mannitol and polyethylene glycol [PEG]) on water and electrolyte homeostasis and subjective tolerance, both in healthy volunteers and in patients before endoscopy of the colon.

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