AI Article Synopsis

  • Short-peptide-based enteral nutrition (SPEN) is found to be more effective than intact-protein nutrition in reducing the risk of infections and addressing intestinal bacterial translocation in mice with severe acute pancreatitis (SAP).
  • The study indicates that while SPEN does not improve pancreatic injury directly, it significantly helps restore the intestinal barrier and microcirculation, enhancing overall gut health.
  • SPEN promotes better mucosal function and immunity, mitigates systemic immunosuppression, and supports the body's defense against harmful bacteria following SAP, suggesting it could be a beneficial nutritional approach in such conditions.

Article Abstract

Scope: Short-peptide-based enteral nutrition (SPEN) is absorbed more efficiently in patients with severe acute pancreatitis (SAP). More importantly, SPEN decreases SAP-induced enterogenous infection risk. This study aims to investigate whether SPEN alleviates intestinal bacterial translocation in mice with SAP, and the underlying mechanisms.

Methods And Results: The SAP model is established after pre-treatment with SPEN or intact-protein-based enteral nutrition. Although there is no improvement in pancreas injury, as evaluated through Hematoxylin-Eosin staining or serum amylase, SPEN obviously attenuates intestinal bacterial translocation after SAP. To unveil the mechanisms, it is found that the intestinal mechanical barrier destroyed by SAP is significantly relieved by SPEN, which presents with recovered ZO-1 expression, mucus layer, and goblet cell function. Additionally, SPEN alleviates local CCR6/CCL20 induced CD11c dendritic cell infiltration, systemic immunosuppression, and inhibits the secretion of luminal secretory immunoglobulin A. Possibly responsible for SAP-induced mucosal dysfunctions, destroyed intestinal mucosal microcirculation and local hypoxia are largely improved in SAP+SPEN group.

Conclusion: SPEN can improve downregulated intestinal mucosal microcirculation secondary to SAP, which may be responsible for mucosal inflammation relief, maintenance of the mechanical barrier and mucosal immunity, the correction of systemic immunosuppression, and play a protective role in defending commensal bacterial translocation after SAP.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mnfr.201901191DOI Listing

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