We report a 60-year-old man with intermittent diarrhea for 15 years which was worsened by cholecystectomy. The results of routine laboratory tests, x-ray studies of the gut, and endoscopy were normal. Fecal fat excretion was normal, but total bile acid excretion was increased in the alkaline feces. The retention of 75SeHCAT was low. Jejunal mucosal biopsy showed normal mucosa. Ileal biopsy was performed at ileoscopy some 10 to 15 cm proximal to the ileocecal valve. Scanning-electron and light microscopy showed a transitional zone between villous atrophy in the distal and normal mucosa in the proximal part of the biopsy specimen. The response of diarrhea to cholestyramine treatment was unequivocal, suggesting bile acid malabsorption. The increased enterohepatic cycling of bile acids after cholecystectomy may be responsible for a decrease in their ileal uptake. Very often, as in our patient, the diarrhea precedes cholecystectomy and is considerably increased by it. Cholecystectomy may unmask a previously unrecognized bile acid transport defect. In our patient, this defect might have been caused by the villous atrophy of the terminal ileum.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00004836-199304000-00013 | DOI Listing |
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