A B T R A C T Studies were carried out to test the hypothesis that abnormal bile salt metabolism (interruption of the enterohepatic circulation) is responsible for steatorrhea in patients with ileal disease and (or) ileectomy.Duodenal bile salt concentration after a single, standard meal eaten at 8 a.m. was measured in 8 patients with ileectomy steatorrhea and compared with 11 normal control subjects and 7 hospitalized patients without gastrointestinal disease. Mean bile salt concentration was approximately half normal in the ileectomy group, but some of the patients fell well within the normal range, even on repeat studies. However, it was shown that the second and third meals eaten during a single day were associated with a marked depression of duodenal bile salt concentration in ileectomy patients, which suggested that the first meals in these patients flush out a large fraction of the bile salt pool. Simultaneously measured turnover studies with taurocholate-14C showed a t4 of 3.1 hr in these patients compared with 29.5 and 32 hr in two control subjects, proving that the enterohepatic circulation had indeed been interrupted by ileectomy. Hepatic synthesis can apparently partially reconstitute the bile salt pool during the overnight period.
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