The effects of physiological dietary phytosterol supplements on intestinal microflora activity and faecal sterols and their capacity to protect rats fed a normal or high saturated fatty-acid diet against tumour development were studied. A group of 80 female Wistar rats were fed an 8% lipid diet for 4 weeks (adaptation period) and then randomly assigned in a factorial experimental design study to diets containing 8% or 24% hydrogenated coconut oil, with or without a 24-mg/day/rat phytosterol supplement. They were instilled intrarectally with saline or methyl-nitroso-urea (MNU). Faecal sterol output was analysed for one week each month. Pathological analysis was done at the end of the 30-week experiment. Animals treated with MNU and given phytosterol supplements had tumour frequencies (8/20) similar to those not fed phytosterols (11/20). The fat-supplemented diet had no significant influence. Colonic glands were found in area of lymphoid follicles in all the groups, but were more frequent in rats on high-fat diets (P < 0.01). The coprostanol and the cholesterol excretion of the phytosterol-supplemented rats was significantly enhanced. Therefore phytosterols have an unfavourable effect on bacterial activity. These data confirm the capacity of phytosterols to decrease cholesterol absorption, but indicate that a large excess of phytosterol must be avoided until further research on its effects on carcinogenesis has been done.
A case of post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease (PTLD) with donor heart involvement is reported. The 49-year-old patient presented with heart failure initially ascribed to acute graft rejection. The treatment with high doses of immunosuppressive agents was unsuccessful and the outcome rapidly fatal. This case suggests that cardiac failure occurring after high doses of immunosuppressive therapy could be a sign of early PTLD in heart transplant recipients.
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