Abstract

To determine whether the presence of unabsorbed fat in the colon altered colonic motility, intraluminal pressures were recorded in the terminal ileum and proximal colon, and serial 1-min γ camera scans were obtained while test solutions labeled with diethylenetetramine pentaacetic acid chelate of indium 111 were infused into the middle portion of the ascending colon. Seven subjects received a control solution, and 6 subjects received an emulsion of oleic acid (4.3 g/100 ml). Oleic acid accelerated colonic transit; isotope accumulated in the rectosigmoid faster in the first 120 min (4343 ± 1175 cpm) than it did during control infusion (1236 ± 348 cpm; p < 0.01). Accelerated transit of oleate was accompanied by high amplitude (> 60 mmHg, range 60–95 mmHg), prolonged (> 10 s, range 10–48 s), propagated pressure waves; they originated near the ileocecal junction at a median frequency of 1.3 times/hour fmean 4.1, range 0.4–15.7). These were associated with a narrow image of the ascending colon on scintiscan and movement of 65.9% ± 6.5% of counts from the ascending to transverse colon over the succeeding 4 min. A similar sequence was seen only once in 33 h of infusion with control solutions (p < 0.01). Associated with these responses, the total volume of infusate tolerated before defecation was less with oleate than with control solutions (311 ± 21 ml vs. 1049 ± 71 ml; p < 0.01). Long-chain fatty acids stimulated unusual motor patterns and reduced the reservoir function of the ascending colon; these effects may contribute to the diarrhea of patients with fat malabsorption.

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