Polyamines have been shown to be important regulators of the intestinal adaptation process after massive bowel resection. Saccharomyces boulardii is yeast that has the ability to synthesize polyamines. Therefore. S. boulardii may be useful in the treatment of short bowel syndrome. Twenty 150-g male Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to 80% jejunoileal resection. Another 20 animals received transection and closure and served as pair fed controls. One half of the resected rats and one half of the controls were given S. boulardii 25 mg/day. After 2 weeks, mucosal mass (mg/cm bowel) did not differ between treated and non-treated animals despite the presence of a marked resection effect. Mucosal DNA, protein, and sucrase activity likewise did not differ. Subsequently, the experiment was repeated four times the original dose (100 mg/day) and found comparable results. In the proximal bowel, mucosal mass was 92+/-6 mg/cm in treated animals versus 107+/-8 mg/cm in untreated rats. In the distal small bowel, comparable values were 85+/-5 mg/cm and 88+/-4 mg/cm. Again, mucosal DNA, protein, and sucrase activity levels paralleled these results. Although S. boulardii may stimulate polyamine synthesis, it does not seem to be helpful in augmenting gut adaptation in this animal model of short bowel syndrome.
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