Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1949609 | Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular and Cell Biology of Lipids | 2010 | 9 Pages |
Clinically relevant fat malabsorption is usually due to impaired intestinal fat digestion (lipolysis) and/or to impaired solubilization of the lipolytic metabolites. We hypothesized that Gelucire®44/14 – a semi-solid self-micro-emulsifying excipient – could increase fat absorption. In relevant rat models for impaired lipolysis or for impaired solubilization we tested whether administration of Gelucire®44/14 enhanced fat absorption. Rats with impaired lipolysis (lipase inhibitor Orlistat diet) and rats with reduced solubilization (permanent bile diversion) underwent a 72 h fat balance test to assess fat absorption. The absorption kinetics of a stable isotope-labeled fatty acid was assessed in rats with reduced solubilization, in the presence or absence of Gelucire®44/14. Gelucire®44/14 improved fat absorption in rats with impaired lipolysis (from 70% to 82%, p < 0.001). In rats with reduced solubilization, Gelucire®44/14 did not increase fat absorption nor did it reconstitute the absorption kinetics of 13C-labeled palmitate, compared with control rats administered buffer without Gelucire®44/14. The present data show that Gelucire®44/14 might enhance fat absorption under conditions of impaired lipolysis, but not during impaired solubilization. We speculate that, due to its self-micro-emulsification properties, Gelucire®44/14 stabilizes and improves residual lipolytic enzyme activity in vivo, which could be of therapeutic value in clinical conditions of fat malabsorption due to impaired lipolysis.