Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5658486 | Gastroenterology | 2017 | 29 Pages |
Abstract
Steatorrhea and hyperoxaluria were common in obese patients before bypass, but hyperoxaluria was not caused by excess unabsorbed fatty acids. Hyperphagia, obesity, or metabolic syndrome could have produced this previously unrecognized hyperoxaluric state by stimulating absorption or endogenous synthesis of oxalate. Hyperoxaluria after RYGB correlated with steatorrhea and was presumably caused by excess fatty acids in the intestinal lumen. Because post-bypass steatorrhea caused little increase in fecal water excretion, most patients with steatorrhea did not consider themselves to have diarrhea. Before and after RYGB, high oxalate intake contributed to the severity of hyperoxaluria.
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Authors
Amber M. Moreland, Carol A. Santa Ana, John R. Asplin, Joseph A. Kuhn, Ross P. Holmes, Jason A. Cole, Elizabeth A. Odstrcil, Thomas G. Jr., Juan G. Martinez, John S. Fordtran,