Journal of Lipid Research (Mar 1971)

An evaluation of four methods for measuring cholesterol absorption by the intestine in man

  • EDER QUINTÃO,
  • SCOTT M. GRUNDY,
  • E.H. AHRENS, JR.

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
pp. 221 – 232

Abstract

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Critical comparisons have been made in 12 patients of four methods for measuring cholesterol absorption from the intestine. Methods 1–111 depend on the use of labeled cholesterol (intravenously or continuous labeling orally) in conjunction with sterol balance measurements; Method IV can be carried out with only a single test dose containing labeled cholesterol plus labeled β-sitosterol. In the latter technique absorption is calculated as the loss of cholesterol relative to β-sitosterol during intestinal transit.Method III (isotopic steady-state method) proved to be undependable because of uncertainties in determining the existence of an isotopic steady state. However, Method IV gave good agreement with Methods I and II, and it appears to have certain practical as well as theoretical advantages. Although Method IV requires collections of stools for up to 8 days, it is nevertheless the most rapid and the simplest of all the methods for estimating absorption. It can also be used in certain situations, such as in fur-licking animals, when Methods I and II are inadequate. Therefore, this method would seem to be a valuable addition to other isotopic techniques for estimating cholesterol absorption in man.

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