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Original article

Cholesterol Saturation of the Bile after Jejunoileal Bypass Increases More with a 1:3 than with a 3:1 Jejunoileal Ratio

, , , &
Pages 945-950 | Received 17 Jan 1981, Accepted 13 Feb 1981, Published online: 22 Feb 2010
 

Abstract

Previous studies suggested, surprisingly, that alter jejunoileal bypass surgery the lithogenicity of the bile, assessed by its cholesterol saturation and the rate of gallstone formation, increases more with a 1:3 than with a 3:1 jejunoileal ratio of the functioning segment. The present study re-evaluates this by examining fasting bile samples drawn from duodenum after cholecystokinin stimulation in 34 obese patients without gallstones, who either were waiting for or had had bypass surgery, with a 1:3 or 3:1 jejunoileal ratio. 3, 9, or 15 months earlier. In all groups, the cholesterol content exceeded the solubilizing capacity of the bile as determined on the basis of total lipid concentration and content of phospholipid relative to bile acids. The cholesterol supersaturation increased with bypass surgery as such, increased more with a 1:3 than with a 3:1 jejunoileal ratio, decreased with time after surgery, and reached the preoperative level at 15 months. Assuming a total lipid concentration of 10g/dl in the bile did not change this pattern. Our results indicate that during the period of weight loss after bypass surgery the lithogenicity of gallbladder bile increases more with a 1:3 than with a 3:1 jejunoileal ratio.

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