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Original Article

Incidence and Clinical Significance of Lactose Malabsorption in Adult Coeliac Disease

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Pages 484-488 | Received 25 Jun 1987, Accepted 11 Jan 1988, Published online: 08 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Fifty-one adult patients with coeliac disease, verified by a proximal small-intestinal biopsy, were investigated. Before treatment with a gluten-free and low-lactose diet 52% showed a slight rise in blood glucose during the lactose tolerance test. Seventy-nine per cent of these patients had watery stools, and 88% had three or more bowel movements a day—statistically significantly different from the coeliac patients with a normal lactose tolerance test. After treatment 12% had a flat lactose tolerance curve. Half of them (6%) had specific lactase deficiency. This is approximately the incidence of lactose malabsorption in the general Danish population. The small-intestinal disaccharidases and alkaline phosphatase levels were severely depressed before treatment. After treatment the activities increased, but not to normal. We conclude that lactose malabsorption is a clinically important condition in many patients with untreated coeliac disease, giving rise to more frequent and more watery stools. In well-treated coeliac disease lactose malabsorption is not commoner than in the general population. The lactose activity in a proximal intestinal biopsy specimen was found to be an unreliable indicator of lactose malabsorption in coeliac disease.

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