Citation Info

J Appl Physiol. 73(5):2142-2150. Available: www.gssiweb.org

Intestinal water absorption from select carbohydrate solution in humans.

Gisolfi CV, Summers RW, Schedl HP, Bleiler TL.

Abstract

Eight men positioned a triple-lumen tube in the duodenojejunum. By use of segmental perfusion, 2, 4, 6, or 8% solutions of glucose (111-444 mM), sucrose (55-233 mM), a maltodextrin [17-67 mM, avg. chain length = 7 glucose units (7G)], or a corn syrup solid [40-160 mM, avg. chain length = 3 glucose units (3G)] were perfused at 15 ml/min for 70 min after a 30-min equilibration period. All solutions were made isotonic with NaCl, except 6 and 8% glucose solutions, which were hypertonic. An isotonic NaCl solution was perfused as control. Water absorption (range: 9-15 ml·h^-1·cm^-1) did not differ for the 2, 4, and 6% CHO solutions but was greater (P <0.05) than absorption from control (3.0 ± 2.2 ml·h^-1·cm^-1). The 8% glucose and 3G solutions reduced (P <0.05) net water flux compared with their 2, 4, and 6% solutions, but 8% sucrose and 8% 7G solutions promoted water absorption equivalent to lower CHO concentrations. Water absorption was independent of [Na+] in the original solution. In the test segment, 1) Na+ flux correlated with net water flux (r = 0.72, P < 0.01), K+ (r = 0.78, P < 0.01), and [Na+] (r = 0.68, P < 0.001); 2) Na+ absorption occurred at luminal [Na+] as low as 50 mM; 3) glucose transport increased linearly over the luminal concentration range of 40-180 mM; and 4) net water flux was similar over a range of glucose-to-Na+ concentration ratios of 0.4:1 to 3.5:1. We conclude that 1) water absorption is independent of CHO type up to a concentration of 6% for isocaloric solutions, and 2) increasing CHO concentration up to 8% can significantly reduce water absorption for solutions containing glucose and G3 but not G7 or sucrose.