| 12. Disaccharidase
Deficiencies |
page 240 |
Disaccharide intolerance is
a characteristic symptom complex resulting from the ingestion of ordinary dietary
quantities of disaccharides, which produces a symptomatic diarrhea. The cause is a
deficiency of one or more disaccharidases, but not all people with such a deficiency will
experience symptoms.
Dietary carbohydrates are presented to the surface of the jejunal
mucosa in the form of isomaltose, maltotriose and three major disaccharides - maltose,
sucrose and lactose. Trehalose, a disaccharide contained in young mushrooms and in certain
insects, is a minor component of modern Western diets. Deficiencies of disaccharidases may
be primary (hereditary) or secondary (acquired) deficiencies. Characteristically in
primary deficiencies, which are rare, only one enzyme is involved; the deficiency is
present at birth (with the exception of the adult-onset form of lactase deficiency), not
associated with intestinal disease, and irreversible. Secondary deficiencies usually
involve all the disaccharidases, may occur at any age, are associated with a disorder of
the small intestinal mucosa, and may be reversed if the intestinal disorder (e.g., celiac
disease, stasis syndromes or acute enteritis) heals. Because primary lactase deficiency is
uncommon in Canadians with northern European ancestors, the appropriate tests need to be
performed to exclude secondary causes such as celiac disease.
The clinical manifestations
of enzyme deficiency result from the osmotic diarrhea following ingestion of the
disaccharide. The affected individual develops crampy, abdominal distress and distention,
relieved by the expulsion of liquid stool and flatus. The severity of the diarrhea varies
with the disaccharide load, the degree of deficiency of enzyme activity and any
associated/ causal intestinal disease. The clinical diagnosis can be confirmed by direct
enzyme assay of jejunal mucosal biopsies or by indirect methods for detecting disaccharide
malabsorption (e.g., the breath hydrogen test). Treatment of hereditary deficiencies is
usually by elimination diets. For children and adolescents (who have high nutritional
requirements) and for adults who enjoy milk, low-lactose milk is available in some
localities. It can also be prepared by adding yeast lactase (available in commercial form)
to milk and refrigerating it for 24 hours; 80% lactose hydrolysis can be obtained with
this method.
Delayed-onset (adult-onset) hereditary lactase deficiency is extremely common
and probably "normal" for humans. Beginning as early as age 2 years in some
racial groups, and as late as adolescence in others, the activities of lactase in the
majority of the world's populations drop sharply. This is the result of the genetically
controlled "switching off" of lactase synthesis by intestinal cells. Individuals
of northern European ancestry and certain groups in Africa and India, however, maintain
lactase activity throughout adulthood. |