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Archives of Disease in Childhood 1981;56:368-372; doi:10.1136/adc.56.5.368
Copyright © 1981 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health

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Failure of the hydrogen breath test to detect pulmonary sugar malabsorption.

A J Gardiner, M J Tarlow, J Symonds, J G Hutchison, I T Sutherland

Five patients with sucrase-isomaltase deficiency, and one patient with primary glucose-galactose malabsorption had no increases in breath hydrogen excretion after oral sucrose or glucose. Anaerobic incubation with sugars of stool suspensions from 5 patients with primary sugar malabsorption produced by trace of hydrogen (17 microliter) in only one, while those from 13 or 14 controls produced a mean hydrogen volume of 640 microliter under similar conditions. Altered bacterial metabolism is a probable explanation. Breath hydrogen excretion did increase appreciably in 2 of these patients after oral lactulose showing that hydrogen excretion may vary according to the substrate. Therefore, observation of breath hydrogen excretion after lactulose is not recommended as a means of predicting false-negative breath tests with other sugars. The hydrogen breath test is not a reliable mean of diagnosing primary sugar malabsorption in children.








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Copyright © 1981 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health