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Differential impact of lactose/lactase phenotype on colonic microflora
Authors:Andrew Szilagyi  Ian Shrier  Debra Heilpern  Jung Sung Je  Sunghoon Park  George Chong  Catherine Lalonde  Louis-Francois Cote  Byong Lee
Institution:1.Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine, McGill School of Medicine;;2.Centre for Clinical Epidemiology and Community Studies, Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research;;3.Department of Food Science, Macdonald Campus, McGill University;;4.Division of Laboratory Genetic Testing, Department of Biochemistry;;5.Department of Dietetics, Jewish General Hospital;;6.Department of Microbiology/Immunology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec
Abstract:

BACKGROUND:

The ability to digest lactose divides the world’s population into two phenotypes that may be risk variability markers for several diseases. Prebiotic effects likely favour lactose maldigesters who experience lactose spilling into their colon.

OBJECTIVE:

To evaluate the effects of fixed-dose lactose solutions on fecal bifidobacteria and lactobacilli in digesters and maldigesters, and to determine whether the concept of a difference in ability to digest lactose is supported.

METHODS:

A four-week study was performed in 23 lactose mal-digesters and 18 digesters. Following two weeks of dairy food withdrawal, subjects ingested 25 g of lactose twice a day for two weeks. Stool bifidobacteria and lactobacilli counts pre- and postintervention were measured as the primary outcome. For secondary outcomes, total anaerobes, Enterobacteriaceae, beta-galactosidase and N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase activity in stool, as well as breath hydrogen and symptoms following lactose challenge tests, were measured.

RESULTS:

Lactose maldigesters had a mean change difference (0.72 log10 colony forming units/g stool; P=0.04) in bifidobacteria counts compared with lactose digesters. Lactobacilli counts were increased, but not significantly. Nevertheless, reduced breath hydrogen after lactose ingestion correlated with lactobacilli (r=?0.5; P<0.001). Reduced total breath hydrogen and symptom scores together, with a rise in fecal enzymes after intervention, were appropriate, but not significant.

CONCLUSIONS:

Despite failure to achieve full colonic adaptation, the present study provided evidence for a differential impact of lactose on microflora depending on genetic lactase status. A prebiotic effect was evident in lactose maldigesters but not in lactose digesters. This may play a role in modifying the mechanisms of certain disease risks related to dairy food consumption between the two phenotypes.
Keywords:Fecal microflora  Lactose  Prebiotic
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