Effect of Diet High in Beef Fat on the Composition of Fecal Bile Acids During Intestinal Carcinogenesis in the Rat2

Abstract
Two groups of 20 male Sprague-Dawley rats each were given sc 8 mg azoxymethane/kg body weight and fed a normal diet or one high in beef fat. Control groups were not given azoxymethane. Fat-control animals did not excrete more total bile acids than did the normal-control group but did excrete more deoxycholic acid as the result of increased cholic acid degradation. Azoxymethane itself caused an increase in fecal bile acid concentration but tended to reduce the level of cholic acid degradation. Fatty acid content in the feces increased in the animals on the fat diet but was not affected by azoxymethane. A fat-diet-dependent increase was apparent in total fecal neutral steroids and a carcinogen-dependent increase in cholesterol degradation. Dietary fat and bile steroids altered by gut microflora were important interrelated factors in the intestinal carcinogenic process of this animal model.