Effects of Feeding Fermentable Carbohydrates on the Cecal Concentrations of Minerals and Their Fluxes between the Cecum and Blood Plasma in the Rat
- 1 November 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Elsevier in Journal of Nutrition
- Vol. 119 (11) , 1625-1630
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/119.11.1625
Abstract
This study was conducted to determine in rats to what extent fermentable carbohydrates alter the mineral composition of cecal contents and the absorption of the major cations. The carbohydrates studied were as follows: an oligosaccharide (lactulose, 10%); a soluble fiber (pectin, 10%); and an amylose-rich starch, incompletely broken down in the small intestine (amylomaize starch, 25 or 50%). All of these carbohydrates elicited a marked enlargement of the cecum, a drop of cecal pH and an increase in the volatile fatty acids (VFA) pool. With the lactulose diet, the VFA concentration was the lowest, whereas VFA absorption was similar to that observed with the 10% pectin or 25% amylomaize diets. From comparisons between germfree and conventional rats adapted to a fiber-free diet, it appears that VFA are required as counter anions to maintain high concentrations of cations, especially sodium. In conventional rats fed fermentable carbohydrates, sodium concentration in the cecal fluid was ∼80 mM, except with the lactulose diet (49.5 mM), due to osmotic effects of lactulose. There was, compared to the fiber-free diet, an increase in the cecal concentrations of potassium, calcium and phosphate, but not of magnesium; nevertheless, the cecal pool of all of these minerals was considerably increased. Potassium absorption was increased by fermentable carbohydrates in the cecum, which also appears to be a major site of magnesium and calcium absorption. Thus, fermentable carbohydrates shift aborally the absorption of the major cations, and this point is especially interesting in regard to calcium, since an enhanced supply of calcium in the large bowel has been invoked for fiber effects on colonic carcinogenesis.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Calcium and phosphate: Effect of two dietary confounders oncolonic epithelial cellular proliferationNutrition Research, 1989
- Oral calcium suppresses increased rectal epithelial proliferation of persons at risk of colorectal cancer.Gut, 1989
- Influence of starches of low digestibility on the rat caecal microfloraBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1988
- Calcium and colon cancer: A reviewNutrition and Cancer, 1988
- Comparative effects of wheat bran and barley husk on nutrient utilization in ratsBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1986
- Effect of dietary fiber on bioavailability of zinc and copper and histology in ratsNutrition Research, 1985
- Calcium inhibits the damaging and compensatory proliferative effects of fatty acids on mouse colon epitheliumCancer Letters, 1984
- The large bowel—a supplementary rumen?Proceedings of the Nutrition Society, 1984
- Adaptive increase in phytate digestibility by phosphorus-deprived rats and the relationship of intestinal phytase (EC 3.1.3.8) and alkaline phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.1) to phytate utilizationBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1983
- The digestion of pectin in the human gut and its effect on calcium absorption and large bowel functionBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1979