• 1 January 1968
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 9 (3), 374-+
Abstract
In the course of carrying out sterol balance studies in 19 patients, the following evidence was gathered that, in some but not all patients, considerable amounts of neutral sterols are "lost" during their passage through the intestinal tract. Since plant sterols are largely nonabsorbable in man, they should be totally recovered in the feces; yet in many patients significantly less plant sterol than expected was recovered, the loss amounting to as much as 56% of daily intake. In 2 patients in whom cholesterol-14C and [beta]-sitosterol-3H were instilled into the terminal ileum, from which neither sterol is absorbed, the feces contained 25% less of each isotope than was instilled. In 4 patients fed radioactive cholesterol daily until the isotopic steady state was closely approximated, 28-50 % of the isotope could not be accounted for. On the other hand, in 5 patients fed radioactive bile acids until the isotopic steady state was approximated, input equalled output as predicted. Since the amount of [beta]-sitosterol absorbed in man is limited (5% or less), this sterol can be used as an internal standard for upward correction of the figure obtained for the amount of neutral steroids excreted. The use of [beta]-sitosterol for this purpose is based on 3 considerations it passes through the intestine in the same physicochemical state as cholesterol, it accompanies cholesterol at every step of its isolation and chromatographic measurement and it is lost to the same extent as cholesterol. Excretion data for fecal neutral steroids can therefore be corrected for irregular fecal flow as well as for the "unexpected loss" referred to. This loss seems to be due not to errors in stool collection or to technical errors, but to intestinal bacterial degradation of neutral 3[beta]-OH, [DELTA] 5-sterols to products not recognized as steroids in the analytical methods used.[long dash]Authors.