Increased Intestinal Hydrolysis of Urea in Patients with Alcoholic Cirrhosis

Abstract
Fourteen patients with biopsy-proven alcoholic liver cirrhosis in a clinically stable phase but with compromised liver function entered the study, together with 10 control persons. All had normal creatinine clearance, and none received antibiotics or hormones. They ingested a diet containing 1 g of protein/kg body weight daily during the study. The fractional intestinal loss of newly synthesized urea, determined by a 14C-urea tracer method, was increased from 0.17 ± 0.08 in controls to 0.26 ± 0.08 in cirrhotics (mean ± SD, PP < 0.05). Furthermore, there was a positive correlation between intestinal loss and blood urea nitrogen concentration (r = 0.68, P < 0.01) in patients with cirrhosis but not in controls. The increased endogenous ammonia load of cirrhotics corresponds to an extra protein intake of 30-35 g/day. In patients with cirrhosis prophylactic treatment with, for example, lactulose is rational before reduction in dietary protein.