2000
DOI: 10.1016/s0041-1345(00)01225-2
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Human intestinal fatty acid binding protein in peritoneal fluid is a marker of intestinal ischemia

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Cited by 23 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Sonnino et al (9) reported that peritoneal fluid levels of I-FABP, a protein that is only present in the villus tips of intestinal mucosa and is not present in the circulation under normal conditions, is strongly correlated with severity of intestinal ischemia (3). It has been shown that functional and structural changes in intestinal mucosa begin with the short-term (5-15 min) disappearance of superior mesenteric artery flow, and then gradually become more severe with time.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Sonnino et al (9) reported that peritoneal fluid levels of I-FABP, a protein that is only present in the villus tips of intestinal mucosa and is not present in the circulation under normal conditions, is strongly correlated with severity of intestinal ischemia (3). It has been shown that functional and structural changes in intestinal mucosa begin with the short-term (5-15 min) disappearance of superior mesenteric artery flow, and then gradually become more severe with time.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This was done by attaching a three-way connector to the end of the transurethral catheter, injecting 25 mL of sterile saline solution into the bladder through one port, and then measuring IAP by attaching a manometer to the other available port. Intraabdominal pressure was measured with the patient in supine position and at the end of expiration, and the mid-axillary line was accepted as the zero point (9). This measurement was taken at four time points: beginning of surgery, end of surgery, 12-hour postoperatively, 24-hour postoperatively.…”
Section: Study Protocolmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In clinical settings, I-FABP concentrations measured in peritoneal fluid, plasma and urine are significantly higher in patients with i3 than in healthy controls and patients with other causes of the acute abdomen [66][67][68]. In peritoneal fluid, whose presence reveals late and severe disease, high levels of I-FABP were detected in patients with intestinal diseases [68].…”
Section: Fatty Acid-binding Proteins (Fabp) Biomarkers Of Villi Injurymentioning
confidence: 97%
“…[22] Sonnino et al found strong statistical correlation between intestinal ischemia and levels of fatty acid-binding proteins in peritoneal fluid normally found only in intestinal mucosa villus tips, not in the circulatory system. [23] Diagnostic use of inert Xenon (Xe 54 ) gas is promising in early diagnosis of AMIwhen dissolved in salt and injected into the peritoneal cavity, it is absorbed with passive diffusion into the intestine. While tissues with normal perfusion can clean this gas easily, ischemic tissues cannot.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%