Intestinal Absorption of Bile Pigments

Roger Lester(University of Chicago), Rudi Schmid(University of Chicago)
New England Journal of Medicine
July 25, 1963
Cited by 132

Abstract

IN the voluminous literature on bile-pigment metabolism1 little attention has been given to the possibility that bilirubin is reabsorbed from the intestinal tract. Recent studies utilizing G14-labeled pigment2 have demonstrated that unconjugated bilirubin is absorbed rapidly from the intestine of rats. In contrast conjugate is not absorbed intact,2 hepatic conjugation creating a barrier against the reabsorption of the potentially toxic3 unconjugated pigment. In rats this conjugate barrier is incomplete; a fraction of the administered bilirubin glucuronide is hydrolyzed in the intestine, and significant quantities of the released unconjugated bilirubin are absorbed.The following studies were performed to determine whether . . .


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