Background: 13CO2 breath tests can be used to monitor carbohydrate digestion in the small intestine. However, after ingestion of 13C-substrates, 13CO2 excretion in breath originates from two sources: a digestive/oxidative fraction, derived from the small intestine, and a fermentation fraction, derived from undigested substrate spill-over in the colon. In this study, the determinants of the digestive/oxidative fraction were analysed in order to improve the sensitivity/specificity of the 13C-carbohydrate breath tests.
Methods: 13C-carbohydrate breath tests were performed in healthy adults using 13C-lactose, pre-digested 13C-lactose, 13C-glucose, and 13C-galactose as substrates. The effect of exercise (bicycling, 50 W), increasing the metabolism of digested/absorbed substrate, on the outcome of the test was analysed.
Results: In rest, no difference was observed in the 4-h cumulative percentage dose recovered in breath (4-h cPDR) after administration of glucose, pre-digested lactose, and lactose, which were 20.3 +/- 4.5%, 19.2 +/- 5.5%, and 19.9 +/- 4.9%, respectively. The 13CO2 excretion rate after 13C-galactose consumption was significantly slower than after 13C-glucose consumption. Exercise increased 4-h cPDR of 13C-glucose significantly: 76.0 +/- 1.0% vs. 22.7 +/- 2.3%. This effect was also observed using 13C-lactose as substrate: 66.1 +/- 6.2% vs. 19.6 +/- 3.9%. One subject had non-symptomatic lactose maldigestion indicated by a positive H2 breath test. The 13CO2 breath test of this subject in rest was indistinguishable from that of the others (4-h cPDR 16.6 vs. 19.6 +/- 3.9%), whereas the test was clearly indicative during exercise (4-h cPDR 20.5 vs. 66.1 +/- 6.2%).
Conclusion: In healthy volunteers in rest, glucose oxidation is the rate-limiting step in lactose conversion into 13CO2. Increase of metabolism (for instance, by exercise) can shift this step to intestinal hydrolysis of lactose, making the 13C-lactose breath test more sensitive.