Mucosal and invading bacteria in patients with inflammatory bowel disease compared with controls

B Kleessen, AJ Kroesen, HJ Buhr… - Scandinavian journal of …, 2002 - Taylor & Francis
B Kleessen, AJ Kroesen, HJ Buhr, M Blaut
Scandinavian journal of gastroenterology, 2002Taylor & Francis
Background: Endogenous intestinal bacteria and/or specific bacterial pathogens are
suspected of being involved in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). The
aim of this study was to investigate IBD tissues for different bacterial population groups
harbouring the mucosal surface and/or invading the mucosa. Methods: Tissue sections from
surgical resections from the terminal ileum and/or the colon from 24 IBD patients (12 active
ulcerative colitis (UC), 12 active Crohn disease (CD)) and 14 non-IBD controls were studied …
Background
Endogenous intestinal bacteria and/or specific bacterial pathogens are suspected of being involved in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). The aim of this study was to investigate IBD tissues for different bacterial population groups harbouring the mucosal surface and/or invading the mucosa.
Methods
Tissue sections from surgical resections from the terminal ileum and/or the colon from 24 IBD patients (12 active ulcerative colitis (UC), 12 active Crohn disease (CD)) and 14 non-IBD controls were studied by fluorescent in situ hybridization on a quantifiable basis.
Results
More bacteria were detected on the mucosal surface of IBD patients than on those of non-IBD controls ( P < 0.05). Bacterial invasion of the mucosa was evident in 83.3% of colonic specimens from the UC patients, in 55.6% of the ileal and in 25% of the colonic specimens from the CD patients, but no bacteria were detected in the tissues of the controls. Colonic UC specimens were colonized by a variety of organisms, such as bacteria belonging to the gamma subdivision of Proteobacteria , the Enterobacteriaceae , the Bacteroides/Prevotella cluster, the Clostridium histolyticum/Clostridium lituseburense group, the Clostridium coccoides/Eubacterium rectale group, high G + C Gram-positive bacteria, or sulphate-reducing bacteria, while CD samples harboured mainly bacteria belonging to the former three groups.
Conclusion
Pathogenic events in CD and UC may be associated with different alterations in the mucosal flora of the ileum and colon.
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