From the Genova Diagnostics information about their intestinal permeability test:
I had the test done about four or five years ago, about a year before I had the enterolab testing that showed gluten intolerance. The mannitol uptake was very low, just on the borderline of abnormal so technically still in the reference range. But still that is indicative of poor absorption of small molecules (like fructose). My doctor didn't understand the test and wasn't able to explain it to me properly. So here I am five years later, finally figuring it out!In certain disease states of the small intestine, such as gluten-sensitive enteropathy, permeability to large molecules may increase while permeability to small molecules decreases.
The explanation of this apparent paradox lies in the different routes of entry for readily absorbed, water-soluble molecules such as mannitol and normally excluded molecules like lactulose. Transcellular uptake of mannitol relies on properties of the luminal cell membrane, a relatively huge area compared to the minute intercellular junctional complexes or “tight junctions.”
Increased porosity of tight junctions has little effect on mannitol uptake, but villous atrophy decreases mannitol diffusion into mucosal cells. Thus, decreased transcellular permeability to small, water-soluble molecules may lead to malnutrition. In contrast, increased porosity of junctional complexes may lead to increased uptake of food antigens and bacterial toxins, correlating with increased susceptibility to food allergies and autoimmune conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis.

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