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In rodents, obesity is associated with changes in tight junctions' structure in small intestine, which impacts intestinal permeability and results in metabolic complications. Few data exist in human. We hypothesized that intestinal permeability is altered in obese subjects in comparison to lean subjects, linked to metabolic and inflammatory status and that these alterations are modified after gastric bypass.
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The regulation of the permeability of the intestinal barrier is essential in the molecular traffic between the lumen and the internal environment. It affects the absorption of nutrients and tolerance or immunization against foodborne non-self antigens that penetrate the barrier. In rodents, increased endotoxemia has been proposed as an important player in low-grade inflammation accompanying the development of obesity and metabolic disorders. In humans, the intestinal barrier function is altered in inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis and celiac disease). The term "leaky gut" is used to describe a porous intestine with hyper-permeability associated with acute or chronic inflammatory diseases such as "systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS),"acute inflammatory bowel disease (IBD for "inflammatory bowel disease").
Deficiencies of the barrier are also observed in extra-intestinal diseases (type-1 diabetes, food allergies, and autoimmune diseases). Impairments in tight junctions may precede clinical signs and constitute a risk factor for developing diseases or secondarily be altered and cause an increased entry of undesirable bacterial or nutritional antigens. The state of the intercellular tight junctions of the intestine controls the diffusion of molecules between cells. A deficiency of the intestinal barrier function is often associated with structural changes in the tight junctions resulting from loss of localization of protein or expression of genes and / or cellular signals such as ZO-1, occludin or tricellulin.
There are few studies about the condition of the intestinal barrier in the context of human obesity.
The objectives of our study are to :
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Inclusion criteria :
Control subjects T2
Obese subjects OB:
Exclusion criteria :
Subject with a history of vascular symptomatic disease in the last 6 months before selection.
Subject receiving a treatment that can affect measured parameters
Pregnancy
Subject with acute or chronic disease that can affect measured parameters or to life-threatening. Including but not limited :
Subject in a situation that, according to the investigator's opinion could interfere with an optimal participation to the study or constitute a particular risk to the subject
Subject in an exclusion period after participating in another clinical trial
Adult person subject to legal protection or unable to consent.
Persons deprived of their liberty by judicial or administrative decision
Control subjects T2
Subject with a history of symptomatic vascular disease (myocardial infarction, angina syndrome threat, surgical or endovascular surgery, stroke, lower limb arteritis symptomatic) of less than 6 months
Subject with any acute or chronic disease which may influence the results of the study or to life-threatening. Including but not limiting:
Adult person subject to legal protection or unable to consent.
Persons deprived of their liberty by judicial or administrative decision
Obese subjects candidates for surgery:
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80 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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