• Mashup Score: 4

    Objectives Lipid mediators in the GI tract regulate satiation and satiety. Bile acids (BAs) regulate the absorption and metabolism of dietary lipid in the intestine, but their effects on lipid-regulated satiation and satiety are completely unknown. Investigating this is challenging because introducing excessive BAs or eliminating BAs strongly impacts GI functions. We used a mouse model (Cyp8b1–/–…

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    • #GUTImage showing the influence of exogenous #BileAcids on gastric emptying and lipid absorption in the paper "Bile acid composition regulates GPR119-dependent intestinal lipid sensing and food intake regulation in mice" via https://t.co/1FpORzjAIq @emadelomar https://t.co/MOxDBJS2Lq

  • Mashup Score: 2

    As you were browsing www.gastroendonews.com something about your browser made us think you were a bot. There are a few reasons this might happen: You’re a power user moving through this website with super-human speed. You’ve disabled JavaScript in your web browser. A third-party browser plugin, such as…

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    • Researchers say a novel bile acid sequestrant could help roughly 30% of patients with GERD who do not respond adequately to PPIs. https://t.co/1bh0BCHmG8 @metrohealthCLE @CooperHospital #reflux #gi #gimotility #gerd #bileacids #ppis

  • Mashup Score: 14

    A new study led by researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences reveals that human noroviruses, the leading viral cause of foodborne illness and acute diarrhea around the world, infect cells of the small intestine by piggybacking on a normal cellular process called endocytosis that cells use to acquire materials from their…

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    • Betrayed by bile: #bileacids help norovirus sneak into cells @BCMHouston @PNASNews https://t.co/kojtQDQp5F