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Glucose Galactose Malabsorption (GGM) is a rare metabolic disorder caused
by a defect in glucose and galactose transport across the intestinal lining.
GGM is characterized by severe diarrhea and dehydration as early as the
first day of life and can result in rapid death if lactose (milk sugar),
sucrose (table sugar), glucose, and galactose are not removed from the diet.
Half of the 200 severe GGM cases found worldwide result from familial
intermarriage. At least 10% of the general population has glucose
intolerance, however, and it is possible that these people may have milder
forms of the disease. GGM is an autosomal recessive disorder in which
affected individuals inherit two defective copies of the
SGLT1
gene, located on chromosome 22. Normally within
the space enclosed by the small intestine (called the lumen), lactose is
broken down into glucose and galactose by an enzyme called lactase, while
sucrose is broken down into glucose and fructose by an enzyme called sucrase.
The protein product of SGLT1
then moves the glucose and the galactose
from the lumen of the small intestine into intestinal cells. Usually the
mutations carried by GGM individuals result in nonfunctional truncated SGLT1
proteins or in the improper placement of the proteins such that they can not
transport glucose and galactose out of the intestinal lumen. The glucose and
galactose, if left untransported, draw water out of the body into the
intestinal lumen, resulting in diarrhea. Although no cure exists for GGM,
patients can control their symptoms (diarrhea) by removing lactose, sucrose,
and glucose from their diets. Infants showing a prenatal diagnosis of GGM
will thrive on a fructose-based replacement formula and will later continue
their "normal" physical development on a fructose-based solid diet. Older
children and adults with severe GGM can also manage their symptoms on a
fructose-based diet and may show improved glucose tolerance and even
clinical remission as they age. |