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Dive into the research topics where Ece Mutlu is active.

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Featured researches published by Ece Mutlu.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2007

ACG practice guidelines: Esophageal reflux testing

Ikuo Hirano; Joel E. Richter; Ronnie Fass; Darren S. Baroni; David Bernstein; Adil E. Bharucha; William R. Brugge; Lin Chang; William D. Chey; Matthew E. Cohen; John T. Cunningham; Steven A. Edmundowicz; John M. Inadomi; Timothy R. Koch; Ece Mutlu; Henry P. Parkman; Charlene M. Prather; Daniel S. Pratt; Albert Roach; Richard E. Sampliner; Subbaramiah Sridhar; Nimish Vakil; Miguel A. Valdovinos; Benjamin C.Y. Wong; Alvin M. Zfass

Investigations and technical advances have enhanced our understanding and management of gastroesophageal reflux disease. The recognition of the prevalence and importance of patients with endoscopy-negative reflux disease as well as those refractory to proton pump inhibitor therapy have led to an increasing need for objective tests of esophageal reflux. Guidelines for esophageal reflux testing are developed under the auspices of the American College of Gastroenterology and its Practice Parameters Committee and approved by the Board of Trustees. Issues regarding the utilization of conventional, catheter-based pH monitoring are discussed. Improvements in the interpretation of esophageal pH recordings through the use of symptom-reflux association analyses as well as limitations gleaned from recent studies are reviewed. The clinical utility of pH recordings in the proximal esophagus and stomach is examined. Newly introduced techniques of duodenogastroesophageal reflux, wireless pH capsule monitoring and esophageal impedance testing are assessed and put into the context of traditional methodology. Finally, recommendations on the clinical applications of esophageal reflux testing are presented.


Cell | 2015

Disease-Specific Alterations in the Enteric Virome in Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Jason M. Norman; Scott A. Handley; Megan T. Baldridge; Lindsay Droit; Catherine Y. Liu; Brian C. Keller; Amal Kambal; Cynthia L. Monaco; Guoyan Zhao; Phillip Fleshner; Thaddeus S. Stappenbeck; Dermot P. McGovern; Ali Keshavarzian; Ece Mutlu; Jenny Sauk; Dirk Gevers; Ramnik J. Xavier; David Wang; Miles Parkes; Herbert W. Virgin

Decreases in the diversity of enteric bacterial populations are observed in patients with Crohns disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). Less is known about the virome in these diseases. We show that the enteric virome is abnormal in CD and UC patients. In-depth analysis of preparations enriched for free virions in the intestine revealed that CD and UC were associated with a significant expansion of Caudovirales bacteriophages. The viromes of CD and UC patients were disease and cohort specific. Importantly, it did not appear that expansion and diversification of the enteric virome was secondary to changes in bacterial populations. These data support a model in which changes in the virome may contribute to intestinal inflammation and bacterial dysbiosis. We conclude that the virome is a candidate for contributing to, or being a biomarker for, human inflammatory bowel disease and speculate that the enteric virome may play a role in other diseases.


Annals of Surgery | 2010

Sacral nerve stimulation for fecal incontinence: Results of a 120-patient prospective multicenter study

Steven D. Wexner; John A. Coller; Ghislain Devroede; Tracy L. Hull; Richard W. McCallum; Miranda Chan; Jennifer M. Ayscue; Abbas S. Shobeiri; David A. Margolin; Michael England; Howard S. Kaufman; William J. Snape; Ece Mutlu; Heidi Chua; Paul Pettit; Deborah Nagle; Robert D. Madoff; Darin R. Lerew; Anders Mellgren

Background:Sacral nerve stimulation has been approved for use in treating urinary incontinence in the United States since 1997, and in Europe for both urinary and fecal incontinence (FI) since 1994. The purpose of this study was to determine the safety and efficacy of sacral nerve stimulation in a large population under the rigors of Food and Drug Administration-approved investigational protocol. Methods:Candidates for SNS who provided informed consent were enrolled in this Institutional Review Board-approved multicentered prospective trial. Patients showing ≥50% improvement during test stimulation received chronic implantation of the InterStim Therapy (Medtronic; Minneapolis, MN). The primary efficacy objective was to demonstrate that ≥50% of subjects would achieve therapeutic success, defined as ≥50% reduction of incontinent episodes per week at 12 months compared with baseline. Results:A total of 133 patients underwent test stimulation with a 90% success rate, and 120 (110 females) of a mean age of 60.5 years and a mean duration of FI of 6.8 years received chronic implantation. Mean follow-up was 28 (range, 2.2–69.5) months. At 12 months, 83% of subjects achieved therapeutic success (95% confidence interval: 74%–90%; P < 0.0001), and 41% achieved 100% continence. Therapeutic success was 85% at 24 months. Incontinent episodes decreased from a mean of 9.4 per week at baseline to 1.9 at 12 months and 2.9 at 2 years. There were no reported unanticipated adverse device effects associated with InterStim Therapy. Conclusion:Sacral nerve stimulation using InterStim Therapy is a safe and effective treatment for patients with FI.


Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology | 2002

Intestinal permeation and gastrointestinal disease.

Mark T. DeMeo; Ece Mutlu; Ali Keshavarzian; Mary C. Tobin

The gastrointestinal tract constitutes one of the largest sites of exposure to the outside environment. The function of the gastrointestinal tract in monitoring and sealing the host interior from intruders is called the gut barrier. A variety of specific and nonspecific mechanisms are in operation to establish the host barrier; these include luminal mechanisms and digestive enzymes, the epithelial cells together with tight junctions in between them, and the gut immune system. Disruptions in the gut barrier follow injury from various causes including nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and oxidant stress, and involve mechanisms such as adenosine triphosphate depletion and damage to epithelial cell cytoskeletons that regulate tight junctions. Ample evidence links gut barrier dysfunction to multiorgan system failure in sepsis and immune dysregulation. Additionally, contribution of gut barrier dysfunction to gastrointestinal disease is an evolving concept and is the focus of this review. An overview of the evidence for the role of gut barrier dysfunction in disorders such as Crohns disease, celiac disease, food allergy, acute pancreatitis, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, and alcoholic liver disease is provided, together with critical insight into the implications of this evidence as a primary disease mechanism.


Movement Disorders | 2012

Alpha-synuclein in colonic submucosa in early untreated Parkinson's disease.

Kathleen M. Shannon; Ali Keshavarzian; Ece Mutlu; Hemraj B. Dodiya; Delia M. Daian; Jean A. Jaglin; Jeffrey H. Kordower

The diagnosis of Parkinsons disease rests on motor signs of advanced central dopamine deficiency. There is an urgent need for disease biomarkers. Clinicopathological evidence suggests that α‐synuclein aggregation, the pathological signature of Parkinsons disease, can be detected in gastrointestinal tract neurons in Parkinsons disease. We studied whether we could demonstrate α‐synuclein pathology in specimens from unprepped flexible sigmoidoscopy of the distal sigmoid colon in early subjects with Parkinsons disease. We also looked for 3‐nitrotyrosine, a marker of oxidative stress. Ten subjects with early Parkinsons disease not treated with dopaminergic agents (7 men; median age, 58.5 years; median disease duration, 1.5 years) underwent unprepped flexible sigmoidoscopy with biopsy of the distal sigmoid colon. Immunohistochemistry studies for α‐synuclein and 3‐nitrotyrosine were performed on biopsy specimens and control specimens from a tissue repository (23 healthy subjects and 23 subjects with inflammatory bowel disease). Nine of 10 Parkinsons disease samples were adequate for study. All showed staining for α‐synuclein in nerve fibers in colonic submucosa. No control sample showed this pattern. A few showed light α‐synuclein staining in round cells. 3‐Nitrotyrosine staining was seen in 87% of Parkinsons disease cases but was not specific for Parkinsons disease. This study suggests a pattern of α‐synuclein staining in Parkinsons disease that was distinct from healthy subjects and those with inflammatory bowel disease. The absence of this pattern in subjects with inflammatory bowel disease suggests it is not a sequel of inflammation or oxidative stress. 3‐Nitrotyrosine immunostaining was common in all groups studied, suggesting oxidative stress in the colonic submucosa.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2012

Colonic microbiome is altered in alcoholism

Ece Mutlu; Patrick M. Gillevet; Huzefa Rangwala; Masoumeh Sikaroodi; Ammar Naqvi; Phillip Engen; Mary J. Kwasny; Cynthia Lau; Ali Keshavarzian

Several studies indicate the importance of colonic microbiota in metabolic and inflammatory disorders and importance of diet on microbiota composition. The effects of alcohol, one of the prominent components of diet, on colonic bacterial composition is largely unknown. Mounting evidence suggests that gut-derived bacterial endotoxins are cofactors for alcohol-induced tissue injury and organ failure like alcoholic liver disease (ALD) that only occur in a subset of alcoholics. We hypothesized that chronic alcohol consumption results in alterations of the gut microbiome in a subgroup of alcoholics, and this may be responsible for the observed inflammatory state and endotoxemia in alcoholics. Thus we interrogated the mucosa-associated colonic microbiome in 48 alcoholics with and without ALD as well as 18 healthy subjects. Colonic biopsy samples from subjects were analyzed for microbiota composition using length heterogeneity PCR fingerprinting and multitag pyrosequencing. A subgroup of alcoholics have an altered colonic microbiome (dysbiosis). The alcoholics with dysbiosis had lower median abundances of Bacteroidetes and higher ones of Proteobacteria. The observed alterations appear to correlate with high levels of serum endotoxin in a subset of the samples. Network topology analysis indicated that alcohol use is correlated with decreased connectivity of the microbial network, and this alteration is seen even after an extended period of sobriety. We show that the colonic mucosa-associated bacterial microbiome is altered in a subset of alcoholics. The altered microbiota composition is persistent and correlates with endotoxemia in a subgroup of alcoholics.


Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 2009

Intestinal Dysbiosis: A Possible Mechanism of Alcohol-Induced Endotoxemia and Alcoholic Steatohepatitis in Rats

Ece Mutlu; Ali Keshavarzian; Phillip Engen; Christopher B. Forsyth; Masoumeh Sikaroodi; Patrick M. Gillevet

BACKGROUND Clinical and animal data indicate that gut-derived endotoxin and other luminal bacterial products are necessary cofactors for development of alcoholic liver disease (ALD). Although gut leakiness is clearly an important cause of endotoxemia in ALD, it cannot fully explain endotoxemia in all ALD subjects and thus other factors may be involved. One possible factor is a change in gut microbiota composition (dysbiosis). Thus, the aim of our study was to interrogate the gut bacterial microbiota in alcohol-fed rats to see if chronic alcohol consumption affects gut bacteria composition. METHOD Male Sprague-Dawley rats were given either alcohol or dextrose intragastrically by gavage twice daily for up to 10 weeks. A subgroup of rats was also given either a probiotic (lactobacillus GG) or a prebiotic (oats) by gavage. Ileal and colonic mucosal-attached microbiota composition were interrogated by Length Heterogeneity PCR (LH-PCR) fingerprinting. RESULTS Bacterial microbiota composition in alcohol-fed rats is not different from dextrose-fed rats at weeks 4 and 6. Mucosa-associated microbiota composition in the colon is altered at 10 weeks of daily alcohol gavage. Both LGG and oats prevented alcohol-induced dysbiosis up to 10 weeks of alcohol treatment. CONCLUSION Daily alcohol consumption for 10 weeks alters colonic mucosa-associated bacterial microbiota composition in rats. Our data showed, for the first time, that daily alcohol consumption can affect colonic microbiome composition and suggest that dysbiosis may be an important mechanism of alcohol-induced endotoxemia. Further studies are needed to determine how dysbiotic microbiota contributes to development of ALD and whether therapeutic interventions targeted towards dysbiotic microbiota can prevent complications of alcoholism like ALD.


Gut | 2003

Increases in free radicals and cytoskeletal protein oxidation and nitration in the colon of patients with inflammatory bowel disease

Ali Keshavarzian; Ali Banan; Ashkan Farhadi; Sri Komanduri; Ece Mutlu; Yong Guo Zhang; Jeremy Z. Fields

Background: Overproduction of colonic oxidants contributes to mucosal injury in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) but the mechanisms are unclear. Our recent findings using monolayers of intestinal cells suggest that the mechanism could be oxidant induced damage to cytoskeletal proteins. However, oxidants and oxidative damage have not been well characterised in IBD mucosa. Aims: To determine whether there are increases in oxidants and in tissue and cytoskeletal protein oxidation in IBD mucosa. Methods: We measured nitric oxide (NO) and markers of oxidative injury (carbonylation and nitrotyrosination) to tissue and cytoskeletal proteins in colonic mucosa from IBD patients (ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease, specific colitis) and controls. Outcomes were correlated with IBD severity score. Results: Inflamed mucosa showed the greatest increases in oxidants and oxidative damage. Smaller but still significant increases were seen in normal appearing mucosa of patients with active and inactive IBD. Tissue NO levels correlated with oxidative damage. Actin was markedly (>50%) carbonylated and nitrated in inflamed tissues of active IBD, less so in normal appearing tissues. Tubulin carbonylation occurred in parallel; tubulin nitration was not observed. NO and all measures of oxidative damage in tissue and cytoskeletal proteins in the mucosa correlated with IBD severity. Disruption of the actin cytoarchitecture was primarily within the epithelial cells and paracellular area. Conclusions: Oxidant levels increase in IBD along with oxidation of tissue and cytoskeletal proteins. Oxidative injury correlated with disease severity but is also present in substantial amounts in normal appearing mucosa of IBD patients, suggesting that oxidative injury does not necessarily lead to tissue injury and is not entirely a consequence of tissue injury. Marked actin oxidation (>50%)—which appears to result from cumulative oxidative damage—was only seen in inflamed mucosa, suggesting that oxidant induced cytoskeletal disruption is required for tissue injury, mucosal disruption, and IBD flare up.


PLOS Pathogens | 2014

A Compositional Look at the Human Gastrointestinal Microbiome and Immune Activation Parameters in HIV Infected Subjects

Ece Mutlu; Ali Keshavarzian; John Losurdo; Garth Swanson; Basile Siewe; Christopher B. Forsyth; Audrey L. French; Patricia Demarais; Yan Sun; Lars Koenig; Stephen Cox; Phillip Engen; Prachi S. Chakradeo; Rawan Abbasi; Annika Gorenz; Charles Burns; Alan Landay

HIV progression is characterized by immune activation and microbial translocation. One factor that may be contributing to HIV progression could be a dysbiotic microbiome. We therefore hypothesized that the GI mucosal microbiome is altered in HIV patients and this alteration correlates with immune activation in HIV. 121 specimens were collected from 21 HIV positive and 22 control human subjects during colonoscopy. The composition of the lower gastrointestinal tract mucosal and luminal bacterial microbiome was characterized using 16S rDNA pyrosequencing and was correlated to clinical parameters as well as immune activation and circulating bacterial products in HIV patients on ART. The composition of the HIV microbiome was significantly different than that of controls; it was less diverse in the right colon and terminal ileum, and was characterized by loss of bacterial taxa that are typically considered commensals. In HIV samples, there was a gain of some pathogenic bacterial taxa. This is the first report characterizing the terminal ileal and colonic mucosal microbiome in HIV patients with next generation sequencing. Limitations include use of HIV-infected subjects on HAART therapy.


Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2003

Endoscopy in eosinophilic esophagitis: “feline” esophagus and perforation risk

Mitchell Kaplan; Ece Mutlu; Shriram Jakate; Keith Bruninga; John Losurdo; Joseph Losurdo; Ali Keshavarzian

BACKGROUND & AIMS Idiopathic eosinophilic esophagitis is an underdiagnosed disease with typical endoscopic findings, which have not been well described. METHODS Charts and pathology reports at two tertiary care centers from June 1993 to April 2002 were reviewed to describe the endoscopic findings of this disease and to correlate them with clinical characteristics. Eight patients were identified as having eosinophilic esophagitis based on clinical symptoms and pathology reports. RESULTS Soft and subtle ring(s) in the esophagus were found in 7 of 8 patients. In 3 of 8 patients, the esophagus appeared rigid. Mucosal rents occurred with simple passage of the endoscope in 5 of 8 patients. One patient developed a perforation after simple passage of the endoscope. Endoscopic findings can be normal or very subtle in these patients, and the findings can easily be missed during endoscopy. Tearing of the esophagus can occur with simple passage of the endoscope or biopsy even in the absence of overt rings. A minimum of 8 weeks of medical therapy (proton pump inhibitor, histamine antagonists, immunosuppressants) should be undertaken before considering dilation because of the high risk involved with the procedure and the good response to medical therapy. CONCLUSIONS We recommend considering dilation only in patients with eosinophilic esophagitis who do not respond to medical therapy and have rings that appear to be obstructing the lumen.

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Ali Keshavarzian

Rush University Medical Center

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Phillip Engen

Rush University Medical Center

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Christopher B. Forsyth

Rush University Medical Center

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Ali Banan

Rush University Medical Center

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John Losurdo

Rush University Medical Center

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Garth Swanson

Rush University Medical Center

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Jeremy Z. Fields

Rush University Medical Center

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Ashkan Farhadi

Rush University Medical Center

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