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1.
Alteration of electrical function in mammalian gastric mucosa is considered as an indicator of gastric barrier rupture. Measurements of transmucosal potential difference (PD) and electrical resistance (R) have documented such alterations to a variety of mucosal damaging agents. This study was designed to test whether the rat gastric mucosa exhibits circadian rhythms in acid secretion and electrical function and whether the damage produced by a mucosal acting agent (butyric acid) is also circadian-stage dependent. Mucosa was isolated from the gastric body of male rats standardized from birth to a light-dark regimen. Circadian rhythms of acid secretion and PD and R with acrophases during the dark hours were documented. Administration of butyric acid produced circadian-stage dependent damage with an acrophase also during the dark-phase span. Thus, in this experimental model, measurements of electrical function represented a poor index of gastric mucosal susceptibility to damaging agents. The authors discuss the possibility that rhythms other than those related to electrical function may better define mucosal vulnerability to ulcerogenesis.  相似文献   

2.
Sialic acids occupy terminal positions on gastric mucus glycoprotein where they contribute to the high viscosity of mucin. Desialylation of mucus may lead to degradation of the mucus and eventually to the breakdown of the gastric mucus barrier. The effect of a variety of damaging agents (0.1 M HCl, 2 mg ml(-1) pepsin and 2 M NaCl) on sialic acid profile was determined in pylorus-ligated rats. The relationship between sialic acid, galactose, pyruvate and the extent of gastric mucosal damage were studied. Instillation of pepsin significantly increased total sialic acid, galactose and macroscopic mucosal lesions in the stomach. Instillation of 0.1 M HCl reduced the total sialic acid but this decrease was not significant. Acidity led to a significant increase in the amount of free sialic acid in the gastric instillates and the macroscopic lesions induced by acid was not significantly different from the control animals (0.15 M NaCl). 2 M NaCl induced the macroscopic lesions in the stomach and also free sialic acid in the instillates. Pepsin potentiates the action of 2 M NaCl. In all the agents examined with the exception of acid, it was observed that an increase in free sialic acid and galactose was accompanied by gastric mucosal erosion and elevation of pyruvate concentration. It is concluded that gastric acidity alone is not inherently damaging and that resistance of gastric mucosa to destructive agents may be dependent on the integrity of the sialic acids.  相似文献   

3.
We investigated the effects of tauroursodeoxycholic acid (TUDCA) to assess whether this acid may also have "protective" effects similar to those found with ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA). We used a well-known amphibian model of gastric mucosa, and studied the effects of taurodeoxycholic acid (TDCA) on electrical transepithelial parameters, acid secretion and histology in absence or in presence of TUDCA. Mucosal exposure to TDCA, after stimulation with histamine, caused a reduction in transepithelial potential difference (V(t)) and transepithelial resistance (R(t)) and a decrease in acid secretion while mucosal exposure to TUDCA did not cause a significant change in the electrical parameters. Moreover, TDCA primarily affected the neck cells, while TUDCA affected only oxyntic cells, causing a similar degree of injury to that observed in controls. Mucosal exposure to TUDCA plus TDCA caused a reduction in short circuit current (I(sc)) and R(t), whereas acid secretion did not change. These results suggest that: (1) TUDCA reduces the damaging effects of TDCA on fundus gastric mucosa; (2) TUDCA may play an important role in the treatment of gastritis associated with bile reflux.  相似文献   

4.
Several models of erosive peptic disease have used drug-induced lesions to examine protective mechanisms of the gastric mucosa. Physiological processes such as acid secretion, motility, or epithelial cell turnover have circadian rhythms which may modulate the susceptibility of the gastric mucosa to injury. In this review are described recent studies which demonstrated that susceptibility to gastric mucosal injury by acidified aspirin and absolute ethanol varied with the phases of the light-dark cycle. Acidified aspirin caused significantly more gastric mucosal lesions when administered early in the light phase compared to administration early in the dark phase. The differences in susceptibility were not altered by pretreatment conditions such as immobilization or length of the fasting period. Absolute ethanol also caused significantly greater gastric mucosal injury when administered in the light than in the dark phase, but this difference was only evident in rats immobilized during the pretreatment fasting period. Further studies are needed to correlate circadian susceptibility to drug-induced gastric mucosal injury with physiological defense mechanisms. Careful attention to circadian timekeeping may allow us to refine therapy to optimize physiological defense mechanisms in the stomach.  相似文献   

5.
Several models of erosive peptic disease have used drug-induced lesions to examine protective mechanisms of the gastric mucosa. Physiological processes such as acid secretion, motility, or epithelial cell turnover have circadian rhythms which may modulate the susceptibility of the gastric mucosa to injury. In this review are described recent studies which demonstrated that susceptibility to gastric mucosal injury by acidified aspirin and absolute ethanol varied with the phases of the light-dark cycle. Acidified aspirin caused significantly more gastric mucosal lesions when administered early in the light phase compared to administration early in the dark phase. The differences in susceptibility were not altered by pretreatment conditions such as immobilization or length of the fasting period. Absolute ethanol also caused significantly greater gastric mucosal injury when administered in the light than in the dark phase, but this difference was only evident in rats immobilized during the pretreatment fasting period. Further studies are needed to correlate circadian susceptibility to drug-induced gastric mucosal injury with physiological defense mechanisms. Careful attention to circadian timekeeping may allow us to refine therapy to optimize physiological defense mechanisms in the stomach.  相似文献   

6.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of intragastrically given pectin-induced physicochemical properties and actions on active gastric acid secretion and on the development of ethanol- and aspirin-induced gastric mucosal lesions. The observations were carried out on CFY-strain rats, fasted for 24 h before the experiments with water ad libitum. The observations were carried out in two experimental series. A) The gastric mucosal lesions were produced by intragastrically given 96% ethanol or aspirin prepared with 0.2 M HCl. Different doses of pectin (100, 50 and 25 mg.kg–1, respectively) were administered intragastrically 30 min before giving necrotizing agents. The number of gastric lesions was noted 1 h after the administration, while the severity of gastric mucosal lesions was scored by semi-quantitative scale. B) The effects of pectin were studied on the volume and H+ secretion of the stomach in 4-h pylorus-ligated rats. It has been found that: 1) the gastric mucosal lesions could be produced in 100% of rats by the application of both necrotizing agents. 2) Pectin in doses of 50–100 mg.kg–1 increased the number of gastric mucosal lesions in both models, while no increase was produced by the application of 25-mg.kg–1 dose. 3) The severity of mucosal lesions increased significantly after the administration of all doses of pectin. 4) The pectin-induced increase of gastric lesions (number) showed a dose-response effect. 5) The pectin produced a significant increase in the volume of gastric secretion and gastric H+ secretion. It has been concluded that: a) pectin-induced physicochemical changes are able to enhance the aggression to gastric mucosa produced by ethanol and aspirin; b) a positive correlation exists between the linkage of H+ to pectin and significant active metabolic response in the rat stomach; c) pectin alone stimulates the active metabolic process of the gastric H+ secretion.  相似文献   

7.
刘均利  张席锦 《生理学报》1989,41(5):523-528
本工作研究了巯基物质在消炎痛引起大鼠胃粘膜损伤中的可能作用。在胃粘膜损伤发生过程中、胃粘膜内非蛋白及蛋白结合的巯基物质含量均无明显降低。虽然半胱胺灌胃(132或264μmol)或皮下注射(132μmol)后均明显抑制消炎痛溃疡的发生,其抑制率分别为82%,92%和75%,但同样具有巯基的半胱氨酸却无保护作用。半胱胺(132μmol)皮下注射可使消炎痛大鼠胃酸分泌抑制46%,而灌胃则无此作用。两种途径给予的半胱胺均不影响胃壁结合粘液的分泌。这些结果表明,胃粘膜内巯基物质似不参与消炎痛的致溃疡过程。半胱胺在此种模型上虽有强烈的细胞保护作用,但似乎不是由于其分子上所带的巯基所致。因此,巯基物质在消炎痛引起的胃粘膜损伤模型上没有细胞保护作用。  相似文献   

8.
Much of the research on gastric mucosal protection has concerned prostaglandins. Some of the recent studies consolidate aspects first investigated a few years ago, but whose importance is now becoming established more clearly. This short review will mention some of the more recent work demonstrating the importance of prostaglandins in preventing stasis of gastric mucosal blood flow, effects on cell senescence and exfoliation, and the protection of a severe mucosal lesion by a mucus-containing plug which facilitates healing. The leukotrienes are other substances formed in the gastric mucosa from the same precursors as the prostaglandins. Their roles are not well understood, but may include participation in gastric inflammation, and in mucosal damage by nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and ethanol. The NSAIDs may damage the gastric mucosa not only by reducing the formation of protective prostaglandins, but also by increasing the metabolism of prostaglandin precursors into leukotrienes. Another factor is thromboxane A2, a substance that is damaging to the gastric mucosa but whose synthesis is inhibited by NSAIDs. The prostaglandin analogues produced for the treatment of peptic ulcer may find a major use in the protection against damage by NSAIDs. Not only may they act as 'replacement therapy' for the inhibited prostaglandins, but they protect against damage from substances that do not inhibit prostaglandin synthesis. In doses that raise the gastric pH, the prostaglandins reduce the local absorption of NSAIDs by increasing their ionisation. In rats, paracetamol protects against damage by aspirin, but whether this occurs in man is controversial. Work not previously published demonstrates that paracetamol does not affect the inhibition of prostaglandin formation by indomethacin in human isolated gastric mucosa.  相似文献   

9.
Conscious cats equipped with a gastric fistula and a denervated Heidenhain pouch were submitted to weekly measurements of the basal and pentagastrin-stimulated gastric secretion for 1 to 14 years. Rhythms of basal secretion were documented in 37 cats for the group studies, in 25 cats only for the individual studies which required at least whole year data. Twelve-month or 6-month rhythms were detected for each variable studied, i.e. volume, acid, pepsin, fucose and uronic acid outputs in the group studies, with peaks for volume, acid and pepsin in Winter, peaks for uronic acid in Spring and Fall indicating different rhythms for oxyntic, chief and mucous cells. Individual studies detected rhythms in 25% of the analyses, and demonstrated male and female and cat to cat differences. Spectral analysis in 3 cats confirmed the differences in the individual rhythms with prominent peaks differing from 365 days in 50% of the cases. Chronopharmacological responses to pentagastrin were documented for volume, acid and pepsin outputs in 5 male and 6 female cats. Group analysis detected a Winter acrophase for volume and acid secretion and a Summer acrophase for pepsin secretion. Analysis of the stimulated response data showed interindividual variation but a higher percentage of detection for rhythms, i.e. 38% for all variables and 50% for pepsin secretion. Different rhythms in acid and pepsin secretion documented in individual studies could provide the basis of a better understanding of the discrepancies reported in the literature concerning the seasonal incidence of peptic ulcer disease.  相似文献   

10.
Conscious cats equipped with a gastric fistula and a denervated Heidenhain pouch were submitted to weekly measurements of the basal and pentagastrin-stimulated gastric secretion for 1 to 14 years. Rhythms of basal secretion were documented in 37 cats for the group studies, in 25 cats only for the individual studies which required at least whole year data. Twelve-month or 6-month rhythms were detected for each variable studied, i.e. volume, acid, pepsin, fucose and uronic acid outputs in the group studies, with peaks for volume, acid and pepsin in Winter, peaks for uronic acid in Spring and Fall indicating different rhythms for oxyntic, chief and mucous cells. Individual studies detected rhythms in 25% of the analyses, and demonstrated male and female and cat to cat differences. Spectral analysis in 3 cats confirmed the differences in the individual rhythms with prominent peaks differing from 365 days in 50% of the cases. Chronopharmacological responses to pentagastrin were documented for volume, acid and pepsin outputs in 5 male and 6 female cats. Group analysis detected a Winter acrophase for volume and acid secretion and a Summer acrophase for pepsin secretion. Analysis of the stimulated response data showed interindividual variation but a higher percentage of detection for rhythms, i.e. 38% for all variables and 50% for pepsin secretion. Different rhythms in acid and pepsin secretion documented in individual studies could provide the basis of a better understanding of the discrepancies reported in the literature concerning the seasonal incidence of peptic ulcer disease.  相似文献   

11.
Gastric mucosal blood flow (GMBF) response and the recovery of gastric mucosal integrity were investigated in anesthetized rat stomachs after damage by monochloramine (NH2Cl), in comparison with 20 mM taurocholate Na (TC). A rat stomach was mounted in an ex-vivo chamber, and the mucosa was exposed to 50 mM HCl during a test period. Mucosal application of 20 mM TC for 10 min caused a marked reduction of transmucosal potential difference (PD), but the PD recovered rapidly without development of gross lesions 90 min later. In contrast, the exposure of the mucosa to NH2Cl (5 to approximately 20 mM) produced a concentration-dependent decrease in gastric PD, and the values remained lowered even 90 min after removal of the agent, resulting in severe hemorrhagic damage in the stomach. TC caused a considerable H+ back-diffusion, followed by an increase in the GMBF. In the mucosa damaged by NH2Cl, such GMBF responses were not observed, except for the temporal increase during the exposure, although similar degrees of H+ back-diffusion were observed following NH2Cl treatment. In addition, the prior exposure of the mucosa to NH2Cl significantly attenuated gastric hyperemic response induced by capsaicin but not by misoprostol (a PGE1 derivative) or NOR-3 (a NO donor). Chemical ablation of capsaicin-sensitive sensory neurons had no effect on the PD reduction caused by TC but totally attenuated the GMBF response, resulting in hemorrhagic damage in the stomach. These results suggest that NH2Cl delayed the recovery of the mucosal integrity in the stomach after damage, and this effect may be attributable, at least partly, to the impairment of gastric hyperemic response associated with H+ back-diffusion, probably due to dysfunction of capsaicin-sensitive sensory neurons.  相似文献   

12.
In the rat stomach, evidence has been provided that capsaicin-sensitive sensory nerves (CSSN) are involved in a local defense mechanism against gastric ulcer. In the present study capsaicin or resiniferatoxin (RTX), a more potent capsaicin analogue, was used to elucidate the role of these sensory nerves in gastric mucosal protection, mucosal permeability, gastric acid secretion and gastrointestinal blood flow in the rat. In the rat stomach and jejunum, intravenous RTX or topical capsaicin or RTX effected a pronounced and long-lasting enhancement of the microcirculation at these sites, measured by laser Doppler flowmetry technique. Introduction of capsaicin into the rat stomach in very low concentrations of ng-microg x mL(-1) range protected the gastric mucosa against damage produced by topical acidified aspirin, indomethacin, ethanol or 0.6 N HCl. Resiniferatoxin exhibited acute gastroprotective effect similar to that of capsaicin and exerted marked protective action on the exogenous HCl, or the secretagogue-induced enhancement of the indomethacin injury. The ulcer preventive effect of both agents was not prevented by atropine or cimetidine treatment. Capsaicin given into the stomach in higher desensitizing concentrations of 6.5 mM markedly enhanced the susceptibility of the gastric mucosa and invariably aggravated gastric mucosal damage evoked by later noxious challenge. Such high desensitizing concentrations of capsaicin, however, did not reduce the cytoprotective effect of prostacyclin (PGI2) or beta-carotene. Capsaicin or RTX had an additive protective effect to that of atropine or cimetidine. In rats pretreated with cysteamine to deplete tissue somatostatin, capsaicin protected against the indomethacin-induced mucosal injury. Gastric acid secretion of the pylorus-ligated rats was inhibited with capsaicin or RTX given in low non-desensitizing concentrations, with the inhibition being most marked in the first hour following pylorus-ligation. Low intragastric concentrations of RTX reduced gastric hydrogen ion back-diffusion evoked by topical acidified salicylates. It is concluded that the gastropotective effect of capsaicin-type agents involves primarily an enhancement of the microcirculation effected through local release of mediator peptides from the sensory nerve terminals. A reduction in gastric acidity may contribute to some degree in the gastric protective action of capsaicin-type agents. The vasodilator and gastroprotective effects of capsaicin-type agents do not depend on vagal efferents or sympathetic neurons, involve prostanoids, histaminergic or cholinergic pathways.  相似文献   

13.
It has been proposed that neutrophil and oxygen dependent microvascular injuries may be important prime events in gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity of nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). l-arginine (l-ARG) is an essential amino acid which participates in many important biochemical reactions associated to the normal physiology of the organism. In these experimentations, we studied the role of l-ARG, aminoacid precursor of NO synthesis, on ibuprofen (IB) induced gastric lesions, and also on the inflammatory and oxidative mechanisms related to mucosal damage. Oral administration of IB (100 mg kg-1), produced severe damage on gastric mucosa, which was more important after 6 h test-period, and was accompanied by a significant increment in myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity, as index of neutrophil activation, as well as lipid peroxidation (LP) levels and xanthine oxidase (XO) activity. However, no changes were observed in total mucosal glutathione (tGSH), nor glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px) and superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity. Simultaneous treatment with equimolar doses of l-ARG (oral and i.p.), considerably reduced the number and intensity of lesions, and at the same time (6 h) the maximum protection was also observed. In addition, l-ARG inhibited the IB-induced LP and XO enhancement, but did not produce changes in leukocyte infiltration, tGSH, GSH-Px and SOD activity. These findings suggest that (1) l-ARG protective effect on gastric mucosa against IB-induced mucosal lesions could be explained by a local effect and also might be due to the systemic action of the aminoacid; (2) the active oxygen species, derived both from XO and activated neutrophils, could play a role in the pathogenesis of gastric injury induced by IB, (3) l-ARG exhibit a protective effect against IB-induced mucosal damage, probably through the inhibition of oxidative stress derived via xanthine-XO, but it does not block the oxygen free radical production through polymorphe nuclear leukocytes.  相似文献   

14.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of intragastrically given pectin-induced physicochemical properties and actions on active gastric acid secretion and on the development of ethanol- and aspirin-induced gastric mucosal lesions. The observations were carried out on CFY-strain rats, fasted for 24 h before the experiments with water ad libitum. The observations were carried out in two experimental series. A) The gastric mucosal lesions were produced by intragastrically given 96% ethanol or aspirin prepared with 0.2 M HCl. Different doses of pectin (100, 50 and 25 mg x kg(-1), respectively) were administered intragastrically 30 min before giving necrotizing agents. The number of gastric lesions was noted 1 h after the administration, while the severity of gastric mucosal lesions was scored by semi-quantitative scale. B) The effects of pectin were studied on the volume and H+ secretion of the stomach in 4-h pylorus-ligated rats. It has been found that: 1) the gastric mucosal lesions could be produced in 100% of rats by the application of both necrotizing agents. 2) Pectin in doses of 50-100 mg x kg(-1) increased the number of gastric mucosal lesions in both models, while no increase was produced by the application of 25-mg x kg(-1) dose. 3) The severity of mucosal lesions increased significantly after the administration of all doses of pectin. 4) The pectin-induced increase of gastric lesions (number) showed a dose-response effect. 5) The pectin produced a significant increase in the volume of gastric secretion and gastric H+ secretion. It has been concluded that: a) pectin-induced physicochemical changes are able to enhance the aggression to gastric mucosa produced by ethanol and aspirin; b) a positive correlation exists between the linkage of H+ to pectin and significant active metabolic response in the rat stomach; c) pectin alone stimulates the active metabolic process of the gastric H+ secretion.  相似文献   

15.
The plausible mechanism by which dexamethasone makes the gastric mucosa susceptible to ulceration has been studied. As acid aggravates ulcer, the role of dexamethasone on acid secretion was first investigated. Dexamethasone stimulates both basal and drug (mercaptomethylimidazole)-induced gastric acid secretion by 100 and 50% respectively in male Wister rats 24 h after intramuscular administration at the dose of 1 mg/kg body wt. This stimulated acid secretion is 93% blocked by cimetidine indicating increased liberation of histamine in the process. Pretreatment of dexamethasone before 24 h produces ulcer in 30% of the pylorus- ligated rats and aggravates the ulcer index by 82% in both pylorus and esophagus ligated rats. The incidence of ulceration in the latter cases is also increased by 25%. As mucosal prostaglandin synthetase and peroxidase play an important role in gastroprotection through biosynthesis of prostaglandin and by scavenging endogenous H2O2 respectively, the effect of dexamethasone on the activities of these gastroprotective enzymes were studied. Prostaglandin synthetase and peroxidase activities of the mucosa are significantly inhibited by 87 and 83% respectively by 24-h pretreatment with dexamethasone. The results indicate that dexamethasone makes the mucosa prone to ulceration by inhibiting the activity of prostaglandin synthetase to block the gastroprotective action of prostaglandin and also by inhibiting the peroxidase, thereby elevating the endogenous H2O2 level to generate more reactive hydroxyl radical responsible for the mucosal damage.  相似文献   

16.
TRH analogue, RX 77368, injected intracisternally (i.c.) at high dose (3 microg/rat) produces gastric mucosal lesion formation through vagal-dependent pathway. The gastric mucosal hyperemia induced by i.c. RX 77368 was shown to be mediated by muscarinic vagal efferent fibres and mast cells. Furthermore, electrical vagal stimulation was observed to induce gastric mucosal mast cell degranulation. The aim of the study was to assess the influence of ketotifen, a mast cell stabilizer, on RX 77368-induced gastric lesion formation and gastric acid secretion. RX 77368 (3 microg, i.c.) or vehicle (10 microL, i.c.) was delivered 240 min prior to the sacrifice of the animals. Ketotifen or vehicle (0.9% NaCl, 0.5 mL) was injected intraperitoneally (i.p.) at a dose of 10 mg x kg(-1) 30 min before RX 77368 injection. The extent of mucosal damage was planimetrically measured by a video image analyzer (ASK Ltd., Budapest) device. In the gastric acid secretion studies, the rats were pretreated with ketotifen (10 mg x kg(-1), i.p.) or vehicle (0.9% NaCl, 0.5 mL, i.p.), 30 min later pylorus-ligation was performed and RX 77368 (3 microg, i.c.) or vehicle (0.9% NaCl, 10 microL, i.c.) was injected. The rats were killed 240 min after i.c. injection, and the gastric acid secretion was measured through the titration of gastric contents with 0.1 N NaOH to pH 7.0. RX 77368 (3 microg, i.c.) resulted in a gastric mucosal lesion formation involving 8.2% of the corpus mucosa (n = 7). Ketotifen elicited an 85% inhibition on the development of mucosal lesions (n = 7, P < 0.001) whereas ketotifen alone had no effect on the lesion formation in the mucosa (n = 7). The RX 77368 induced increase of gastric acid secretion was not influenced by ketotifen pretreatment in 4-h pylorus-ligated animals. Central vagal activation induced mucosal lesion formation is mediated by the activation of mucosal mast cells in the stomach. Mast cell inhibition by ketotifen does not influence gastric acid secretion induced by i.c. TRH analogue in 4-h pylorus-ligated rats.  相似文献   

17.
The circadian patterns of bone collagen formation were studied in vitro to ascertain whether the biorhythmic profiles previously measured in vivo reflect true differences in collagen synthesis. Alteration of amino acid pool sizes did not negate the circadian-stage differences in bone collagen production. Evaluations of proline uptake and transport, as well as collagenous protein turnover, demonstrated that the intracellular assembly and secretion of bone collagenous protein during the dark span is truly decreased relative to that during the light period. It was further affirmed that PTH is essential for maintenance of the normal circadian collagen synthesis rhythms.  相似文献   

18.
Lam EK  Tai EK  Koo MW  Wong HP  Wu WK  Yu L  So WH  Woo PC  Cho CH 《Life sciences》2007,80(23):2128-2136
The gastric mucosa is frequently exposed to different exogenous and endogenous ulcerative agents. Alcoholism is one of the risk factors for the development of mucosal damage in the stomach. This study aimed to assess if a probiotic strain Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG (LGG) is capable of protecting the gastric mucosa from acute damage induced by intragastric administration of ethanol. Pre-treatment of rats with LGG at 10(9) cfu/ml twice daily for three consecutive days markedly reduced ethanol-induced mucosal lesion area by 45%. LGG pre-treatment also significantly increased the basal mucosal prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)) level. In addition, LGG attenuated the suppressive actions of ethanol on mucus-secreting layer and transmucosal resistance and reduced cellular apoptosis in the gastric mucosa. It is suggested that the protective action of LGG on ethanol-induced gastric mucosal lesions is likely attributed to the up-regulation of PGE(2), which could stimulate the mucus secretion and increase the transmucosal resistance in the gastric mucosa. All these would protect mucosal cells from apoptosis in the stomach.  相似文献   

19.
The severity of gastric mucosal injury produced by aspirin (ASA) was endoscopically assessed during morning and evening studies in 10 healthy, male volunteers. In a randomized, double-blind design, subjects received either ASA (1300 mg) alone or ASA (1300 nig) plus Ranitidine (150mg) or placebo tablets during morning and evening studies. Each subject had 3 morning and 3 evening studies. The severity of damage produced by ASA was assessed by counting the number of punctate mucosal hemorrhages observed in the gastric antrum and low-body. This study demonstrated (1) wide intersubject variability in the severity of damage produced by ASA (range of 47-1030 lesions/subject in morning studies), (2) significant protection against ASA-indueed damage by Ranitidine and (3) significantly greater damage produced by ASA in the morning compared to the evening studies. Because evening acid secretory rates are higher and because ASA-induced damage is believed to be acid-dependent, this last observation was unexpected. It suggests mucosal resistance is higher in the evening and raises the possibility that there may be circadian variation in gastric mucosal resistance.  相似文献   

20.
The purpose of this experiment was to study the possible role of the gastric antrum and small bowel in the rhythm(s) of plasma gastrin. The cat was used as the laboratory animal. Three groups of cats were provided with a gastric fistula for the study of gastric acid and plasma gastrin rhythms. The first group (N = 7) served as controls. A second group (N = 3) was antrectomized and later subjected to a 80% small bowel resection. Gastric acid secretions were collected every 30 min from 0800 to 2400. Blood samples for determination of gastrin were drawn every 2hr from 0800 to 2400. In control animals a circadian (i.e.<24hr) and 3 ultradian (i.e.<24 hr) rhythms were detected for acid output. In the antrectomized cats, circadian and ultradian rhythms were documented. After small bowel resection circadian and ultradian rhythms in gastric acid secretion were observed. For plasma gastrin, circadian and ultradian rhythms were found in the control cats. In the antrectomized cats no rhythms were observed. After small bowel resection an ultradian rhythm reappeared in these antrectomized cats. Removal of the antrum in the cat induces disappearance of circadian and ultradian rhythms of plasma gastrin but fails to modify the acid rhythms. Small bowel resection results in the reappearance of an ultradian rhythm for plasma gastrin and a shift in acrophase for the circadian rhythm in acid secretion.  相似文献   

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