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Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.) 1987-Oct

Influence of neural blockages and proglumide on rat pancreatic enzyme secretion in response to intraluminal fatty acid.

يمكن للمستخدمين المسجلين فقط ترجمة المقالات
الدخول التسجيل فى الموقع
يتم حفظ الارتباط في الحافظة
S Fukuoka
T Fushiki
M Kondoh
K Iwai

الكلمات الدالة

نبذة مختصرة

Effects of neural blockages on pancreatic enzyme secretion in response to infusing fatty acid into the lumen were investigated using anesthetized rats, equipped with bile-pancreatic and duodenal cannulae, to evaluate the relative contribution of the neural and the hormonal mediations in the pancreatic response. Oleate (0.2 ml) was injected as a bolus into the rat duodenum, and the trypsin output in bile-pancreatic juice was monitored to determine the pancreatic enzyme secretion response with continuous return of bile-pancreatic juice to the intestine. When anticholinergic agents such as atropine sulfate and scopolamine were administrated, although basal level in pancreatic enzyme secretion fell, the increase of pancreatic enzyme secretion from basal level after stimulation by oleate was not significantly different from that of the control (no blockage). However, the ganglion blocker, hexamethonium, inhibited the pancreatic enzyme secretion in response to oleate by 94%. An adrenergic blocker, guanethidine, also led to as much of a decrease as the ganglion blocker-induced decrease. Adrenergic alpha- and beta-blockers partially, but not completely, inhibited the enzyme secretion. Adrenergic blockage also suppressed the basal level in pancreatic enzyme secretion. On the other hand, a specific CCK antagonist, proglumide, significantly inhibited pancreatic enzyme secretion induced by oleate in the presence of scopolamine. These observations suggest that pancreatic enzyme secretion in response to oleate is primarily mediated by CCK and that adrenergic modulation may play an important role in the CCK-mediated pancreatic enzyme secretion in response to oleate, although interpretation of these results may have some restriction related to anesthesia.

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