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J Physiol Vol 245, Issue 3 pp 737-754
Copyright © 1975 by The Physiological Society
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Alterations in secretory patterns following antrectomy in rats with Pavlov pouches.

L Lundell

1. In conscious rats provided with Pavlov pouches, with the antrum retained or resected,the gastric secretory response to various stimuli has been studied. Each acid secretory response was related to that obtained with maximal doses of methacholine and histamine in combination, presumed to reflect the maximal secretory capacity of the mucosa. 2. Three weeks after the operation, the maximal acid secretory capacity was 60 percent lower in the antrectomized than in the intact Pavlov pouch rats; the difference was still larger at 6 weeks and 3-5 months, owing to a gradual increase in the rats with the antrum retained. 3. Antrectomy reduced interdigestive secretion of acid to the same degree as the concomitant reduction in maximal secretory capacity. 4. Acid secretion in response to a maximal infusion of pentagastrin was reduced by about 50 percent at 3 and about 65 percent at 6 weeks after antrectomy. No significant difference was, however, noted between the antrectomized and intact rats when the responses were related to the maximal secretory capacity. The dose response curve to pentagastrin revealed a redcued responsiveness to submaximal doses of this agent following antrectomy. 5. The maximal acid secretory response to histamine was reduced after antrectomy, although the sensitivity to submaximal infusions of histamine appeared to be increased. 6. The mean secretroy output to 2-deoxy-D-glucose was reduced by about 65 percent and that to food by about 85 percent following antrectomy. 7. After antrectomy a background infusion of pentagastrin enhanced the secretory responses to 2-deoxy-D-glucose and to food but did not restore the responses to the levels in the intact rats. The feeding responses as related to the maximal secretory capacity were, however, similar in the two groups on infusing pentagastrin in the antrectomized rats. 8. Interdigestive secretion of pepsin was reduced by about 60 percent after antrectomy, while the peak response to 2-deoxy-Dglucose was about twice the interdigestive level in both groups. Pepsin secretion in response to food showed an increased secretion above the interdigestive level of longer duration in the antrectomized than in the intact Pavlov pouch rats. 9. The irreversibily reduced responsiveness of the gastric mucosa after antrectomy is discussed in relation to known morphological and biochemical changes.







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