Abstract
The effect of the histidine decarboxylase inhibitor brocresine (NSD-1055) given by mouth, intraperitoneally or intravenously on tetragastrin-, histamine- and bethanechol-stimulated gastric acid secretion was examined in rats. Intravenous injection of brocresine slightly reduced the tetragastrin-stimulated secretion. Histamine-stimulated secretion was markedly increased by both intraperitoneal and intravenous injection of brocresine but it had no effect on the bethanechol-stimulated secretion. It was concluded that either histidine decarboxylase is not effectively inhibited by brocresine or any inhibition induced does not affect gastric acid secretion. The enhanced histamine-stimulated secretion points towards an inhibition of diamine oxidase by brocresine.