Absorption of thiamine from intestine of dog
- 1 July 1961
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in American Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content
- Vol. 201 (1) , 185-189
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajplegacy.1961.201.1.185
Abstract
A chronic Thirty fistula of the jejunum and ileum was prepared which permitted repeated quantitative studies to be made on the absorption of various substances. Dogs weighing an average of 20 kg had an average intestinal capacity to absorb approximately 22 mg of thiamine per day, when the daily oral intake was 40 mg. Thiamine was not destroyed when incubated for 12 hr in vitro with the normal saline wash of a Thiry loop of the jejunum or ileum. It was mechanically possible to recover all the thiamine introduced into the Thiry loops within 30–60 sec after its introduction. The same amount of thiamine was absorbed from the jejunum and ileum, respectively, during 1 hr. In nine daily tests an average of 3.2 mg or 30% (range 18–40%) of 10 mg of thiamine in 20 ml of normal saline was absorbed in 1 hr, the loops being 25–30 cm long. When 20 ml of an aqueous solution containing 0.7% Na2SO4, 0.45% NaCl, and 0.1% glucose was introduced for 30 min, the ileal and jejunal loops absorbed all the glucose. The ileal loops absorbed 34 mg or 38% of chloride expressed as NaCl, whereas the jejunal loops apparently added chloride.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Physiological Aspects of Aging. I. Efficiency of Absorption and Phosphorylation of Radiothiamine.Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1958
- The Effect of Antibiotics on the Intestine of the ChickBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1955
- THE DETERMINATION OF THIAMINE AND THIAMINE PHOSPHATES IN SMALL QUANTITIES OF BLOOD AND BLOOD CELLSJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1952
- Effect of Oral Thiamine Administration on Thiamine Content of the Stool.Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1951
- THE ABSORPTION, DESTRUCTION, AND EXCRETION OF ORALLY ADMINISTERED THIAMIN BY HUMAN SUBJECTS1948
- STUDIES OF THIAMINE METABOLISM IN MAN. II. THIAMINE AND PYRIMIDINE EXCRETION WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INJECTED AND EXCRETED THIAMINE IN NORMAL AND ABNORMAL SUBJECTS 1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1946
- ABSORPTION, DISTRIBUTION AND EXCRETION OF STREPTOMYCINArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1946
- Enzymic synthesis of cocarboxylase in animal tissuesBiochemical Journal, 1939
- THE INFLUENCE OF VARIOUS ANIONS OF THE LYOTROPIC SERIES UPON THE SODIUM AND CHLORIDE CONTENT OF FLUID IN THE INTESTINEAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1934