Rectal electrogenic secretion--is it a putative indicator of intestinal secretory status induced by nutritional deprivation in the rat?
- 1 July 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Experimental Physiology
- Vol. 75 (4) , 609-611
- https://doi.org/10.1113/expphysiol.1990.sp003438
Abstract
Intestinal secretion is enhanced by starvation in rats. The rectum from fed and 3-day-starved rats generates a basal electrogenic ion transfer (short-circuit current) in vitro which is mainly electrogenic Na+ absorption (amiloride-sensitive, 66-71%) with a small component of electrogenic chloride secretion (furosemide-sensitive 14-22%). Bethanechol, a muscarinic agonist, caused an increase in the short-circuit current (mainly furosemide-sensitive chloride secretion) and potential difference in rectums from both fed and starved rats but the respective values for the starved animals were 100% and 64% greater. In starvation, the rat rectum is an indicator of intestinal secretory status. The result warrants investigation of human rectal electrogenic secretion in nutritional deprivation.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Diarrhoea of famine and malnutrition--investigations using a rat model. 2--Ileal hypersecretion induced by starvation.Gut, 1990
- Diarrhoea of famine and malnutrition: investigations using a rat model. 1. Jejunal hypersecretion induced by starvation.Gut, 1990
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