Inhibition of Cysteamine-Induced Duodenal Ulcer in the Rat by Bile Diversion

Abstract
Three groups of rats were twice given cysteamine subcutaneously in a dose of 20 mg/100 g body weight. Nine of 10 controls developed severe duodenal ulcers. In contrast, the ulcer formation was inhibited significantly in the rats submitted, before exposure to cysteamine, to a bile diversion operation consisting of jejunopylorostomy and Roux-en-Y anastomosis without gastric resection. However, rats submitted to the same operation but drinking a solution with 5 mmol/l sodium salts of taurocholic and glycocholic acid, 1:3, developed severe duodenal ulcers after cysteamine injections (8 of 10). The conclusion is that neither the chemical cysteamine nor hydrochloric acid alone can be made responsible for cysteamine-induced duodenal ulcer in the rat, but that bile salts clearly enhance the ulcerogenic property of cysteamine.