Abstract
Different regions of small bowel were examined in five groups of rats in three separate experiments. The effects on mucosal morphology of position along the bowel, induced hypoproliferation (due to fasting), and induced hyperproliferation (due to streptozotocin diabetes) were investigated. Intestines fixed by in situ perfusion with buffered glutaraldehyde were sampled by strictly randomised procedures. Pieces of tissue from segments of roughly equal length were processed for electron microscopy and embedded in resin. Complete transverse sections were cut for light microscopy and estimates of villous surface areas were obtained by stereological methods devised for the purpose. Ultrathin sections from random sectors of the same tissue blocks were sampled systematically to obtain micrographs of the villous surface. These were analysed for quantitative information about microvilli (length, diameter, surface area, and number). Structural quantities from individual segments were pooled to provide values for the entire small bowel. Significant regional differences in villous and microvillous dimensions were found in all groups. The numbers of microvilli per bowel were remarkably constant in all control groups. Other variables were estimated reproducibly in rats of the same sex, strain, and average body weight. Effective absorptive surfaces did not show a linear gradient but tended to peak in middle segments. Neither fasting nor induced diabetes altered the mean length, diameter, or packing density of microvilli. However, surfaces due to villi and microvilli altered commensurately during fasting and induced diabetes. Therefore cell number seems to be the key quantity for determining villous and microvillous surface areas. The findings are discussed in the context of kinetic, biochemical, and physiological changes found in different adaptive states.