Mediation by 5-hydroxytryptamine of the femoral vasoconstriction induced by acid challenge of the rat gastric mucosa
Gastric mucosal barrier disruption in the presence of luminal acid causes femoral vasoconstriction via a pathway that appears to be stimulated by messengers generated in the injured gastric mucosa. This study was undertaken to analyse the gastric factors that are responsible for the femoral vasocons...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 1998-06, Vol.509 (2), p.541-550 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Gastric mucosal barrier disruption in the presence of luminal acid causes femoral vasoconstriction via a pathway that appears
to be stimulated by messengers generated in the injured gastric mucosa. This study was undertaken to analyse the gastric factors
that are responsible for the femoral vasoconstrictor response.
Gastric mucosal barrier disruption in the presence of luminal acid was induced by perfusing the stomach of urethane-anaesthetized
rats with ethanol (15 %) in 0.01-0.15 M HCl. Blood flow in the left gastric and right femoral artery was estimated by the
ultrasonic transit time shift technique.
Gastric perfusion of ethanol in HCl caused loss of H + ions from the gastric lumen, decreased the HCO 3 â concentration in hepatic portal vein blood, induced macroscopic histological damage to the gastric mucosa, dilated the left
gastric artery and constricted the femoral artery. These responses were related to the HCl concentration in the ethanol-containing
perfusion medium.
The femoral vasoconstriction was also seen when, instead of ethanol, taurocholate (20 mM) was used to disrupt the gastric
mucosal barrier in the presence of 0.15 M HCl.
The femoral vasoconstriction evoked by gastric perfusion of ethanol in HCl was left unaltered by pharmacological blockade
of gastrin and histamine receptors. In contrast, the 5-hydroxytryptamine 5-HT 1/2 receptor antagonist methiothepin, but not the 5-HT 2A receptor antagonist ketanserin or the 5-HT 3 receptor antagonist granisetron, inhibited the ability of both 5-hydroxytryptamine and gastric acid back-diffusion to constrict
the femoral artery.
Gastric acid back-diffusion caused release of 5-hydroxytryptamine into the gastric lumen, which was related to the HCl concentration
in the ethanol-containing perfusion medium.
These data show that femoral vasoconstriction evoked by gastric mucosal barrier disruption depends on back-diffusion of acid
into the mucosa. The acid-induced damage results in release of 5-hydroxytryptamine from the gastric mucosa, and the pathway
leading to constriction of the femoral artery involves 5-hydroxytryptamine acting via 5-HT 1/2 receptors as a messenger molecule. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1469-7793.1998.541bn.x |