A. Aneman et al., CONTINUOUS MEASUREMENT OF GASTRIC NITRIC-OXIDE PRODUCTION, American journal of physiology: Gastrointestinal and liver physiology, 34(6), 1996, pp. 1039-1042
With the use of a double-lumen catheter, nitric oxide (NO) was dialyze
d across a Gore-Tex membrane into a gas phase and subsequently analyze
d on-line by chemiluminescence. This new technique for the continuous
measurement of NO was evaluated bench-side and applied in the human st
omach in vivo to measure the nonenzymatic formation of NO generated fr
om nitrite in an acidic milieu. A linear relation (r(2) = 0.991, P < 0
.0001) between concentrations of NO in aqueous solutions (2.5 - 52.5 m
M) and NO in the corresponding gas phases obtained by the dialysis tec
hnique (50 - 1,000 parts per billion) validated the present method for
quantitative analyses of NO. Interassay and intra-assay coefficients
of variation at all concentrations of NO for six experiments were < 5%
. High intragastric concentrations of NO (in the micromolar range) wer
e found during basal conditions. The requirement of both nitrite from
the saliva and an acidic environment for NO formation is indicated, si
nce depletion of saliva as well as acid neutralization greatly reduced
gastric NO concentrations. Furthermore, large amounts of gastric NO w
ere formed after intake of sodium nitrate. With the use of this techni
que, NO can be continuously measured with accuracy experimentally and
clinically in any organ accessible to intubation.