BILE AND PANCREATIC-JUICE REPLACEMENT AMELIORATES EARLY LIGATION-INDUCED ACUTE-PANCREATITIS IN RATS

Citation
I. Samuel et al., BILE AND PANCREATIC-JUICE REPLACEMENT AMELIORATES EARLY LIGATION-INDUCED ACUTE-PANCREATITIS IN RATS, The American journal of surgery, 169(4), 1995, pp. 391-399
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Surgery
ISSN journal
00029610
Volume
169
Issue
4
Year of publication
1995
Pages
391 - 399
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-9610(1995)169:4<391:BAPRAE>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In healthy rats, combined bile and pancreatic juice divers ion from gut has a synergistic rather than additive effect on stimulat ion of exocrine pancreatic protein secretion, We hypothesized that exc lusion of combined bile and pancreatic juice from gut exacerbates bile and pancreatic-duct ligation-induced acute pancreatitis in rats to a greater extent than exclusion of either bile or pancreatic juice alone . METHODS: Bile and pancreatic juice (obtained fresh from donor rats) were replaced, separately or together, via a duodenal fistula beginnin g immediately before 6 hours of duct ligation. Pancreatic morphologic changes were evaluated with an acute pancreatitis histology score and morphometric quantitation of acinar-cell necrosis, Plasma amylase and cholecystokinin concentrations and pancreatic subcellular distribution of cathepsin B activity were determined. Characteristics of bile and pancreatic juice obtained from donor rats were also studied. RESULTS: Combined bile and pancreatic juice replacement limited the increase in acute pancreatitis histology score by 77%, acinar cell necrosis by 95 %, hyperamylasemia by 99%, and hypercholecystokininemia by 99%, while preventing subcellular redistribution of cathepsin B. Amelioration of pancreatic morphologic changes was significantly greater with combined bile and pancreatic juice replacement than with replacement of either bile or pancreatic juice alone. CONCLUSION: In this experimental coro llary of early gallstone-induced acute pancreatitis, combined bile and pancreatic juice exclusion from gut contributes to disease pathogenes is to a greater extent than exclusion of either bile or pancreatic jui ce alone.