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The role of the antrum and the vagus nerve in the formation of gastric mucosal histamine
Author(s) -
Rosengren Elsa,
Svensson S. E.
Publication year - 1969
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1113/jphysiol.1969.sp008964
Subject(s) - antrum , stomach , gastrin , histamine , medicine , pouch , g cell , vagus nerve , pyloric antrum , endocrinology , gastric mucosa , duodenum , gastroenterology , chemistry , stimulation , anatomy , secretion
1. The effects of the vagus nerve and of antral gastrin on the rate of histamine formation (histamine forming capacity, HFC, i.e. histidine decarboxylase activity) in the parietal cell region of the gastric mucosa has been investigated in the following stomach preparations: gastric fistula, denervated Heidenhain pouch, antral resection with gastrojejunostomy, gastrojejunostomy with exclusion of the duodenum and in the intact stomach. The determinations of mucosal HFC were made on fasting rats and on re‐fed animals when the effect of feeding was studied. 2. In fasting rats with a gastrojejunostomy and the antrum intact the mucosal HFC of the innervated stomach was about 4 times higher than in the corresponding preparation with the antrum resected. In the innervated main stomach the mucosal HFC was about twice as high as in the denervated pouch, indicating that the vagus and endogenous antral gastrin each contribute to maintaining mucosal HFC in the fasting state. 3. Acidifying the stomach caused a substantial lowering of the mucosal HFC presumably by inhibiting antral gastrin release, whereas acid in the stomach did not interfere with the elevation of mucosal HFC evoked by injection of gastrin. 4. Injection of gastrin elevated mucosal HFC in the innervated main stomach and in the denervated pouch to approximately equal levels. With the dose of gastrin employed there was about a fourfold increase in the HFC of the pouch mucosa. 5. In antrectomized rats enhanced vagal influence, evoked by insulin injection or by feeding, raised the mucosal HFC. In rats with the antrum intact and the stomach acidified, insulin injection produced an increased HFC. Thus, a vagal effect on mucosal HFC exists independent of participation of antral gastrin. 6. The stable choline esters carbachol and methacholine act directly on the parietal cell without involving mucosal HFC. The vagus nerve and gastrin, however, are assumed to provide secretory stimulation by means of accelerated histamine formation. 7. The interrelation between increased histamine formation and hydrochloric acid secretion is discussed.