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Research Article

Biochemical Alterations in Rat Thiry?Vella Fistulas

Pages 95-101 | Published online: 09 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

In order to obtain baseline information on the secretory function of normal rat bowel for our work on intestinal graft ischemia, we studied several biochemical parameters in rat Thiry?Vella fistulas (TVF). TVFs were created in 200-g male Lewis rats (n=11) using the 25-cm segment of jejunum normally used as a graft in our intestinal transplant model. The stomas were matured primarily and the animals were allowed to recover. The TVFs were flushed at 0, 6, and 24 h and then daily for up to 21 days with 12 mL normal saline solution. The effluent was collected and analyzed for total protein (TP), secretory phospholipase A (sPLA), intestinal fatty acid binding protein (I-FABP), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), and N-acetylglucosamine (NAGA). TP content was 0.12 0.01 mg/mL up to 48 h, then gradually increased and stabilized at 0.39 0.05 mg/mL at day 21. By sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), one major protein band was identified in the low-molecular-mass range (15 kD), consistent with I-FABP and sPLA2. Secretory PLA2 levels decreased over the first 4 days to a low of 115 24.8% hydrolysis/min/fraction, then gradually rose to a plateau at approximately 529.76 88.36% hydrolysis/min/fraction by day 18. I-FABP levels rose rapidly from 0 ng/mL at 2 h to 900 250.0 ng/mL at 6 h and approximately 3000 304.9 ng/mL by day 14. LDH levels at 2 h and 48 h did not differ, with 0.03 0.004 and 0.03 0.005 optical density units (OD)/min/mL, respectively. NAGA levels were 0.07 0.05 OD/h/mL at 2 h and rose to 0.14 0.04 OD/h/mL at 48 h. These data suggest that after an early equilibration period, biochemical secretion into the lumen of normal rat bowel reaches a state of equilibrium, and therefore appears to reflect the baseline biochemical status of the bowel. Some of these levels are not negligible as one would expect in ?normal? bowel. This information should prove extremely helpful as a baseline study of abnormal conditions of the intestine, such as ischemia or rejection.

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