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: suppression
of centrally stimulated gastric motility
Departments of 1 Physiology and 2 Cell Biology and Neuroanatomy, College of Medicine, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210
Gastric stasis is frequently seen in
conjunction with critical infectious illness, chronic inflammatory
disorders, radiation sickness, and carcinogenesis. These conditions are
associated with elevated circulating levels of the cytokine tumor
necrosis factor-
(TNF-
). The present studies examined the
relationship between endogenously produced TNF-
and the central
neural mechanisms that augment gastric motility. Systemic
lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was employed to induce TNF-
production in
thiobutabarbital-anesthetized rats. Sixty minutes after intravenous LPS
injection, gastric motility could not be stimulated by a potent
centrally acting gastrokinetic stimulant, thyrotropin-releasing hormone
(TRH). This failure to elicit gastric motility via central mechanisms
coincided with high circulating levels of TNF-
. However, intravenous
injections of bethanecol, a peripherally acting cholinergic agonist
with direct gastrokinetic effects, were still able to elicit normal increases in gastric motility in the presence of TNF-
and LPS. Therefore, the inability to stimulate gastric motility via central TRH
could not be attributed to the direct inhibitory effects of either LPS
or TNF-
on the stomach. If the production of endogenous TNF-
was
suppressed via the use of urethan as the anesthetic agent, then
intravenous injections of LPS were no longer effective in suppressing
gastric motility. Thus these effects on gastric motility are not
directly attributable to LPS nor are they due to direct effects on the
gastric smooth muscle. Our previous study demonstrated that
microinjection of femtomole quantities of TNF-
in the brain stem
dorsal vagal complex (DVC) can modulate gastric motility. This central
TNF-
effect on gastric motility was dose dependent and required an
intact vagal efferent pathway. The results from these two studies
suggest that systemically produced TNF-
may gain access to the DVC
to modulate gastric function.
brain stem; gastric stasis; anesthesia; urethan; Inactin
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