Literature DB >> 2919683

Inhibition of gastric emptying by glucose depends on length of intestine exposed to nutrient.

H C Lin1, J E Doty, T J Reedy, J H Meyer.   

Abstract

Nutrients inhibit gastric emptying in a dose-related fashion. We postulated that load-dependent gastric emptying results from the saturation of mucosal absorptive mechanisms, so that a longer length of the small intestine is exposed to unabsorbed nutrients as more nutrient enters the intestine to participate in this negative feedback. To test this idea, we limited exposure of 0.25 to 1.0 M glucose meals to various lengths of duodenum and jejunum in 17 dogs. The effects of these limited perfusions were then compared with experiments in which the whole gut (ALL) was exposed to the nutrient. Maximal inhibition was seen with 1.0 M meal and was similar with perfusions of 150 cm and ALL. By contrast, even with the 1.0 M load, no inhibition of gastric emptying was seen when glucose meal was confined to the first 15 cm of the proximal duodenum. Only 50-60% of maximal inhibition was observed during confinement of 1.0 M meal to the proximal 65 cm. We concluded that glucose sensors are present in both the proximal and the distal gut and the inhibition was related to the length of the small intestine exposed to glucose.

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2919683     DOI: 10.1152/ajpgi.1989.256.2.G404

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol        ISSN: 0002-9513


  52 in total

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4.  Electrical pacing accelerates intestinal transit slowed by fat-induced ileal brake.

Authors:  J D Z Chen; Henry C Lin
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5.  Gastrointestinal adaptation to diets of differing fat composition in human volunteers.

Authors:  K M Cunningham; J Daly; M Horowitz; N W Read
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6.  Effects of intraduodenal glucose concentration on blood pressure and heart rate in healthy older subjects.

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7.  Effects of posture on gastric emptying, transpyloric flow, and hunger after a glucose drink in healthy humans.

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8.  To be or not to be--an incretin or enterogastrone?

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9.  Proximal gastric motility in critically ill patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Authors:  Nam Q Nguyen; Robert J Fraser; Laura K Bryant; Marianne Chapman; Richard H Holloway
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2007-01-14       Impact factor: 5.742

10.  Meal-induced acceleration of tablet transit through the human small intestine.

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