Literature DB >> 6146552

Physiologic determinants of biliary calcium secretion in the dog.

S A Cummings, A F Hofmann.   

Abstract

Studies were carried out to define the origins and physiologic determinants of biliary calcium secretion in the dog. Canalicular bile flow was varied by infusions of several bile acids or a canalicular choleretic agent, SC2644. Three natural bile acids (cholyltaurine, chenodeoxycholyltaurine, and ursodeoxycholyltaurine) that have a low critical micellar concentration and a synthetic hydroxy-oxo bile acid (12-dehydrocholyltaurine) with a much higher critical micellar concentration were used. Calcium output, bile acid output, and bile flow were determined; canalicular bile flow was assessed by measurement of erythritol clearance. Calcium output increased linearly with bile acid output for all three natural bile acids (r = 0.94; 0.026-0.035 mumol delta calcium/mumol delta bile acid), but chenodeoxycholyltaurine and ursodeoxycholyltaurine infusions induced a slightly greater secretion of calcium for a given bile acid output and bile flow than cholyltaurine. Calcium output also increased linearly with bile flow, whether bile flow was induced by the canalicular choleretic SC2644 (r = 0.93; 0.0018 mumol delta calcium/microliter delta water) or the hydroxy-oxo bile acid (r = 0.99; 0.0021 mumol delta calcium/microliter delta water). Because the calcium output induced by the three micelle-forming bile acids was greater than that which could be explained by the induced increase in bile flow per se, it was deduced that canalicular calcium has two origins: a micellar component that is dependent on the presence of micelles or micelle-forming bile acids and an osmotic component that is dependent on osmotic forces, e.g., caused by secretion induced by SC2644 or bile acid molecules and possibly bile acid micelles. A small bile acid-independent output of calcium was also detected and should contribute to the osmotic fraction. To determine whether ductular modification of bile flow influenced biliary calcium secretion, ductular secretion was induced by secretin and ductular absorption was induced by somatostatin. Changes in calcium output followed water movements, increasing with ductular secretion and decreasing with ductular absorption. The relationship between changes in ductular bile flow and calcium output was identical during induced ductular secretion (r = 0.83; 0.0016 mumol delta calcium/microliter delta water) or induced ductular absorption (r = 0.91; 0.0019 mumol delta calcium/microliter delta water). Thus calcium movements in relation to water movements were identical for the osmotic component of canalicular bile and the ductular component of bile.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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Year:  1984        PMID: 6146552

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gastroenterology        ISSN: 0016-5085            Impact factor:   22.682


  8 in total

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4.  Tauroursodeoxycholic acid protects cholestasis in rat reperfused livers: its roles in hepatic calcium mobilization.

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5.  Biliary calcium and bile acid secretion in intact and TPTX rats with varying plasma calcium concentration.

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6.  Secretion of biliary calcium is increased in dogs with pigment gallstones.

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7.  Relationship between biliary calcium and bile acid secretion in the regenerating liver of the rat.

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8.  Increased biliary calcium in cholesterol and pigment gallstone disease: the role of altered bile acid composition.

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  8 in total

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