Literature DB >> 9724140

Nitric oxide as a modulator of intestinal water and electrolyte transport.

A A Izzo1, N Mascolo, F Capasso.   

Abstract

The role of nitric oxide in intestinal fluid and electrolyte secretion depends upon whether the conditions under study are physiological or pathophysiological. In physiological conditions, endogenous nitric oxide seems to be a proabsorptive molecule, based on the findings that nitric oxide synthase inhibitors reverse net fluid absorption to net secretion in mice, rats, guinea pigs, rabbits, and dogs. This proabsorptive mode involves the enteric nervous system, the suppression of prostaglandin formation, and the opening of basolateral K+ channels. However, in some pathophysiological states nitric oxide synthase may be produced at higher concentrations that are capable of evoking net secretion. Thus nitric oxide synthase contributes to the diarrheal response in trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid-induced ileitis in guinea pigs and is the mediator of the laxative action of several intestinal secretagogues including castor oil, phenolphthalein, bisacodyl, magnesium sulfate, bile salts, senna, and cascara in the rat. Corresponding with the in vivo results, nitric oxide-donating compounds or nitric oxide itself stimulate chloride secretion in the guinea pig and rat intestine in vitro. Exceptions are the diarrhea produced by bacterial enterotoxins in the rat, in which nitric oxide seems to have a proabsorptive role, and the mouse ileum in vitro, in which nitric oxide-donating compounds produce a net proabsorptive effect on basal ion transport. Several endogenous secretagogues (substance P, 5-hydroxytryptamine, interleukin-1beta), which are important mediators of the inflammatory bowel diseases, act, at least in part, through the liberation of nitric oxide. Clinical studies have shown that nitric oxide is elevated in several inflammatory bowel diseases and other secretory conditions including ulcerative colitis, Crohn's disease, toxic megacolon, diverticulitis, infectious gastroenteritis, and infantile methemoglobinemia. However, the determination of nitric oxide in secretory diarrhea per se does not give conclusive information on the nitric oxide contribution to clinical secretory diarrhea.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9724140     DOI: 10.1023/a:1018887525293

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dig Dis Sci        ISSN: 0163-2116            Impact factor:   3.199


  110 in total

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Authors:  M J Miller; J H Thompson; X J Zhang; H Sadowska-Krowicka; J L Kakkis; U K Munshi; M Sandoval; J L Rossi; S Eloby-Childress; J S Beckman
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9.  Nitric oxide involvement in sodium choleate-induced fluid secretion and diarrhoea in rats.

Authors:  N Mascolo; T S Gaginella; A A Izzo; G Di Carlo; F Capasso
Journal:  Eur J Pharmacol       Date:  1994-10-13       Impact factor: 4.432

10.  Enterotoxin Escherichia coli STa activates a nitric oxide-dependent myenteric plexus secretory reflex in the rat ileum.

Authors:  V Rolfe; R J Levin
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  1994-03-15       Impact factor: 5.182

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7.  Does senna extract promote growth of aberrant crypt foci and malignant tumors in rat colon?

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9.  A nitrergic secretomotor neurotransmitter in the chloride secretory response to serotonin.

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10.  Dose-response relationship and mechanism of action of Saccharomyces boulardii in castor oil-induced diarrhea in rats.

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