1. Dietary supplementation of carbonate promotes spontaneous tumorigenesis in a rat gastric stump model
- Author
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Roy Ehrnström, Clas Lindström, Stefan Arvidsson, Nils H Sternby, Tommy Andersson, and Béla Veress
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Diet therapy ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Adenocarcinoma ,Biology ,Calcium ,medicine.disease_cause ,Gastroenterology ,Calcium Carbonate ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Unresected ,Stomach Neoplasms ,Internal medicine ,Gastric Stump ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Carcinogen ,Stomach ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Disease Models, Animal ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Dietary Supplements ,Carbonate ,Carcinogenesis - Abstract
Food supplements are known to affect the development of gastric adenocarcinoma. In this study, an animal model of gastric resection was used to investigate the effects of calcium carbonate on spontaneous development of gastric adenocarcinoma.Ninety-two Wistar rats with gastric resections (performed to induce spontaneous gastric cancer) and 60 without resections (controls) were used to analyse the carcinogenic potential of different ion supplements in food.Among the resected rats, cancer developed in 3 out of 18 (17%, NS) given NaCl but in 11 out of 18 (61%, p0.01) exposed to calcium carbonate. No tumours were found in the unresected (unoperated) animals. These findings were further analysed by separately investigating the effects of calcium and carbonate ions on tumorigenesis in the gastric stump model. Cancer developed in one of 26 (4%) resected animals given a diet supplemented with CaHPO(4), which was lower than the rate observed in the resected control group fed a normal diet, although this difference was not statistically significant. However, tumour development increased significantly in the resected animals given a diet supplemented with NaHCO(3) (tumours in 13 out of 24 rats, 54%; p0.01).The present results reveal a significant role for carbonate in the induction of gastric carcinoma in the rat. The relevance of this finding is underlined by the fact that carbonate is a major constituent of intestinal reflux into the stomach, and that such reflux is considered to be one of the major causes of gastric cancer.
- Published
- 2006
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