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Gastrointestinal Motility Changes and Myenteric Plexus Alterations in Spontaneously Diabetic Biobreeding Rats

Authors :
Ingrid Demedts
Jan Tack
Ricard Farré
Tatsuhiro Masaoka
Pieter Vanden Berghe
Gert De Hertogh
Sébastien Kindt
Karel Geboes
Clinical sciences
Gastroenterology
Source :
Journal of Neurogastroenterology and Motility
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Korean Society of Neurogastroenterology and Motility, 2013.

Abstract

Background/aims: Type 1 diabetes is often accompanied by gastrointestinal motility disturbances. Vagal neuropathy, hyperglycemia, and alterations in the myenteric plexus have been proposed as underlying mechanism. We therefore studied the relationship between vagal function, gastrointestinal motiliy and characteristics of the enteric nervous system in the biobreeding (BB) rat known as model for spontaneous type 1 diabetes. Methods: Gastric emptying breath test, small intestinal electromyography, relative risk-interval variability, histology and immunohistochemistry on antral and jejunal segments were performed at 1, 8 and 16 weeks after diabetes onset and on age-matched controls. Results: We observed no consistent changes in relative risk-interval variability and gastric emptying rate. There was however, a loss of phases 3 with longer duration of diabetes on small intestinal electromyography. We found a progressive decrease of nitrergic neurons in the myenteric plexus of antrum and jejunum, while numbers of cholinergic nerve were not altered. In addition, a transient inflammatory infiltrate in jejunal wall was found in spontaneous diabetic BB rats at 8 weeks of diabetes. Conclusions: In diabetic BB rats, altered small intestinal motor control associated with a loss of myenteric nitric oxide synthase expression occurs, which does not depend on hyperglycemia or vagal dysfunction, and which is preceded by transient intestinal inflammation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20930887 and 20930879
Volume :
19
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neurogastroenterology and Motility
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9647bd6a776bff38ec5af6fbca784a98