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Gallbladder emptying, plasma levels of estradiol and progesterone, and cholecystokinin secretion in liver cirrhosis

Authors :
Eugenio Caturelli
A Cedrone
Gian Ludovico Rapaccini
Massimo D'Amato
Marcello Anti
Paolo Montuschi
Diego CurrĂ²
Vittorio Sciamanna
A Aliotta
Anna Grattagliano
Edoardo Menini
Maurizio Pompili
Source :
Digestive Diseases and Sciences. 40:428-434
Publication Year :
1995
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 1995.

Abstract

Defective gallbladder emptying has been proposed as a possible accessory pathogenetic factor to explain the increased prevalence of gallstones in liver cirrhosis. In this study we have evaluated the fasting volume and the meal-stimulated emptying of the gallbladder, the plasma levels of estradiol and progesterone, and the basal and postprandial secretion of cholecystokinin in Child A cirrhotic patients compared to normal subjects. Basal (42.2 +/- 27 vs 22.8 +/- 8.4 ml) (P0.002) and residual (8.4 +/- 8.7 vs 4.6 +/- 3.8 ml) (P0.05) gallbladder volumes were higher in cirrhotics but neither the integrated gallbladder response to meal nor the maximal percentage of emptying was significantly different. Circulating estradiol and progesterone was slightly increased in only 1/13 and 5/13 cirrhotics, respectively. In eight cirrhotics and seven normals taken from the overall populations, the secretion of cholecystokinin was also measured. The fasting plasma level of cholecystokinin was higher in the cirrhotics (6.71 +/- 5.08 vs 2.02 +/- 0.46 pmol/liter) (P0.01). The meal-stimulated integrated plasma cholecystokinin response also was greater in cirrhotics (438.5 +/- 615 pmol/liter/270 min) than in normals (153 +/- 170.4 pmol/liter/270 min), but this difference was not significant because of the small study population. In spite of a normal kinetics of postprandial emptying, cirrhotic patients show increased fasting gallbladder volume and increased plasma levels of basal and postprandial cholecystokinin. Circulating estradiol and progesterone do not seem to be responsible for the large gallbladder volume found in liver cirrhosis.

Details

ISSN :
15732568 and 01632116
Volume :
40
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Digestive Diseases and Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d96a3dcea29dded544ea72e4fd4f1497