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1.
Am J Physiol Renal Physiol ; 313(3): F687-F698, 2017 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28539334

ABSTRACT

The dynamics of propagating myogenic contractions in the wall of the resting ex vivo urinary bladder of the rabbit were characterized by spatiotemporal maps and related to cyclic variation in intravesical pressure (Pves). Patches of propagating contractions (PPCs) enlarged and involuted in near synchrony with peaks in Pves [mean 3.85 ± 0.3 cycles per minute (cpm)] and were preceded by regions of stretch. The maximum area of the bladder undergoing contraction (55.28 ± 2.65%) and the sizes of individual PPCs (42.61 ± 1.65 mm2) coincided with the peak in Pves PPCs originated and propagated within temporary patch domains (TPDs) and comprised groups of nearly synchronous cyclic propagating individual contractions (PICs). The TPDs were located principally along the vertical axis of the anterior surface of the bladder. The sites of origin of PICs within PPCs were inconsistent, consecutive contractions often propagating in opposite directions along linear maps of strain rate. Similar patterns of movement occurred in areas of the anterior bladder wall that had been stripped of mucosa. Pves varied cyclically with area of contraction and with the indices of aggregation of PPCs, indicating that they grew by peripheral enlargement and collision without annihilation. The synchronization of PICs within PPCs was sometimes lost, uncoordinated PICs then occurring irregularly (between 4 and 20 cpm) having little effect on Pves We postulate that the formation and involution of PPCs within a TPD resulted from cyclic variation in excitation that increased the incidence and distance over which component PICs propagated.


Subject(s)
Muscle Contraction , Muscle, Smooth/innervation , Periodicity , Urinary Bladder/innervation , Administration, Intravesical , Animals , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , In Vitro Techniques , Linear Models , Pattern Recognition, Automated , Pressure , Rabbits , Sodium Chloride/administration & dosage , Time Factors , Transducers, Pressure , Video Recording
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27647623

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Electrogastrography in conjunction with Fast Fourier transform has limited success in detecting low grade abnormalities in gastric electrophysiological activity owing to the non-stationarity of the signal. Analysis by continuous wavelet transform is suitable for non-stationary signals and was used to analyse EGG activity in babies with and without colic. METHODS: Thirty minute postprandial EGG recordings were obtained from 23 sleeping breast-fed infants with clinically validated recurrent colic and 26 breast-fed non-colicky infants. Continuous wavelet transform analysis (CWT) identified three principal frequency components. The mean, standard deviation, and the number of frequency maxima that fell below one standard deviation from the mean were determined for each infant and each frequency. KEY RESULTS: Three component frequencies in the ranges 1.4-2.5 cpm, 2.5-4.0 cpm, and 4.0-15 cpm were found in all EGGs. Pairwise comparisons of the characteristics of each of the frequency ranges by univariate analyses showed significant differences between colicky and non-colicky subjects only in the number of maxima in the mid range of frequencies that lay below one standard deviation from the mean. However, CWT based on all frequencies allowed discrimination of the EGGS of colicky from non-colicky babies on a basis of number of frequency maxima below one standard deviation from the mean in the midrange of frequencies and in the mean and standard deviation in the low range of frequencies that was likely a harmonic of the midrange. CONCLUSIONS & INFERENCES: CWT allowed distinction of EGG signals from colicky and healthy babies. The results indicate that colic may result from tardiness in the establishment of coherent propagation of the gastric slow wave in colicky babies.


Subject(s)
Colic/physiopathology , Postprandial Period/physiology , Stomach/physiopathology , Wavelet Analysis , Colic/diagnosis , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Stomach/innervation , Surveys and Questionnaires
3.
Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol ; 311(6): G1064-G1075, 2016 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27765760

ABSTRACT

We used spatiotemporal mapping of strain rate to determine the direction of propagation and amplitudes of the longitudinal and circumferential components of antrocorporal (AC) contractions and fundal contractions in the rat stomach maintained ex vivo and containing a volume of fluid that was within its normal functional capacity. In the region of the greater curvature the longitudinal and circular components of AC contractions propagated synchronously at right angles to the arciform geometric axis of the stomach. However, the configuration of AC contractions was U shaped, neither the circular nor the longitudinal component of contractions being evident in the upper proximal corpus. Similarly, in the distal upper antrum of some preparations, circumferential components propagated more rapidly than longitudinal components. Ongoing "high-frequency, low-amplitude myogenic contractions" were identified in the upper proximal gastric corpus and on the anterior and posterior wall of the fundus. The amplitudes of these contractions were modulated in the occluded stomach by low-frequency pressure waves that occurred spontaneously. Hence the characteristics of phasic contractions vary regionally in the antrum and corpus and a previously undescribed high-frequency contractile component was identified in the proximal corpus and fundus, the latter being modulated in synchrony with cyclic variation in intrafundal pressure in the occluded fundus.


Subject(s)
Electromyography/methods , Muscle Contraction , Optical Imaging/methods , Stomach/physiology , Animals , Female , Male , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Stomach/innervation
4.
Neurogastroenterol Motil ; 26(11): 1651-62, 2014 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25251369

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Spatiotemporal (ST) mapping has mainly been applied to ex vivo preparations of the gut. We report the results of ST mapping of the spontaneous and remifentanil-induced motility of circular and longitudinal muscles of the distal ileum in the postprandial anaesthetized pig. METHODS: Spatiotemporal maps of strain rate were derived from image sequences of an exteriorized loop of ileum on a superfusion tray at laparotomy. Parameters were obtained by direct measurement from these maps, and by auto- and cross-correlation of map segments. KEY RESULTS: Localized domains of standing longitudinal and circular activity that alternated between neighboring domains occurred spontaneously and both were promptly extinguished following intraluminal dosage with lidocaine. Longitudinal or circular contractions within a domain typically occurred at times that would coincide with every second or third cycle of the slow wave but propagated within the domain at a rate consistent with that reported within spike patches. Shortly after intravenous administration of remifentanil, longitudinal and circular contractions at the reported slow wave frequency propagated over longer distances at a high speed before slowing to a rate similar to that reported for slow waves. CONCLUSIONS & INFERENCES: ST mapping based on cross-correlation is a robust tool for the analysis of intestinal movement and minimizing movement artefacts. We propose that the ST pattern of standing longitudinal and circular contractions arises from variation in the refractory period of smooth muscle, and hence, in its response to successive slow waves with neural stimuli influencing the former and having a mainly permissive role.


Subject(s)
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Muscle Contraction/physiology , Muscle, Smooth/physiology , Peristalsis/physiology , Anesthesia, General , Animals , Female , Ileum , Postprandial Period , Swine , Video Recording
5.
Neurogastroenterol Motil ; 25(12): 931-42, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24028606

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Myogenic tone has long been recognised as an important component of gastrointestinal motility. Recent work has clarified the cellular mechanisms that engender tone and the neurogenic and mechanical stimuli that modulate it but has also highlighted cellular and regional specialisation in these mechanisms within the GI tract. Smooth muscle in all segments of the gut has the capability of latching, i.e. can generate ongoing specific rather than tetanic tone. This is likely modulated by both direct and indirect input from agonists such as acetylcholine and mechanoreceptors, the latter originating in ICC-IM, smooth muscle cells or elements of the ENS. Tonic contraction can occur in the absence of phasic contractions or concurrent with them, and it can modulate wall compliance and the capacity of particular segments, thereby affecting the level of on-flow and mixing, both luminal and adjacent to the mucosa. PURPOSE: The review seeks to provide an overview of our understanding of the mechanism by which tone is generated and maintained, highlighting its modulation by neurogenic and mechanical stimuli, its mechanical consequences in the walls of the various segments of the gastrointestinal tract and its contribution to flow and mixing of contained digesta.


Subject(s)
Digestion/physiology , Gastrointestinal Motility/physiology , Humans , Muscle Proteins/physiology , Muscle, Smooth/physiology
6.
J Dairy Sci ; 96(10): 6539-49, 2013 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23958020

ABSTRACT

Increasing early (<3 mo) nutrient feeding levels and growth rate of dairy calves has been found to increase their milk production potential. The objective of this study was to compare the effect of offering milk diets with or without added carbohydrates and amino acids on calf growth, weaning age, and subsequent growth and milk yield of dairy heifers in their first lactation. Friesian calves born at Massey University (n=57) were selected at random, weighed, and allocated to receive 1 of 3 diets. All calves were fed colostrum from 1 to 3d of age, followed by 4 L of whole milk (WM) per head per day and probiotics between 3 and 18d of age. At 18d of age, calves were weighed to ensure mean body weight (BW); then, at 19 d of age, calves changed diets to 1 of 3 treatments, which reached full treatment rate at 21 d of age. The diets were 4 L/head per day of WM (M); 4 L/head per day of WM plus 200 g of plant carbohydrates (MP); and 4 L/head per day of WM plus 200 g of plant carbohydrates with amino acids (MPA). Calves were weaned upon reaching a BW of 90 kg. During this period, BW, body condition, and hip height and width were measured. The heifers were commingled and grazed on ryegrass and white clover pastures until calving at 23 mo of age, when BW, body condition, and hip height and width were measured again. Milk yield and composition were measured throughout first lactation. At weaning, calves fed MPA had greater mean BW gain, a lower number of days to target BW, and a greater mean hip width gain compared with calves in the M group, although mean gain in hip height did not differ among treatments. Total calf starter intake during the milk period was lower for MPA-fed calves compared with those offered M, mainly due to a shorter milk feeding period required to attain the 90-kg weaning weight, whereas mean daily starter intake and straw intake did not differ. No difference was observed in the calving rate or calving age of heifers in any of the dietary feeding groups. First lactation fat-corrected milk yield, milk fat percentage, and total milk fat and protein yields were greater for animals reared on MP and MPA compared with M. Body weight, hip height and width at parturition, milk protein percentage, somatic cell count, or days in milk did not differ among treatments. Increasing nutrient intake, during the milk feeding period, improved the BW gain of calves and milk production of dairy heifers during first lactation.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/administration & dosage , Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Cattle/growth & development , Diet/veterinary , Lactation , Milk/chemistry , Amino Acids/analysis , Animal Feed , Animals , Body Weight , Cattle/physiology , Energy Intake , Feeding Behavior , Female , Milk Proteins/analysis , Weaning , Weight Gain
7.
Vet Parasitol ; 163(1-2): 73-80, 2009 Jul 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19398276

ABSTRACT

Resilience to parasitism is considered to be the maintenance of growth and production during infection, probably associated with an immune response with lesser detrimental effects on the host relative to adverse effects on the parasite. Resilience to infection with Teladorsagia circumcincta was investigated in lambs from a flock selected for forty generations for high fleece weight (HFW), but with higher FEC and worm burdens than their unselected control (C) flock run in parallel. After recovery from surgery to implant abomasal cannulae, four parasite-naïve lambs from each flock were infected intraruminally at 6.5 months-of-age with 50,000 T. circumcincta L3, then from Day 35 to 70 post infection with 10,000 larvae at weekly intervals. Blood, abomasal fluid and faecal samples were collected daily to Day 35 and thence twice weekly for measurement of serum gastrin and pepsinogen concentrations, blood eosinophils, abomasal pH and FEC. Abomasal worm counts were made after necropsy on Day 94. Skin biopsies were collected weekly for estimation of the percentage of wool follicles containing paracortical cells. Total serum immunoglobulin and IgG1, IgG2, IgA and IgM titres specific for T. circumcincta antigens were estimated twice weekly to Day 42 p.i., then weekly. After the primary challenge, FEC were higher in the HFW lambs, whereas neither group shed many eggs during the 5-week trickle infection; worm burdens were small at post mortem. Resilient HFW lambs showed a lesser inflammatory response, but relatively small differences in abomasal secretion. Circulating eosinophil counts increased moderately in both groups, less in the HFW lambs, during the primary infection and more markedly during the subsequent trickle infection, when the increase in the C lambs became significantly greater. All measured serum antibody titres were low in both groups throughout. Selection for HFW altered the wool characteristics of parasite-naïve lambs (fewer follicles containing paracortical cells). There was a slower increase in the percentage of follicles containing these cells after primary infection. Abomasal function was similar in the two groups, both exhibiting typical increases in abomasal pH and serum gastrin and pepsinogen concentrations. The most marked differences in the HFW lambs were a greater rise in serum pepsinogen during the primary infection and the 2-day delay in onset of hypoacidity. Resilience to parasitism in this flock is consistent with maintenance of wool quality and small differences in abomasal secretion resulting from an attenuated immune response causing fewer detrimental effects on host tissues.


Subject(s)
Ostertagia , Ostertagiasis/veterinary , Sheep Diseases/physiopathology , Wool , Animals , Antibodies, Helminth/blood , Eosinophils , Hair Follicle , Ostertagiasis/physiopathology , Sheep
8.
Vet Parasitol ; 135(3-4): 287-95, 2006 Feb 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16309842

ABSTRACT

Heavy burdens of the abomasal nematode, Ostertagia (Telodorsagia) circumcincta, in growing lambs result in a reduction in liveweight gain due largely to a drop in voluntary feed intake. The present study investigated: (1) the role of subdiaphragmatic vagal and non-vagal visceral afferent nerves in mediating a reduction in voluntary feed intake, using subdiaphragmatic vagal deafferentation (vagotomy) either alone or in combination with coeliac-superior mesenteric ganglionectomy (vagotomy and sympathectomy); and (2) the association between appetite, abomasal pH, selected blood values (amidated gastrin (G-17-amide), glycine-extended gastrin (G-17-Gly), pepsinogen and leptin) and worm burden, in sheep experimentally infected with 100,000 O. circumcincta infective larvae per os. Neither vagotomy alone nor vagotomy and sympathectomy in combination adversely affected the establishment or course of development of the parasite burden, when compared with a control group subject to sham surgery. Furthermore, neither surgical procedure prevented the drop in appetite seen 5-10 days post-infection, although combined vagotomy and sympathectomy did reduce voluntary feed intake prior to the start of the study. Ostertagia infection resulted in a significant increase in abomasal pH in all three groups, which was accompanied by an increase in blood G-17-amide and in G-17-Gly, the latter reported for the first time in parasitized ruminants. There were no significant differences in blood leptin, also reported for the first time in parasitized sheep, either between groups or in comparison with pre-infection levels, though weak negative correlations were established between blood leptin and appetite from day 5 to the end of the study in all three groups and a positive correlation with blood G-17-amide in the control group over the same period. These data suggest that neither intact subdiaphragmatic vagal afferent nerves or coeliac-superior mesenteric ganglion fibres, nor changes in circulating gastrin and leptin concentrations play a major role in mediating the hypophagic effects of O. circumcincta in parasitized sheep.


Subject(s)
Abomasum/parasitology , Anorexia/veterinary , Energy Intake , Ostertagiasis/veterinary , Sheep Diseases/parasitology , Afferent Pathways , Animals , Anorexia/etiology , Anorexia/parasitology , Energy Intake/physiology , Female , Gastrins/analysis , Gastrins/blood , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Leptin/analysis , Leptin/blood , Male , Ostertagiasis/complications , Ostertagiasis/parasitology , Random Allocation , Sheep , Sheep Diseases/etiology , Sympathectomy/veterinary , Time Factors , Vagotomy/veterinary , Weight Gain
9.
Br J Nutr ; 90(2): 271-81, 2003 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12908887

ABSTRACT

The utilisation of essential amino acids (EAA) by the mammary gland of lactating dairy cows fed fresh forages was studied to provide basic information useful in designing strategies to increase the production of milk protein from pasture-fed dairy cows. The relationship between the flux of EAA in the whole body and their uptake by the mammary gland was determined in four cows in early lactation (length of time in milk 44 (SD 14.5) d) producing 21 (SD 4.0) kg milk/d. The cows were maintained in metabolism stalls and fed fresh perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne) and white clover (Trifolium repens) pasture ad libitum or restricted to 75 % ad libitum intake. The whole-body fluxes of amino acids (AA) were measured using an arterio-venous infusion of universally (13)C-labelled AA. Whole-body fluxes of fourteen AA were estimated. Isotope dilution indicated that mammary utilisation accounted for one-third of the whole-body flux of EAA, with individual AA ranging between 17 and 35 %. Isoleucine, leucine, valine and lysine were the EAA with the greatest partitioning towards the mammary gland (up to 36 % of the whole-body flux), which could reflect a potentially limiting effect on milk protein synthesis. In the case of AA with low partitioning to the mammary gland (for example, histidine), it is suggested that non-mammary tissues may have priority over the mammary gland and therefore the supply of this AA may also limit milk protein synthesis.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/metabolism , Cattle/metabolism , Lactation/metabolism , Mammary Glands, Animal/metabolism , Amino Acids/blood , Animal Feed , Animals , Female , Isoleucine/metabolism , Leucine/metabolism , Lysine/metabolism , Nitrogen/metabolism , Poaceae , Valine/metabolism
10.
Br J Nutr ; 83(4): 421-30, 2000 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10858700

ABSTRACT

The aim of the present study was to determine whether dietary peptide concentration had an effect on endogenous ileal amino acid flow in the growing pig. Eight 33 kg live weight entire male pigs had post-valve T-caecum (PVTC) cannulas surgically implanted for the collection of ileal digesta. The pigs were fed twice daily at 100 g/kg metabolic body weight per d and were given diets containing enzyme-hydrolysed casein (EHC) at 0, 50, 100 and 200 g/kg in a Latin-square design. A basal casein-based diet was fed to the pigs for 6 d periods between receiving the experimental diets. The pigs received the experimental diets for 8 d periods, with continuous collection of digesta for 24 h on each of the fifth and eighth days. The endogenous ileal amino acid flows were determined with reference to recovery of the marker, Cr, directly for pigs receiving the protein-free diet or after centrifugation and ultrafiltration (10,000 Da molecular mass cut-off) for pigs on the EHC-based diets. Mean endogenous ileal N flows were 1753, 1948, 2851 and 5743 micrograms/g DM intake when the pigs received diets containing 0, 50, 100 and 200 g EHC/kg respectively. There was a significant (P < 0.05) effect of dietary peptide concentration on the endogenous ileal flows of N and all of the amino acids, with an increase in endogenous ileal amino flow with increasing dietary EHC concentration.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/metabolism , Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Ileum/metabolism , Peptides/administration & dosage , Swine/growth & development , Amino Acids/administration & dosage , Animals , Caseins/administration & dosage , Hydrolysis , Male , Nitrogen/analysis , Peptides/metabolism
11.
Vet Parasitol ; 89(1-2): 79-94, 2000 Mar 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10729648

ABSTRACT

Disturbances in the physiology of the abomasa of sheep infected with either adult Ostertagia circumcincta given via abomasal cannulae, or larvae (L3) given intraruminally were matched by pathological changes in tissues collected by repeated mucosal biopsy. Within 2-3 days of the transplant of adult worms, abomasal pH had increased markedly in five out of six animals, and there also had been rapid increases in serum gastrin and pepsinogen concentrations in all animals. Reductions in parietal cell number were recorded as early as 1 day after the transplant of adults and were associated with the rapid accumulation of many neutrophils and eosinophils. Mucosal hyperplasia, with increased numbers of cells closer in appearance to mucous/mucous neck cells, was a relatively late development, being most pronounced in the latter part of the infection. In sheep given larvae, changes in secretory physiology were again matched by a concurrent fall in parietal cell number and by the accumulation of inflammatory cells. Changes became maximal when most worms could be expected to be present as adults, confirming the role of adults in the natural disease. Some abnormalities were detected in biopsies collected from animals maintained free of parasites and, although milder in degree, there were similarities to those observed in parasitised tissues, there being fewer parietal cells, a modest degree of mucous cell hyperplasia and inflammatory infiltrates of predominantly neutrophils. These changes were the likely result of trauma to the tissues in the immediate vicinity of the cannula, due either to the presence of the cannula itself or to the frequent collection of biopsy material from areas close to it.


Subject(s)
Helminthiasis, Animal/pathology , Ostertagiasis/veterinary , Sheep Diseases/pathology , Animals , Biopsy/veterinary , Enzyme Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Female , Helminthiasis, Animal/drug therapy , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Intestinal Mucosa/pathology , Larva , Male , Omeprazole/therapeutic use , Ostertagia , Ostertagiasis/drug therapy , Ostertagiasis/pathology , Parietal Cells, Gastric/pathology , Sheep , Sheep Diseases/drug therapy
12.
Heart ; 82(3): e1, 1999 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10455099

ABSTRACT

Coagulase negative staphylococci are the principal cause of prosthetic valve endocarditis but are a rare cause of native valve infections. However, the incidence of native valve endocarditis is increasing. Staphylococcus capitis is a coagulase negative staphylococcus with the capacity to cause endocarditis on native heart valves. Two cases of native valve endocarditis caused by S capitis are presented; both in patients with aortic valve disease. The patients were cured with prolonged intravenous vancomycin and rifampicin and did not need surgery during the acute phase of the illness. Five of the six previously described cases of endocarditis caused by this organism occurred on native valves and responded to medical treatment alone.


Subject(s)
Aortic Valve/microbiology , Endocarditis, Bacterial/microbiology , Staphylococcal Infections/microbiology , Adult , Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Antibiotics, Antitubercular/therapeutic use , Endocarditis, Bacterial/drug therapy , Heart Valve Diseases/drug therapy , Heart Valve Diseases/microbiology , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Rifampin/therapeutic use , Staphylococcal Infections/drug therapy , Vancomycin/therapeutic use
13.
Exp Physiol ; 84(3): 559-69, 1999 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10362854

ABSTRACT

The effect of selective vagotomy of the abomasum, pylorus, duodenum and liver on insulin release during the cephalic phase of digestion was investigated in wethers and lactating ewes. Electrical stimulation of the cervical vagus nerves was carried out to test the completeness of the vagotomies performed. In experiment 1, using wethers, the abomasal, pyloric and duodenal branches (ADV; n = 7) or the hepatic, abomasal, pyloric and duodenal branches (HADV; n = 10) of the ventral and/or dorsal vagus nerves were cut; a third group of wethers underwent sham-operation (SO; n = 8). In experiment 2, vagotomy (ADV; n = 5) or sham-operations (SO; n = 5) were carried out in lactating ewes. Jugular blood was drawn before and after presentation of food for glucose and insulin determination (experiments 1 and 2) or before, during and after the electrical stimulation of the peripheral ends of the cut cervical vagus nerves in randomly selected lactating ewes (experiment 3: ADV = 3, SO = 3) and wethers (experiment 4: ADV = 4, HADV = 4, SO = 4), for determination of insulin only. Presentation of food caused an immediate and significant (P < 0.05) rise in plasma insulin levels in SO animals compared with ADV or HADV wethers (experiment 1) or ADV ewes (experiment 2) without any significant change in blood glucose concentrations. In comparison with the SO group the baseline-corrected areas under the insulin response curve were significantly (P < 0.05) smaller for the respective vagotomized groups for periods 1-2, 2-4 and 4-6 min (experiment 1) and 1-2 and 2-4 min (experiment 2) after presentation of food. Total area under the response curve for 10 min was significantly (P < 0.05) lower (experiment 1) and tended (P < 0.10) to be lower (experiment 2) for the vagotomized groups compared with that of the control groups. Direct electrical stimulation of the cervical vagus nerves raised plasma insulin concentrations to significantly (P < 0.05) higher levels in the SO ewes but not in the ADV ewes (experiment 3). It was also evident that in experiment 1, HADV did not have any additive effect over that achieved by ADV alone. These results indicate that the vagal innervation of the gut mediates insulin release during the cephalic phase of feeding in sheep. It is concluded that insulin secretion from the pancreatic -cells in response to either food-related reflex activation of the vagal nuclei in the hypothalamus or direct cervical vagus nerve stimulation is mediated through the vagal efferent fibres carried in the abomasal, pyloric and duodenal branches of the vagus nerves in sheep.


Subject(s)
Digestion/physiology , Insulin/metabolism , Sheep/physiology , Vagus Nerve/physiology , Abomasum/innervation , Animals , Blood Glucose/metabolism , Duodenum/innervation , Electric Stimulation , Female , Insulin/blood , Insulin Secretion , Lactation , Liver/innervation , Male , Orchiectomy , Pregnancy , Pylorus/innervation , Testis/physiology , Vagotomy
14.
N Z Vet J ; 47(1): 20-4, 1999 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16032062

ABSTRACT

AIMS: Both adult and larval Ostertagia circumcincta infections raise abomasal pH and serum gastrin and pepsinogen concentrations, either because of physical effects of the worms or from their chemical secretions. The study was designed to examine whether adult worms require contact with the gastric mucosa to effect changes in gastric secretion. METHODS: Abomasal pH and serum gastrin and pepsinogen concentrations were measured in four groups of sheep: Group A (n = 4): abomasal contents containing about 18,000 adult O. circumcincta were obtained from donor sheep, concentrated and infused into 5 microm mesh porous bags attached to surgically implanted abomasal cannulae. A second worm transplantation was carried out 1 week later to assess worm survival after 16 hours. Group B (n = 4): about 9000 adult worms, recovered after migration out of abomasal contents set in agar, were placed in small 5 microm mesh bags which were inserted through indwelling abomasal cannulae and left for 3 days. Group C (n = 2): about 3000 adult worms from the population recovered from agar were infused through abomasal cannulae which allowed. free movement in the abomasum. Group D (n = 3) was left uninfected. RESULTS: Worms transplanted directly into the abomasum (Group C) caused rapid and marked effects on abomasal secretion. Adult O. circumcincta died within 16 hours of transfer into the abomasum when they were restrained within porous bags. Nevertheless, in sheep receiving 18,000 worms, abomasal pH increased soon after new feed was presented on Days 1, 2 and 4 after worm transfer; serum gastrin was elevated in three sheep from 113 hours and serum pepsinogen increased in one animal. Sheep receiving 9000 worms showed similar trends but the results were equivocal. CONCLUSIONS: Adult O. circumcincta prevented from physical contact with the gastric mucosa by restraint in porous bags are able to raise abomasal pH. This study implicates parasite excretory-secretory products in mediating changes in gastric secretion caused by adult abomasal worms.

15.
Int J Parasitol ; 28(9): 1393-401, 1998 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9770625

ABSTRACT

Gastric endocrine cell populations and serum and tissue gastrin have been examined in sheep which were infected either intraruminally by tube with 150,000 Ostertagia circumcincta larvae followed by a trickle infection of 10,000 larvae thrice weekly for 8 weeks or by the transfer of 15,000 adult worms directly into the abomasum and killed 8 days later. Depletion of both antral gastrin and somatostatin was evident in both groups: tissue gastrin concentrations were reduced by 85% in the trickle infection and both G cells (gastrin-containing) and D cells (somatostatin-containing) were pale and fewer after adult worm transfer. The concurrent depletion of antral gastrin and somatostatin supports the contention that the hypergastrinaemia in parasitised sheep is largely secondary to the increase in abomasal pH. Although there was no change in the proportions of G34 and G17 in the tissues, there was an increase in the longer form of gastrin in the circulation of the larval-infected sheep, suggesting that there may be differential secretion of G17 and G34 which may be exaggerated as the rate of secretion increases. Although the fundic mucosa was thicker following trickle infection, there was no evidence of enterochromaffin-like cell hyperplasia in either infected group. It is suggested that hyper-gastrinaemia may be beneficial to the host, as it may allow the abomasum to regain the ability to acidify its contents during continued exposure to the parasites.


Subject(s)
Abomasum/pathology , Gastrins/blood , Ostertagiasis/veterinary , Sheep Diseases/pathology , Stomach Diseases/veterinary , Animals , Enteroendocrine Cells/pathology , Gastric Fundus/pathology , Gastric Mucosa/metabolism , Gastric Mucosa/pathology , Gastrin-Secreting Cells/pathology , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Larva/pathogenicity , Ostertagia/pathogenicity , Ostertagiasis/blood , Ostertagiasis/pathology , Sheep , Sheep Diseases/blood , Sheep Diseases/parasitology , Somatostatin/analysis , Somatostatin-Secreting Cells/pathology , Stomach Diseases/blood , Stomach Diseases/parasitology , Stomach Diseases/pathology
16.
Int J Parasitol ; 28(9): 1383-92, 1998 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9770624

ABSTRACT

The infection of parasite-naive sheep with approximately 15,000 adult Ostertagia circumcincta via abomasal cannulae resulted in marked changes in the structure and function of the abomasum. The functional changes, which have been characterised previously, included elevated abomasal pH and increased serum concentrations of pepsinogen and gastrin. Eight days after the transplant of adult worms, the abomasa of recipient animals were significantly heavier than those of controls (P < 0.001), the thickness of the fundic mucosa was greater (P < 0.01), there were fewer parietal cells (P < 0.01) and increases in the numbers of mitotic figures and mucus-producing cells. Mucous cell hyperplasia was also evident in the fundic mucosae of sheep receiving a trickle infection of infective, third-stage O. circumcincta larvae and was prominent within nodules associated with larval development. In non-nodular mucosa, there was hyperplasia of mucous cells and changes in the distribution of parietal cells. Decreases in the number of parietal cells at the gland base were offset by increases at a mid-gland level, probably due to chronic hypergastrinaemia, so that, overall, total parietal cell number was unaffected. Mucous cell hyperplasia and the diminution of parietal cell number are seen in a diverse range of disease states and may be mediated by host growth factors such as Transforming growth factor-alpha. Alternatively, the cellular and/or the secretory changes in response to the presence of adult worms are mediated by chemicals that are cytotoxic/inhibitory for parietal cells, and released by the parasites themselves.


Subject(s)
Abomasum/parasitology , Ostertagia/growth & development , Ostertagiasis/veterinary , Sheep Diseases/parasitology , Sheep/parasitology , Stomach Diseases/veterinary , Abomasum/pathology , Age Factors , Animals , Gastric Fundus/parasitology , Gastric Fundus/pathology , Gastric Mucosa/metabolism , Gastric Mucosa/parasitology , Gastric Mucosa/pathology , Gastrins/blood , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Hyperplasia , Larva , Organ Size , Ostertagiasis/parasitology , Ostertagiasis/pathology , Parietal Cells, Gastric/pathology , Pepsinogen A/blood , Pylorus/parasitology , Pylorus/pathology , Sheep Diseases/pathology , Specific Pathogen-Free Organisms , Stomach Diseases/parasitology , Stomach Diseases/pathology
17.
Int J Parasitol ; 27(7): 825-31, 1997 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9279586

ABSTRACT

Abomasal pH and serum pepsinogen and gastrin were increased in parasite-naive sheep by infection with either larval or adult H. contortus. Four sheep received 10000 larvae intraruminally and 9000 adult worms were given directly via an abomasal cannula to another 4 sheep. The latter animals were dosed orally with 0.4 mg kg-1 ivermectin 4 days after worm transfer and their recovery was monitored for a further 8 days. Whereas the presence of adult worms rapidly induced changes in the secretory activity of the abomasum, the early larval stages had minimal effects up to the 4th day post-infection. After either larval or adult infection, the initial hypergastrinaemia began at the same time as the increase in abomasal pH, but serum gastrin continued to increase after abomasal pH had reached a maximum and returned more slowly to normal values after drenching. The increase in serum pepsinogen did not precede those in the other parameters, unlike the earlier hyperpepsinogenaemia which occurs with Ostertagia infection. Three of the 8 infected sheep had no detectable serum pepsinogen increase during the parasitism while showing typical effects on abomasal pH and serum gastrin. The rapidity of the responses to the transfer of adult worms and to their removal by treatment with anthelmintic supports a role for worm excretory/secretory (ES) products which possibly are not produced by the early larval stages. The similarity of responses to H. contortus and O. circumcincta infection suggests the involvement of the same or very similar ES products.


Subject(s)
Abomasum/metabolism , Gastrins/blood , Haemonchiasis/veterinary , Haemonchus/growth & development , Pepsinogens/blood , Sheep Diseases/metabolism , Animals , Feces/parasitology , Haemonchiasis/metabolism , Haemonchiasis/parasitology , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Larva/growth & development , Parasite Egg Count , Sheep , Sheep Diseases/parasitology
18.
N Z Vet J ; 45(1): 27-36, 1997 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16031944

ABSTRACT

The effect of enteritis on the development of the small intestine was examined in newborn, colostrum-deprived piglets infected with a human isolate of Y. enterocolitica (serotype 0:3, biotype 4) soon after birth. The piglets were killed 3 days (n = 6) or 5 days (n = 8) after infection, or antibiotic therapy was commenced on day 5 and the animals killed on day 14 (n = 5). Compared with the non-infected controls, infected animals had reduced mucosal lactase and sucrase, but not maltase activity, while after antibiotic therapy, previously infected piglets had a lower lactase and a higher maltase and sucrase activity. Lactase activity was significantly reduced in the duodenum and jejunum, and mean values were lower in the ileum, but the difference did not reach significance; maltase activity was greater at all ages from the distal jejunum to the mid-ileum; sucrase activity was reduced in all segments up to day 5 but after antibiotic therapy was increased in the jejunum and appeared early in the ileum. Enzyme profiles were more mature along the crypt-villus axis in some segments of the intestine in previously infected piglets. Sodium-potassium-ATPase activity was unchanged. There was a reduced villus height:crypt depth ratio, crypt hyperplasia and increased crypt cell proliferation. Morphological maturation, indicated by loss of vacuoles and location of the nucleus at the base of the enterocyte, proceeded distally from the duodenum to ileum from 3 to 14 days of age when only the ileum remained immature. In infected piglets, there was reduced vacuolation and earlier location of the nucleus at the base of the cell in the distal intestine. Accelerated maturity of specific disaccharidases and enterocyte morphology in infected piglets appears to be due to physical damage to the mucosa resulting in faster proliferation of crypt cells and migration of enterocytes. It is suggested that this may reduce macromolecular internalisation and impair the ability to utilise dietary carbohydrate and may have long-term effects on growth and immunological responses of the gut.

19.
Int J Parasitol ; 26(10): 1063-74, 1996 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8982786

ABSTRACT

Infection of sheep with adult or larval O. circumcincta increased serum pepsinogen and gastrin and abomasal pH. The upper limits of the normal range, calculated from over 1000 samples collected from parasite-naive sheep, were set at 2 standard deviations above the mean; these were for serum pepsinogen, 454 mU tyrosine l-1; serum gastrin, 64 pM and abomasal pH, 3.26. Five infection regimes were used: sheep previously exposed to field parasitism were infected with 30,000 larvae intraruminally (Group A), while parasite-naive sheep were administered either 50,000 larvae intraruminally (Group B), 150,000 larvae intraruminally followed by a trickle infection of 10,000 larvae thrice weekly from days 21 to 45 (Group C), 150,000 exsheathed larvae via an abomasal cannula (Group D) or 15,000 adult worms via an abomasal cannula (Group E). Whereas the presence of adult worms rapidly increased serum pepsinogen (after 8 h) and abomasal pH and serum gastrin (after about 19 h), the early infective larval stages, regardless of the infection regime, had minimal effects until the abrupt rise in all parameters 5-6 days after infection. Abomasal pH returned to near normal levels when the infections became patent and was not re-elevated by a subsequent trickle infection, whereas serum gastrin and pepsinogen remained high. The initial hypergastrinaemia was coincident with the increased abomasal pH, but was preceded by the increase in serum pepsinogen. In several sheep, serum pepsinogen increased very little during the parasitism, although there were typical effects on abomasal pH and serum gastrin. Serum gastrin was depressed when the abomasal pH exceeded about 5.5. It is suggested that an inhibitor of gastrin release is generated by proliferating abomasal microbes under these conditions and that this is a limitation to the use of elevated serum gastrin in the diagnosis of parasitism in individual sheep.


Subject(s)
Abomasum/metabolism , Gastrins/blood , Ostertagiasis/veterinary , Pepsinogens/blood , Sheep Diseases/metabolism , Abomasum/parasitology , Animals , Eating/physiology , Feces/parasitology , Female , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Larva/physiology , Male , Ostertagia/physiology , Ostertagiasis/blood , Ostertagiasis/metabolism , Reference Values , Sheep , Sheep Diseases/blood
20.
Reprod Fertil Dev ; 8(5): 903-9, 1996.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8876050

ABSTRACT

It has been reported in the literature that the stomach and the intestine in newborns undergo profound growth and functional maturation during the immediate postnatal period and diet ingestion has a significant impact on these changes. The present paper examines oesophageal development in newborn pigs during the first three postnatal days and the effects of diet and oral insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) or IGF-II on oesophageal morphology. It was observed that marked changes, including reduction in thickness of the epithelium, accelerated proliferation and migration of basal epithelial cells and increased accumulation of mucus in the glandular cells, occurred during the first postnatal day following onset of natural suckling. Bottle-feeding with various liquid diets (i.e. porcine colostrum, bovine colostrum, bovine milk, and infant milk formula), induced marked morphological changes which were similar to those induced by natural suckling. However, bottle-feeding with water did not result in marked reduction in the thickness of the epithelium nor did it accelerate basal epithelial cell proliferation and migration. Oral IGF-I, but not IGF-II, increased basal epithelial cell proliferation up to 81%. Owing to a large inter-animal variation, the increment did not reach a significant level (P = 0.071). The results suggest that chemical constituents in the diet and physical stimulation of food ingestion, which cause sloughing off of luminal surface tissue, are two major stimuli or epithelial cell proliferation in the new born oesophagus.


Subject(s)
Aging/metabolism , Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Esophagus/anatomy & histology , Insulin-Like Growth Factor II/pharmacology , Insulin-Like Growth Factor I/pharmacology , Administration, Oral , Aging/drug effects , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Bromodeoxyuridine/metabolism , Cattle , Epithelium/anatomy & histology , Epithelium/drug effects , Epithelium/growth & development , Esophagus/drug effects , Esophagus/growth & development , Insulin-Like Growth Factor I/administration & dosage , Insulin-Like Growth Factor II/administration & dosage , Swine
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