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. 1985 Dec;20(10):1276-80.
doi: 10.3109/00365528509089289.

Effect of different denervation procedures on catecholamines in the gut

Effect of different denervation procedures on catecholamines in the gut

H Graffner et al. Scand J Gastroenterol. 1985 Dec.

Abstract

Sympathectomy has been used to study the role of the sympathetic nervous system in the control of gastric acid secretion. Conflicting results may reflect differences in the sympathectomy procedures used. In a previous study we showed a reduction of catecholamines by more than 90% in the gut wall of the rat after surgical upper abdominal sympathectomy. The aim of the present investigation was to ascertain whether chemical sympathectomy was equally effective and whether total denervation, including combined chemical and surgical sympathectomy together with bilateral truncal vagotomy, would lower the catecholamine levels further. The results showed that chemical sympathectomy reduced noradrenaline levels in fundus (oxyntic) and antrum mucosa to levels similar to those after surgical sympathectomy (less than 5%), but the reduction was less pronounced in the muscle layer of the fundus and antrum and in the pancreas and spleen. Combined surgical and chemical sympathectomy did not reduce noradrenaline more effectively than surgical sympathectomy alone. Vagotomy reduced catecholamines in the stomach by about 50%; in extragastric tissues vagotomy was without effect. Total denervation, including combined surgical and chemical sympathectomy plus vagotomy, did not reduce noradrenaline levels more than surgical sympathectomy alone, suggesting that the proportion of adrenergic fibers that derive from the vagus is quantitatively insignificant but that the vagus exerts a local control of the sympathetic stores of gastric catecholamines.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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