Arteriovenous acid-base balance during acute gastric mucosal ulcerogenesis
- PMID: 7350841
- DOI: 10.1016/0002-9610(80)90224-x
Arteriovenous acid-base balance during acute gastric mucosal ulcerogenesis
Abstract
The possibility that acute gastric mucosal ulcerogenesis induced by bile acid and ischemia is a consequence of inadequate tissue buffering of back-diffused intramucosal H+ was examined indirectly by measuring arteriovenous differences in acid-base parameters across vascularized chambered wedges of proximal canine gastric wall. During acute lesion formation gastric venous [HCO3-] and pH were significantly decreased, and a marked negative base excess developed. The data suggest that mucosal ulcerogenesis is a consequence of uncompensated tissue acidosis. Further, these derangements occur only in the presence of topical acid, suggesting that back-diffused H+ may be ultimately responsible.
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