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. 1998 Aug;275(2):R384-9.
doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.1998.275.2.R384.

Vagal and splanchnic afferents are not necessary for the anorexia produced by peripheral IL-1beta, LPS, and MDP

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Vagal and splanchnic afferents are not necessary for the anorexia produced by peripheral IL-1beta, LPS, and MDP

M H Porter et al. Am J Physiol. 1998 Aug.

Abstract

We investigated the extrinsic gut neural mediation of the suppression of food intake in male Sprague-Dawley rats induced by peripheral intraperitoneal administration of 2 microg/kg interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta), 100 microg/kg bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), and 2 mg/kg muramyl dipeptide (MDP). Food intake during the first 3 and 6 h of the dark cycle was measured in rats with subdiaphragmatic vagal deafferentation (n = 9), celiac superior mesenteric ganglionectomy (n = 9), combined vagotomy and ganglionectomy (n = 9), and sham deafferentation (n = 9). IL-1beta, LPS, and MDP suppressed food intake at 3 and 6 h in all surgical groups. The results demonstrate that neither vagal nor nonvagal afferent nerves from the upper gut are necessary for the feeding-suppressive effects of intraperitoneal IL-1beta, LPS, or MDP in the rat and suggest that peripheral administration of immunomodulators produces anorexia via a humoral pathway.

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