Role of extrinsic innervation in jejunal absorptive adaptation to subtotal small bowel resection: A model of segmental small bowel transplantation |
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Authors: | Karen D. Libsch M.D. Nicholas J. Zyromski M.D. Toshiyuki Tanaka M.D. Michael L. Kendrick M.D. Jaime Haidenberg M.D. Daniela Peia Matthias Worni Judith A. Duenes B.A. Louis J. Kost B.S. Michael G. Sarr M.D. |
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Affiliation: | (1) Gastroenterology Research Unit and Department of Surgery, Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minnesota;(2) Division of General and Gastroenterologic Surgery, Gastroenterology Research Unit, Mayo Clinic, 200 First Street SW, 55905 Rochester, MN |
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Abstract: | Segmental small bowel transplantation offers theoretic advantages over total jejunoileal transplantation, but the regional ability of the transplanted segment to adapt is unknown. Absorption was measured in an 80 cm jejunal segment via a triple-lumen perfusion technique. Separate experiments measuring absorption of four nutrients (glucose, glutamine, oleic acid, and taurocholic acid) were performed before and 2 and 12 weeks after operative intervention. Control dogs (CON, n = 6) underwent distal 50% enterectomy. Experimental dogs (EXT DEN, n = 6), in addition to resection, underwent complete extrinsic denervation of the remaining jejunum. All dogs developed diarrhea, which rhesolved in all CON dogs but persisted in all EXT DEN dogs. Maximal weight loss was greater in the EXT DEN group. Glucose and oleate absorption was decreased 2 weeks after ileal resection in both the CON and EXT DEN dogs; glutamine absorption was decreased at 2 weeks in EXT DEN dogs only. Taurocholate and water absorption remained unchanged in both groups. Absorption of all solutes returned to baseline at 12 weeks in both groups. Despite greater weight loss and persistent diarrhea in EXT DEN dogs, at 12 weeks there were no differences in net absorptive fluxes between the EXT DEN and the CON group after extrinsic denervation. The extrinsic denervation necessitated by small bowel transplantation does not appear to blunt the net jejunal adaptive response to total ileal resection, but may temporarily alter glutamine absorption. Presented in part at the Forty-Second Annual Meeting of The Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract, Atlanta, Georgia, May 20–23, 2001 (oral presentation) and published as an abstract in Gastroenterology 120:A63, 2001. Supported in part by a grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH RO1 39337 toM.G.S.) and the Department of Surgery, Mayo Clinic. |
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Keywords: | Intestinal adaptation extrinsic denervation small bowel transplantation glucose absorption fat absorption glutamine absorption bile acid absorption |
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