SUMMARYFactors affecting absorption of Mg from the ovine rumen have been studied using either a pouch constructed from part of the dorsal rumen or by an isolated washed rumen technique in vivo. Net absorption of Mg against the prevailing electrochemical gradient was observed. An increase in the K/Na ratio within the rumen led to an increase in the potential difference across the rumen wall, blood positive, and to a decrease in the net efflux of Mg from the rumen. This decrease was due to an increase in Mg influx into the rumen. The addition of ammonium chloride (30 mmol/l) to the rumen contents also led to a reduction in net Mg absorption but to no significant change in potential difference. The effects of high K/Na ratio and high ammonium ion concentration within the rumen were additive in causing decreases in net effluxes of both Mg and Na. An inverse relationship was demonstrated between the Ca concentration in the rumen and the net absorption rate of Mg. It was concluded that the efflux of Mg across the rumen wall depends at least in part on a functional system for Na transport.
Although the inhibitory effect of glucocorticoids on the intestinal absorption of calcium is well recognized, their effect on the absorption of phosphate is less well documented. We studied the effect of the oral administration of betamethasone (BM; 25 micrograms/kg per day) on the duodenal absorption of phosphate in chicks fed normal calcium, normal phosphorus (NCaNP), normal calcium, low phosphorus (NCaLP) or low calcium, normal phosphorus (LCaNP) diets using the ligated loop technique in vivo. The daily oral administration of BM for 8 days significantly reduced the absorption of phosphate in chicks fed the NCaNP diet (21% decrease) but had less effect in chicks fed the NCaLP (14% decrease) or LCaNP (9% decrease) diets in which birds the absorption of phosphate was significantly raised (49 and 87% respectively). In one group of chicks, BM was administered for 9 days before the birds were transferred to the NCaLP or LCaNP diets. Adaptation was again unaffected by the treatment. Thirty-four per cent of the absorbed phosphate was retained in the duodenal tissue. Treatment with BM reduced the amount retained but this may have been caused by the lower weight of the duodenal segment in these chicks as BM administration markedly reduced growth rate. We have concluded that the duodenal absorption of phosphate in the chick can be inhibited by treatment with BM, although this may be secondary to the reduced rate of growth, but the increase in the absorption of phosphate caused by feeding NCaLP or LCaNP diets was unaffected by the steroid.
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