A surgical procedure has been designed which permits injection in the stomach and the duodenum by separate catheters, collection of the pancreatic juice during the experiments, recirculation of the pancreatic juice into the duodenum between experiments, and a normal circulation of bile in rats. Experiments were performed in conscious rats given either 20 % ethanol or water. In rats submitted to daily ethanol consumption for 13 months, the intragastric injection of 2 g/kg 20% ethanol considerably increased the pancreatic secretion of protein and, to a lesser extent, of water. In control non-alcoholic rats, a short period of increased secretion is followed by a major inhibition of pancreatic secretion, this reverse reaction to ethanol of pancreatic secretion according to whether or not rats are adapted to regular ethanol consumption is similar to what has been previously observed in dog. In chronic alcoholic rats, the release of secretin is probably not very different from controls.
These results have demonstrated that the esophagogastric devascularization with splenectomy promotes immediate decrease in the portal pressure and a consequent reduction in the esophageal varices size. We also observed that the risk of mortality and severe complications related to this technique is not insignificant.
In 9 conscious dogs (4 of whom were alcohol-fed for 24 months with 50% intragastric ethanol), provided with gastric and duodenal fistulae (Thomas cannula), the effects were studied of an acute iv ethanol infusion (1.3 g/kg) on hepatic bile secretory plateau levels after emptying of the gallbladder was induced by a continuous perfusion of secretin (0.5 CU/kg/hr) plus CCK-PZ (8 Crick-Harper-Raper U/kg/hr) and sodium taurocholate (0.62 mumol/kg/min). Acute iv ethanol infusion in nonalcoholic dogs reduced hepatic bile flow rate (29%), bile salt concentration (55%) and output (67%). In alcohol-fed dogs, acute iv ethanol reduced only the rate of flow (25%). Hepatic bile salt concentration and output plateau values were significantly higher in the alcohol-fed than in the nonalcoholic dogs. There were no significant differences between the two groups of dogs in the rate of evacuation, bile salt output, or lipid composition of gall bladder bile following a single iv injection of CCK-PZ.
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