1974
DOI: 10.3181/00379727-146-38097
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Transductal Fluxes of Anions in the Rat Pancreas

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Cited by 15 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…The fact that intraduodenal injection of HC1 is unable to increase bicarbon ate concentration (table I) is explained by the experiments of Mangos et al (2), which showed that in rats, secretin increases the concentration of chloride and not of bicarbonate. Since the action of intraduodenal HC1 in alcoholics and in controls is not different, it is probable that the release of secretin is not greatly modified in chronic alcoholism.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…The fact that intraduodenal injection of HC1 is unable to increase bicarbon ate concentration (table I) is explained by the experiments of Mangos et al (2), which showed that in rats, secretin increases the concentration of chloride and not of bicarbonate. Since the action of intraduodenal HC1 in alcoholics and in controls is not different, it is probable that the release of secretin is not greatly modified in chronic alcoholism.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…In the reserpinized rat model, our findings suggest an impairment of the anion-exchange mechanism which is thought to occur in the pancreatic ducts of normal rats (9,10,13). The loss of the biphasic pattern of bicarbonate and chloride excretion after crude secretin, and the reversal in the relationship between the concentration of these two anions and flow rate after purified secretin, suggest that the exchange is either inhibited or reversed as a result of some as yet unidentified action of reserpine on the pancreatic duct cells.…”
Section: Pancreas Weights and Compositionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Thus, in fasted animals, the K+ concentration in samples collected at maximum secretary rates averaged 7-61 mm + 0 57 S.E. of mean (n = 8) with Boots secretin and 7-98 mM + 0-36 (n = 6) with GIH secretin, values that are significantly higher than in control samples (P < 0 001 Mangos' group (Mangos & McSherry, 1971;Mangos et al 1974). In Table 2 are listed all published values for the rat.…”
Section: Effects Of Feedingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since the maximum secretary rates that we obtained in fasted rats, even using Boots secretin, were less than half those reported by Mangos (Mangos & McSherry, 1971;Mangos et al 1974), who had worked with fed animals, we have repeated our experiments with Boots secretin in fed rats. The results are summarized in Table 1.…”
Section: Effects Of Feedingmentioning
confidence: 99%