1. To study the relative contributions of luminal nutrition, bile and pancreatic secretions and hormonal factors in intestinal adaptation, lactation hyperphagia was chosen as a model for increased luminal nutrition, either alone (intestinal transection control group) or in combination with (i) exclusion of bile and pancreatic secretions from the jejunum (by transposition of the jejunum above the Ampulla of Vater) or (ii) exclusion of bile, pancreatic secretions and exogenous luminal nutrition from the jejunum (proximal Thiry-Vella by-pass group). 2. The results confirm that in lactation there is mucosal hyperplasia with increases in villus height and crypt depth, and in small-bowel wet and defatted dry-tissue weights per unit length of intestine. 3. There are corresponding changes in absorptive function with increased glucose and water absorption per unit length of intestine. 4. These structural and functional adaptive changes are proportionately greater in ileum than in jejunum. 5. The exclusion of exogenous luminal nutrition, bile and pancreatic secretions from the jejunum did not diminish the degree of intestinal mucosal hyperplasia and functional adaptation seen in lactation. 6. Diversion to the ileum of greater than normal amounts of bile, pancreatic secretions and luminal nutrition did not further increase the degree of mucosal hyperplasia and enhanced absorption seen in the lactating intestinal transection control group. 7. Unlike other models of intestinal adaptation, the changes in small-bowel mucosal structure and function seen in lactation are probably due to hormonal factors.
In this communication, the results of applying various histochemical techniques for the localization of oxidoreductases, transferases, hydrolases and isomerases in the human heart are presented. The Purkinje fibres of the atrioventricular conducting system of the human heart differ from the myocardium proper in containing a slightly higher activity of most of the glycolytic and gluconeogenetic enzymes investigated. The relatively higher activity of 6-phosphofructokinase, the key enzyme in anaerobic carbohydrate metabolism, is especially noteworthy. On the other hand, the activities of some of the enzymes that play a part in the aerobic energy metabolism is slightly less than those in the myocardium fibres. As for the activity of the NADPH regenerating enzymes, the activity of 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase and malate dehydrogenase (oxaloacetate-decarboxylating) is somewhat higher, and the activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase similar, in the Purkinje fibres compared to that in the myocardial fibres. The activity of myosin ATPase is similar for both types of fibre. Likewise, the fibres of the conducting system and of the myocardium show a similar activity of acid phosphatase, beta-glucuronidase, non-specific naphthylesterase and peroxidase. The neurogenic function of the conducting system of the human heart was demonstrated by the high activity of acetylcholinesterase in the Purkinje fibres and in the atrioventricular node. All these histochemical findings in Purkinje fibres are similar at widely differing levels of the conducting system.
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