SUMMARYThe number of G-and D-cells per area and the ratio of G/D-cells were investigated in biopsy specimens of the pyloric antrum from normochlorhydric subjects without peptic ulcer, from patients with duodenal ulcer, gastrinoma, pernicious anaemia, and after selective proximal vagotomy. Compared with normochlorhydric subjects antral G-cell density was significantly raised in pernicious anaemia, unchanged in duodenal ulcer, and diminished in gastrinoma patients. After vagotomy G-cell density was found to be raised if compared with patients with duodenal ulcer. D-cell density was significantly increased in gastrinoma patients, unchanged in duodenal ulcer, and diminished in pernicious anaemia and after vagotomy. The G/D-cell ratio was increased in pernicious anaemia and after vagotomy, unchanged in duodenal ulcer, and decreased in gastrinoma patients. It is concluded that the antral pH governs the ratio of G-and D-cells. Therefore, the G/D-cell ratio increases in states of reduced acid secretion and decreases in massive hyperchlorhydria. Hypergastrinaemia as such does not affect the G/D-cell ratio.A physiological role of the somatostatin-producing D-cells in the gastric mucosa has not been established. Regulation of gastric acid secretion has been suggested, because exogenous somatostatin inhibits basal and stimulated gastric acid secretion' and somatostatin is released into veins draining the antrum and the fundus. (Regulatory Peptides 1980; suppl.
The trophic effect of truncal vagotomy was studied in rats. Three months after vagotomy and pyloroplasty pancreatic weight was significantly increased by 40% (p < 0.001). Gastric stasis and consecutive distension of the stomach was observed in the majority of vagotomized animals despite pyloroplasty; the trophic effect of vagotomy on the pancreas was most pronounced in animals with severe stomach distension. Basal gastrin levels were increased after truncal vagotomy but did not correlate to gastric stasis and to the hypertrophy and hyperplasia of the exocrine pancreas. Basal pancreatic polypeptide hexapeptide levels were not altered after vagotomy. Morphometric studies on the endocrine pancreatic tissue showed that the relative volume density decreased due to the increase in exocrine tissue. However, the total islet cell mass remained constant. It is concluded that chronic truncal vagotomy has a trophic effect on the exocrine but not on the endocrine pancreas; additional factors besides gastrin seem to be responsible for this.
The influence of a 4-week treatment with the substituted benzimidazole omeprazole (20 mg daily) or placebo on gastric endocrine function was tested in healthy male volunteers. Compared with placebo-treated subjects basal serum gastrin levels were slightly but significantly increased after treatment with omeprazole from 10 to 22 pg/ml (medians; P less than 0.05) but returned to pretreatment values after 2 weeks recovery (9 pg/ml). Antral gastrin tissue concentration increased and was still elevated after recovery; however, antral gastrin concentrations also increased in placebo controls, and increments immediately after cessation of omeprazole treatment (2.58 micrograms/g; median) were not significantly over control values (1.92 micrograms/g; P greater than 0.1). Postprandial gastrin release, basal and food-stimulated insulin release, antral somatostatin concentration, and volume densities of antral G and D cells were unaffected. It is concluded that, due to incomplete inhibition of gastric acid secretion at the omeprazole dose studied, only slight effects on the endocrine stomach are to be expected after 4 weeks of administration of omeprazole.
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