Simultaneous measurement of plasma motilin concentration and gastrointestinal contractile activity was make in 12 healthy dogs. Plasma motilin concentration was measured by radioimmunoassay and gastrointestinal contractile activity was monitored by means of chronically implanted force transducers. During the interdigestive state, it was found that the plasma motilin concentration increased in complete accordance with the cyclical interdigestive contractions of the stomach. Furthermore, plasma motilin concentration was lowered by the ingestion of food, and it reamined low as long as the gastric motor activity was in the digestive pattern. Since, as reported previously the interdigestive contractions can be induced by tthe exogenous administration of motilin, we concluded that (1) motilin is released at constant intervals during the interdigestive state, and this release is suppressed by the ingestion of food; (2) motilin induces the interdigestive contractions of the stomach and duodenum; and (3) motilin is an interdigestive hormone and is the only known polypeptide hormone of the gut whose release is not induced by a meal.
An extraluminal strain-gauge force transducer has been developed for recording contractile activity of the gastrointestinal smooth muscle. The details of its construction and implantation were described. The transducer unit allows for continuous long-term recordings (more the 5 months) from conscious experimental animals. It could be constructed in any laboratory and easily implanted in animals if it is done in aseptic technique. Since it is sutured onto the outside of the gut, it does not interfere passage of the contents. The only disadvantages are that it only measures muscle contractions and it is hard to determine movements of intraluminal contents especially in the digestive state.
Twenty-four-hour changes in gastric motor activity were recorded in 4 healthy adult dogs in the conscious state by means of extraluminal force transducers. Three major different gastric motor activity patterns were recognized during 24 hr: digestive, intermediate, and interdigestive. The digestive pattern was characterized by steady low-amplitude contractions in the gastric antrum, with no significant motor activity in the gastric body. The interdigestive pattern consisted of series of high-amplitude contractions of 14-23 min duration in both the gastric body and antrum with intervening and long-lasting (68-109 min) motor quiescence. The intermediate pattern is considered to be the pattern midway when the digestive pattern is changing to the interdigestive pattern. These changes in gastric motor activity are precisely controlled day after day if the animals are fed at regular time intervals and are healthy. The digestive pattern may represent principally a mixing function of ingested food and the interdigestive pattern a cleaning function in preparation for the next meal
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