Changes in the blood glucagon reactive to 30K antibody were followed in two patients before, during, and after total pancreatectomy. The blood glucagon level was decreased six hours after the operation, and then increased gradually unless insulin was administered. The increased non-pancreas glucagon was immediately suppressed by insulin administration. The glucagon secretion response to an arginine load was already low one week after the operation, and was absent even three weeks after the operation.
The effects of gastrectomy and vagotomy on pancreatic glucagon release were investigated clinically. The study included 20 men and eight women, who ranged in age from 28 to 69 years, and who were divided into the following four groups: 1) patients with gastroduodenal ulcers treated with partial gastrectomy, by the Billroth I method, whose hepatic branch was preserved (n = 7). 2) Patients with gastroduodenal ulcers treated with partial gastrectomy, by the Billroth II method, whose hepatic branch was preserved (n = 7). 3) Patients with gastric carcinoma treated with subtotal gastrectomy, by the Billroth I method. In these cases lymphadenectomy required section of the hepatic branch (n = 7). 4) Patients with gastric carcinoma treated with subtotal gastrectomy, by the Billroth II method. In these cases lymphadenectomy required section of the hepatic branch (n = 7). Oral glucose tolerance tests were performed in 10 patients, before operation, and in 28 gastrectomized and vagotomized patients. In the preoperative patients and in the first group, oral glucose (50g) suppressed pancreatic glucagon release, but in the other groups pancreatic glucagon levels were markedly increased.
A case of acute diffuse phlegmonous gastritis in a 54 year old man with an abrupt onset of upper abdominal pain, high fever and complete anorexia was presented. The stomach wall was remarkably thickened and rigid. Histologically there was massive infiltration of polymorphonuclear leukocytes in the submucosa and muscularis of the stomach wall. The lamina muscularis mucosae was fragmented by the numerous small focal abscesses.
Total pancreatectomy was performed in dogs; and arginine test was conducted at the first, second and third weeks after surgery, and measurement was made of blood glucose, glucagon and insulin on a time-course basis for a comparative study with normal dogs. 1) After total pancreatectomy, glucagon reacting to 30 K antibody decreased once but increased with the lapse of time when no insulin was administered. 2) In the arginine test, glucagon showed a biphasic reaction in normal dogs, but a monophasic reaction in totally depancreatized dogs. This reaction declined three weeks after surgery. 3) When blood samples were taken from the pancreaticoduodenal vein, the left-gastroepiploic and mesenteric veins, during and after arginine was infused for 30 minutes. Glucagon in the pancreaticoduodenal vein increased markedly, but there were no such prominent changes in the left-gastroepiploic or mesenteric veins, Meanwhile, the level of glucagon in the left-gastroepiploic vein increased remarkably in dogs one week after total pancreatectomy.
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