Abstract

This study evaluated the effects of 25% ethanol, a mild irritant, on endogenous prostanoid synthesis in the rat stomach before and after exposure to oral 100% ethanol. Rats received water or 25% ethanol orally. After 15 min, a portion of each group was sacrificed and the remaining animals treated with 100% ethanol prior to sacrifice one minute later. Microsomal membrane fractions were prepared from the glandular gastric mucosa in all groups and incubated with 14C arachidonic acid in the presence of cofactors. Endogenous mucosal prostanoid synthesis was analyzed by radiochromatography and results correlated with the presence or absence of gastric injury macroscopically. Prostanoids measured included PGI 2, PGF 2α, PGE 2, PGD 2, PGA 2, and thromboxane A 2. Additional experiments were performed in like manner to those just described with the exception that indomethacin (5 mg/kg intraperitoneally) pretreatment was rendered. Stomachs exposed to water or 25% ethanol alone demonstrated a modest and equivalent level of synthesis of all prostanoids measured. Exposure to 100% ethanol (with and without mild irritant pretreatment) significantly increased prostanoid synthesis (especially PGI 2, PGF 2α, and PGE 2) compared with stomachs exposed to water or 25% ethanol alone; only mild irritant treated mucosa was protected from injury by 100% ethanol. Indomethacin pretreatment reversed the increased prostanoid synthesis in mucosa exposed to 100% ethanol, with or without mild irritant pretreatment, and partially reversed the protective effect of 25% ethanol. Other experiments using tissue slices in which perturbations in mucosal levels of prostanoids were mesured by radioimmunoassay under identical experimental conditions exhibited similar results. These data dispute the notion that adaptive cytoprotection is mediated by increased endogenous prostanoid synthesis. The partial reversal of this process by indomethacin was most likely secondary to some other action of this agent, such as a reduction in gastric blood flow, rather than direct effects on prostanoid synthesis.

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