Abstract

Lithium, a widely used drug in bipolar-affective disorders, plays gastro-protective roles. The effects of lithium on several tissues are mediated through nitric oxide (NO), which regulates gastrointestinal motility and mucosal integrity. The aim of this study was to investigate the protective effect of chronic lithium administration on visceral hypersensitivity and to investigate the role of NO as a potential mechanism of lithium in a rat model of irritable bowel syndrome. Colitis was induced by the intracolonic administration of acetic acid. After subsidence of inflammation on the seventh experimental day, nociception and defecation parameters were measured. A subgroup of animals had been pretreated with lithium carbonate (600 mg/L) for 35 days. Thereafter, either a non-selective NO synthase (NOS) inhibitor (N-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester [L-NAME], 10 mg/kg), a selective NOS inhibitor (aminoguanidine, 100 mg/kg), or saline were administered intraperitoneally 1 h before measurements. Chronic lithium attenuated the visceral hypersensitivity, increased the nociceptive threshold, and decreased stool frequency. L-NAME and aminoguanidine decreased the nociceptive threshold and reduced the protective effects of lithium on visceral hypersensitivity. Stool frequency was increased in both the lithium-treated and water-treated groups by L-NAME administration, but not aminoguanidine. The form of defecation in the lithium-treated rats shifted toward hard stools rather than being soft and formless, but NOS inhibitors did not change the stool consistency pattern. The results indicate the antinociceptive property of chronic lithium on visceral hypersensitivity. As this effect was lowered by NOS inhibitors, NO might play a role in the protective effect of lithium to some extent.

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