Abstract

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) causes a prolonged life-quality reduction of patients and high costs for health services. The aim of this study was to explore the possible involvement of peptidergic capsaicin-sensitive afferent nerves (CSN) in the pathogenesis of IBD. For the defunctionalization of colonic CSN, the lower part of the colon (1–4 cm from the anus) was exposed through a midline laparotomy and small pieces of gelfoam moistened with a solution of capsaicin (1%, 100 μL) was applied onto the serosal surface for 30 min in male Wistar rats. Colonic vascular permeability was assessed by measuring the extravasation of [ 125I] human serum albumin (2 μCi/kg, iv, 2 h prior to killing). Two months after capsaicin treatment a significant increase in albumin extravasation was found in the lower ( P < 0.005), but not in the upper (5–8 cm from the anus) part of the colon as compared to the sham-operated control. Intrarectal (8 cm from anus) administration of trinitrobenzene-sulphonic acid (TNBS; 30 mg/rat) induced similar plasma leakage in the lower and upper colon of control (CSN-intact) rats ( P < 0.001) 1 week later. TNBS + ethanol (50%) produced further extravasation throughout the colon ( P < 0.001) of CSN-intact animals. In the lower colon of capsaicin-pretreated rats TNBS-alone provoked an increase in plasma extravasation ( P < 0.001) similar to that caused by TNBS + ethanol in CSN-intact rats. In the upper colon there was no difference in the effect of TNBS-alone on plasma leakage between control (CSN-intact) and CSN-depleted rats. The results suggest that capsaicin-sensitive nerves may play a significant protective/anti-inflammatory role in the colon under normal and pathological conditions.

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