Abstract

The experiments on rats have proved that ulcerative lesions in the gastric mucosa influenced by intraperitoneal catecholamines (noradrenaline and adrenaline) develop on the background of pronounced decrease of cAMP level in the gastric mucosa during ulceration and relatively slight fluctuations of cGMP level. As a result, cAMP/cGMP ratio in mucosa was significantly decreased during ulceration. These changes in cAMP level and cAMP/cGMP ratio may play an important role in destabilization of lysosomal membranes followed by a chain of pathological reactions resulting in ulcerative lesions of the gastric mucosa.

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