Abstract

In order to detect both pancreatic excretion of dimethadione (DMO), a weak organic acid, and the effect of pancreatic DMO on secretin-stimulated pancreatic secretion, DMO was given intravenously to dogs with pancreatic fistulae at a dose of 50, 100 and 200 mg/kg. DMO was promptly excreted into pancreatic juice; the concentration decreased exponentially as it did in plasma at the highest dose of the compound. At equilibrium of DMO between pancreatic juice and plasma, the DMO concentration in the juice depended directly on that in plasma; the juice/plasma concentration ratios for DMO exceeded 1.0, ranging from 1.7 to 2.1. Pancreatic DMO caused a small but significant decrease in the water, bicarbonate and sodium secretion at non-equilibrium, and in the bicarbonate secretion at equilibrium. A decrease in the bicarbonate secretion may result largely from the buffer action of bicarbonate on protons provided by the undissociated form of DMO. The sum of both bicarbonate and chloride concentrations in pancreatic juice decreased with the increased DMO concentration in the juice, implying that DMO may compete with the secretion of bicarbonate and/or chloride across the apical membrane of the duct cell. Pancreatic DMO can act as a non-specific inhibitor of pancreatic water and electrolyte secretions.

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