Abstract
The motility of the gastrointestinal tract of six opossums with total and four with partial small bowel obstruction was evaluated. Following the establishment of small bowel obstruction, the migrating myoelectric complex was substituted by a new pattern which was characterized by periods of intense spike activity interspersed with quiescent periods. In the experiments with total intestinal obstruction, the frequency and duration of the periods of intense spike activity were related to the recording site and the time after establishment of intestinal obstruction. The frequency of spike bursts in the ileum proximal and distal to the obstruction was the greatest in the first 2 days after the establishment of the obstruction, while in the antrum and proximal small bowel, the frequency of bursts of spike potentials increased gradually from the first to the fourth postobstruction day ( P < 0.01). However, there was no change in the frequency, duration, and localization of periods of intense spike activity during the 5 days following the establishment of partial intestinal obstruction. We concluded that following intestinal obstruction, the migrating myoelectric complex is substituted by a myoelectric pattern that is characterized by periods of intense spike activity interspersed with quiescent periods. In the animals with total intestinal obstruction, the periods of increased motility are initially more frequent in the bowel proximal and distal to the obstruction and afterwards in the stomach and upper small bowel.
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