Abstract

Five healthy students were investigated on two different days with or without a constant infusion of somatostatin (500 microgram/h) into an arm vein a fluoroscopically placed Lagerlöf tube was used for the collection of gastric and duodenal juice. After 30-min basal period, 40 ml 100 mmol/l HCl was infused into the midpart of the duodenum over 5 min through a thin catheter attached to the tube. Plasma immunoreactive secretin was measured by radioimmunoassay employing 125I-labelled synthetic secretin, antibody against synthetic secretin, and standards prepared from pure natural porcine secretin. Secretin levels without somatostatin infusion were 4.6+/-0.7 pmol/l (mean+/-S.E.M.) basally and rose to a peak of 21.8+/-6.2 pmol/l after duodenal acidification (p less than 0.05) and with somatostatin infusion were 4.4+/-0.4 pmol/l basally and rose to a peak of 6.7+/-1.7 pmol/l (n.s.) after duodenal acidification. Pancreatic bicarbonate output increased from 8.0+/-2.5 mumol/min (mean+/-S.E.M.) to 283+/-44 mumol/min without somatostatin infusion (p less than 0.05) and from 6.7+/-2.1 mumol/min to 70+/-13 mumol/min somatostatin (p less than 0.05). This study shows that somatostatin (500 microgram/h can inhibit the release of secretin and the pancreatic bicarbonate secretion after duodenal acidification in man.

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