Abstract

The addition of 92 or 136 mM mannitol to a modified saline solution that contained 1.25 mM Ca2+ led to a mannitol concentration-dependent increase in the amount of calcium absorbed in 1 h from 8 cm long ileal loops prepared from fasted male Sprague-Dawley rats, with body weights of 190 +/- 10 g. It is argued that this mannitol-enhanced movement of calcium out of the loop cannot have utilized the paracellular pathway, inasmuch as the luminal calcium concentration of the mannitol instillate decreased during the experiment, with a negative calcium gradient between luminal and body fluids. Instead it is proposed that uncomplexed mannitol and the uncharged calcium complex of mannitol entered the ileal cells. The uncomplexed intracellular mannitol would bind additional calcium that had crossed the brush border down its gradient. The increase in total intracellular calcium will raise the effective intracellular gradient and thereby amplify intracellular calcium diffusion. This in turn increases calcium absorption.

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