Abstract

Studies were designed to determine if permeability of adapted (remnant) small bowel mucosa to polyethylene glycol (PEG) was altered after major intestinal resection. Rats underwent 50% small bowel resection with preservation of duodenum and terminal ileum. Sham-operated animals served as controls. Two and four weeks later we cannulated the portal vein and measured mucosal permeability to luminal [3H]PEG and [14C]PEG in isotonic Ringer solution in remnant proximal or distal in situ closed intestinal loops. A lumen-to-portal blood gradient of at least 1000/1 persisted throughout the one-hour experimental period in both resected and sham-operated animals. Thus the adapted remnant intestinal mucosa was highly impermeable to luminal radiotracer PEG. In separate experiments 2 and 4 weeks after 70% small bowel resection or sham operation, in vivo segments of proximal and distal small intestinal were perfused through the lumen for one hour with hypertonic (800 mOsm) mannitol or NaCl solution containing [3H]PEG. There was equal and almost total recovery of [3H]PEG at the end of the experimental period in resected and control animals. The combined data of all experiments indicate that radiotracer PEG may be confidently used as a luminal water phase marker in transport studies of remnant bowel following intestinal resection.

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