Abstract

In a model to investigate postoperative gastrointestinal motility with strain gauge transducers in awake rats, we tested the effects of intraluminal capsaicin infusion into the cecum 2 days or 14 days prior to abdominal surgery. Acute infusion of capsaicin into the cecum for 30 minutes increased the gastric, small intestinal, and colonic motility index by up to 115%, 34%, and 59%, respectively, compared to vehicle infusion. Intraluminal capsaicin infusion 2 days prior to abdominal surgery significantly increased the intraoperative gastric and colonic motility index by 166% and 100%, respectively, compared to vehicle, but had no effect on small intestinal motility. The postoperative decrease in gastric or colonic motility was completely prevented by capsaicin pretreatment, representing a 73% and a 72% increase in the motility index during the first postoperative hour and a 40% and a 29% increase in the motility index during the second postoperative hour compared to vehicle, whereas the postoperative decrease in small intestinal motility was not altered by capsaicin pretreatment. In contrast, intraluminal capsaicin infusion 14 days prior to abdominal surgery had no effect on postoperative inhibition of gastrointestinal motility. Our results suggest that capsaicin-sensitive visceral afferent C-fibers, presumably of the submucosa, play an important role in mediating postoperative ileus. Intraluminal capsaicin does probably ablate these nerve fibers temporarily, with no systemic side effects observed with the use of the tail flick test as a measure of skin nociception.

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