Abstract
The regulatory response of the exocrine pancreas was examined in rats under unanesthetized and unrestrained conditions. The previous study demonstrated that the pancreatic protease secretion increased 2-fold after spontaneous feeding of a low protein diet in chronically bile-pancreatic cannulated rats (normal rats) whose bile-pancreatic juice (BPJ) was returned to the duodenum. In the present study, we observed the response of the exocrine pancreatic secretion to spontaneous feeding of a low protein diet in rats with chronic diversion of BPJ from the proximal small intestine for 6 days (bypass rat) whose diverted BPJ was returned to the upper ileum. During BPJ diversion, the dry weight and the protein content of the pancreas were increased 2-fold, compared with normal rats. Also, the levels of trypsinogen and chymotrypsinogen in the pancreas were increased several times, but amylase was decreased. The basal secretion of enzymes after a 24-hr fast was enhanced in bypass rats in proportion to the pancreatic enzyme contents. After spontaneous feeding of 8% casein fat-free diet, the increases in the pancreatic secretion of bypass rats were much smaller than those of normal rats. In contrast, the increase of BPJ flow of bypass rats after feeding was greater than that of normal rats. These findings represent that the chronic diversion of BPJ exerts hypergrowth of pancreas and hypersecretion of proteases in the fasting state, and less sensitivity of pancreatic enzyme secretion to dietary feeding.
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