Abstract
The effect of short fasting for up to 24 h on serum and antral gastrin concentrations and G cell ultrastructure has been examined in the young rat compared with the middle-aged rat. The serum gastrin levels at 24-h fasting were markedly reduced in both young and middle-aged rats. There was also a significant decrease in antral gastrin concentrations after 24 h of fasting in the middle-aged rats. By contrast, the antral gastrin concentrations in the young rats increased progressively and significantly with fasting for up to 24 h. These responses were associated with a significant increase in the content of secretory granules of G cell, which was at its greatest by 24 h. The antral gastrin level in the 48-h fasting rats was markedly reduced to a level below that for the prestarvation group. By 48 h of starvation, the amount of secretory granules in G cell was significantly reduced ( P<0.05) compared with the 24-h fasting group. These results indicate that the effects of fasting on the antral gastrin levels in young rats differ from those of the middle-aged and that starvation for up to 24 h caused a significant increase in the antral gastrin content in the young rats' stomach.
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