Abstract
The level of serum group I pepsinogens (PG I) has been studied during the conventional insulin-pentagastrin test in 29 duodenal ulcer (DU) patients before and 2 months after proximal selective vagotomy (PSV) and in 31 unoperated DU patients. The mean basal serum PG I level was 191.6 +/- 15.4 micrograms/l (mean +/- SEM) before and 143.7 +/- 24.0 micrograms/l after PSV. A significant increase in mean serum PG I above the initial value was found both in unoperated DU patients and in patients after PSV 1 h after insulin injection. In 29 PSV patients the mean serum PG I showed a paradoxical decrease during the 2nd h after insulin injection, and the mean postvagotomy serum PG I 2 h after insulin injection was significantly (p less than 0.01) lower than the respective preoperative value in the same patients, and the value was close to the basal serum PG I. The low level of serum PG I 2 h after insulin injection in vagotomized patients may reflect the deprivation of the reduced store of PG I in the absence of normal vagal tone. Both the basal serum PG I and serum PG I response during insulin-induced hypoglycaemia showed an overlap between unoperated and vagotomized DU patients. Therefore, serum PG I analyses during the insulin test cannot replace acid secretion tests in the assessment of the completeness of vagotomy.
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