Abstract

Indirect evidence suggests that stress ulceration is provoked by vagal hyperactivity. However, direct evidence of hypervagal activity during stress conditions is lacking. Experiments were designed to directly measure vagal activity under different stress conditions in rats. Starvation stress for 48 h did not change the mean amplitude of action potentials, but their frequency was significantly decreased. Restraint stress at 22 degrees C increased vagal activity, both amplitude and frequency, in the first 60 min; these responses were markedly enhanced by cold (4 degrees C) and persisted for at least 2 h. Starvation for 48 h did not induce any gastric mucosal lesions. Restraint alone produced petechiae in the gastric mucosa, but cold restraint induced severe haemorrhagic ulcers. It is concluded that cold restraint stress provokes a prolonged vagal hyperactivity, which is one of the causative factors for gastric ulceration.

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