학술논문

Gastric emptying and intestinal absorption of ingested water and saline by hypovolemic rats
Document Type
Article
Source
Physiology & Behavior. Dec2009, Vol. 98 Issue 5, p570-578. 9p.
Subject
*GASTRIC emptying
*INTESTINAL absorption
*POLYETHYLENE glycol
*LABORATORY rats
*INGESTION
*SALT
*BIOLOGY experiments
*DRINKING (Physiology)
*BLOOD volume
Language
ISSN
0031-9384
Abstract
Abstract: Recent experiments showed that in a one-bottle test conducted 16h after sc injection of polyethylene glycol (PEG) solution, hypovolemic rats consumed water or 0.30M NaCl in an initial drinking episode but did not empty the ingested fluid from the stomach or absorb it from the small intestine very rapidly, certainly not as rapidly as when 0.15M NaCl was consumed (Smith et al., Am J Physiol 292: R2089-R2099, 2007). The present experiments examined the patterns of water and 0.30M NaCl ingestion and the movement of consumed fluid through the gastrointestinal tract when PEG-treated rats were given a two-bottle delayed-access test. We found that both fluids always were consumed in the first drinking episode, that the fluid mixture ingested was equivalent to 0.10–0.15M NaCl, and that gastric emptying rate and net fluid absorption from the small intestine usually were much faster than when PEG-treated rats drank either water or hypertonic saline alone. Thus, ingestion of water and 0.30M NaCl by hypovolemic rats in the same episode adaptively facilitated the movement into the circulation of a near-isotonic fluid that is ideal for restoring plasma volume deficits. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]