activity in the gut.pdf
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Gut, 1972, 13, 790-795
Noradrenaline concentration and turnover in
different regions of the gastrointestinal tract of the
rat: an approach to the evaluation of sympathetic
activity in the gut
H. L. TAUBINI, B. DJAHANGUIRI, AND L. LANDSBERG with the statistical
analysis by E. LERNER
From the Catecholamine Laboratory, West Haven Veterans Hospital, West Haven, Connecticut, and the
Departments of Medicine (Section of Gastroenterology) and Pharmacology, Yale University School of
Medicine
SUMMARY The endogenous noradrenaline concentration, fractional turnover, half-life, and turn-
over rate of tritiated (3H) noradrenaline were determined in the oesophagus, non-glandular and
glandular portions of the stomach, duodenum, jejunum, ileum, and colon of the rat. The highest
concentration of endogenous noradrenaline was present in the duodenum and colon. The 3H-
noradrenaline fractional turnover rates and half-lives were significantly greater in the small and large
intestines as compared with the oesophagus and stomach. The noradrenaline turnover rate, which is
an estimate of the level of sympathetic activity, was greatest in the colon and duodenum. This method
of assessing sympathetic activity in various tissues by direct measurement of the noradrenaline
turnover rate may be applied to the study of the adrenergic nervous system in the physiology and
pathophysiology of the gastrointestinal tract.
The influence of the sympathetic nervous system on
gastrointestinal function has long been the subject of
investigation. Information about the sympathetic
innervation of the gastrointestinal tract has ac-
cumulated gradually from diverse techniques such as
nerve sectioning and nerve stimulation, the appli-
cation of autonomic agonists and antagonists, and
the preparation of histochemical stains specific for
neurotransmitters. Nevertheless, the role played by
the adrenergic nervous system in normal physio-
logical mechanisms of the gut is poorly understood.
Even more obscure is the contri
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