Tags

Type your tag names separated by a space and hit enter

Selective inhibition of pentagastrin- and cholecystokinin-stimulated exocrine secretion by proglumide.
Gastroenterology. 1985 Oct; 89(4):746-51.G

Abstract

The effectiveness and selectivity of proglumide, a putative cholecystokinin/gastrin receptor antagonist in vitro, were examined on gastric acid and pancreatic secretion in vivo. Gastric secretion was measured in conscious dogs in the basal state and during infusion of pentagastrin, histamine, or bethanechol, alone or in combination with proglumide (300 mg/kg . h). Pancreatic secretion was measured in anesthetized rats in response to cholecystokinin-octapeptide or secretin, alone or in combination with proglumide (100 mg/kg). Proglumide inhibited pentagastrin-stimulated secretion but had no effect on basal, histamine-stimulated, or bethanechol-stimulated gastric acid secretion. Inhibition of pentagastrin-stimulated secretion was of the competitive type. An apparent inhibitory constant was calculated to be 300 mg/kg . h; this dose is capable of eliciting plasma concentrations of approximately 1 mM. This estimate corresponds closely to that derived from measurements in isolated canine parietal cells. Proglumide also inhibited cholecystokinin-stimulated but not secretin-stimulated pancreatic secretion. The lack of effect of proglumide on basal, histamine-stimulated, or bethanechol-stimulated gastric acid secretion implies that background gastrin has no direct or synergistic influence on stimulation by other secretagogues. The selective effect of gastrin receptor antagonists contrasts with the effectiveness of muscarinic and histamine H2-receptor antagonists against secretion induced by all types of stimulants. Accordingly, the antisecretory potential of gastrin receptor antagonists is confined to digestive secretion when the effect of gastrin is optimal. Their potential as antitrophic agents in duodenal ulcer disease, however, has not been explored yet.

Authors

No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

Language

eng

PubMed ID

2863192

Citation

Loewe, C J., et al. "Selective Inhibition of Pentagastrin- and Cholecystokinin-stimulated Exocrine Secretion By Proglumide." Gastroenterology, vol. 89, no. 4, 1985, pp. 746-51.
Loewe CJ, Grider JR, Gardiner J, et al. Selective inhibition of pentagastrin- and cholecystokinin-stimulated exocrine secretion by proglumide. Gastroenterology. 1985;89(4):746-51.
Loewe, C. J., Grider, J. R., Gardiner, J., & Vlahcevic, Z. R. (1985). Selective inhibition of pentagastrin- and cholecystokinin-stimulated exocrine secretion by proglumide. Gastroenterology, 89(4), 746-51.
Loewe CJ, et al. Selective Inhibition of Pentagastrin- and Cholecystokinin-stimulated Exocrine Secretion By Proglumide. Gastroenterology. 1985;89(4):746-51. PubMed PMID: 2863192.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Selective inhibition of pentagastrin- and cholecystokinin-stimulated exocrine secretion by proglumide. AU - Loewe,C J, AU - Grider,J R, AU - Gardiner,J, AU - Vlahcevic,Z R, PY - 1985/10/1/pubmed PY - 1985/10/1/medline PY - 1985/10/1/entrez SP - 746 EP - 51 JF - Gastroenterology JO - Gastroenterology VL - 89 IS - 4 N2 - The effectiveness and selectivity of proglumide, a putative cholecystokinin/gastrin receptor antagonist in vitro, were examined on gastric acid and pancreatic secretion in vivo. Gastric secretion was measured in conscious dogs in the basal state and during infusion of pentagastrin, histamine, or bethanechol, alone or in combination with proglumide (300 mg/kg . h). Pancreatic secretion was measured in anesthetized rats in response to cholecystokinin-octapeptide or secretin, alone or in combination with proglumide (100 mg/kg). Proglumide inhibited pentagastrin-stimulated secretion but had no effect on basal, histamine-stimulated, or bethanechol-stimulated gastric acid secretion. Inhibition of pentagastrin-stimulated secretion was of the competitive type. An apparent inhibitory constant was calculated to be 300 mg/kg . h; this dose is capable of eliciting plasma concentrations of approximately 1 mM. This estimate corresponds closely to that derived from measurements in isolated canine parietal cells. Proglumide also inhibited cholecystokinin-stimulated but not secretin-stimulated pancreatic secretion. The lack of effect of proglumide on basal, histamine-stimulated, or bethanechol-stimulated gastric acid secretion implies that background gastrin has no direct or synergistic influence on stimulation by other secretagogues. The selective effect of gastrin receptor antagonists contrasts with the effectiveness of muscarinic and histamine H2-receptor antagonists against secretion induced by all types of stimulants. Accordingly, the antisecretory potential of gastrin receptor antagonists is confined to digestive secretion when the effect of gastrin is optimal. Their potential as antitrophic agents in duodenal ulcer disease, however, has not been explored yet. SN - 0016-5085 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/2863192/Selective_inhibition_of_pentagastrin__and_cholecystokinin_stimulated_exocrine_secretion_by_proglumide_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -