Author:
Hansen MB,Arif F,Gregersen H,Bruusgaard H,Wallin L
Abstract
The physiological significance of serotonin released into the
intestinal lumen for the regulation of motility is unknown in
humans. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of
serotonin infused into the lumen of the gastric antrum,
duodenum or the jejunum, on antro-duodeno-jejunal contractility
in healthy human volunteers. Manometric recordings were
obtained and the effects of either a standard meal, continuous
intravenous infusion of serotonin (20 nmol/kg/min) or
intraluminal bolus infusions of graded doses of serotonin (2.5, 25
or 250 nmol) were compared. In addition, platelet-depleted
plasma levels of serotonin, blood pressure, heart rate and
electrocardiogram were evaluated. All subjects showed similar
results. Intravenous serotonin increased migrating motor
complex phase III frequency 3-fold and migrating velocity 2-fold.
Intraluminal infusion of serotonin did not change contractile
activity. Platelet-depleted-plasma levels of serotonin increased 2-
fold following both intravenous and high doses of intraluminal
infusions of serotonin. All subjects reported minor short-lived
adverse effects following intravenous serotonin stimulation, while
only half of the subjects reported minor short-lived adverse
effects following intraluminal serotonin stimulations. We conclude
that exogenous serotonin in the lumen of the upper part of the
small intestine does not seem to change antro-duodeno-jejunal
contractility significantly in healthy adult volunteers.
Publisher
Institute of Physiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences
Subject
General Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
12 articles.
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