Representative longitudinal muscle strips (6 × 10 mm) from distal small intestine were obtained from rats after 1, 2, and 3 mo of streptozocin-induced diabetes. The strips were stretched to their optimum lengths and subjected to electrical field stimulation (1-ms pulse duration, 30–270 mA, 10 Hz) in the presence of Krebs solution and Krebs solution plus 10−6 M atropine. Field stimulation produced atropine-sensitive and atropine-resistant contractions in all strips. After 1 mo, significant differences in the amplitudes of the atropine-sensitive contractions were found between the diabetic rats and nondiabetic controls. Insulintreated diabetic rats showed contraction responses that were intermediate in amplitude. After 2 mo, the difference between the control and diabetic groups was less evident but still significant. After 3 mo, the previously noted difference in the atropine-sensitive contractions between the diabetic and control groups had resolved. No significant differences among the three groups were noted in the amplitudes of the atropine-resistant contractions. Field stimulation delivered at pulse durations of 50 ms in the presence of neural blockade with tetrodotoxin (5 × 10−6 M) produced similar contraction amplitudes among the three groups at any respective time phase of the study. Dose-response studies of intestinal muscle after 3 mo of untreated diabetes showed normal tension development to both bethanechol chloride and physostigmine. These results indicate that streptozocin-induced diabetes is acutely associated with defective cholinergic neuromuscular transmission in the myenteric plexus of the distal small intestine The abnormality is less evident after 2 mo of untreated diabetes and resolves spontaneously after 3 mo. Insulin treatment appears to accelerate this resolution.
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Original Articles|
August 01 1990
Adaptation of Cholinergic Enteric Neuromuscular Transmission in Diabetic Rat Small Intestine
Thomas V Nowak;
Thomas V Nowak
Department of Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin; and the Research Service, Veterans Administration Medical Center
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
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Bonnie Harrington;
Bonnie Harrington
Department of Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin; and the Research Service, Veterans Administration Medical Center
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
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John Kalbfleisch
John Kalbfleisch
Department of Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin; and the Research Service, Veterans Administration Medical Center
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
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Address correspondence and reprint requests to Thomas V. Nowak, MD, 9200 West Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, Wl 53225.
Diabetes 1990;39(8):891–897
Article history
Received:
July 13 1989
Revision Received:
March 23 1990
Accepted:
March 23 1990
PubMed:
1973670
Citation
Thomas V Nowak, Bonnie Harrington, John Kalbfleisch; Adaptation of Cholinergic Enteric Neuromuscular Transmission in Diabetic Rat Small Intestine. Diabetes 1 August 1990; 39 (8): 891–897. https://doi.org/10.2337/diab.39.8.891
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