Effect of size of Trichinella spiralis (Nematode) infections on glucose and ion transport in the rat intestine.
An in vivo perfusion technique, using 3 intestinal loops representing the anterior, mid and posterior regions of the rat small intestine, was used to determine intestinal glucose uptake 5 days after infection with Trichinella spiralis. At high levels of infection (3,000 and 6,000 larvae/rat) net glucose absorption by the intestinal mucosa was significantly impaired in all regions of the small intestine when compared to uninfected controls. At low levels of infection (50 larvae/rat) glucose uptake by the mucosa was significantly enhanced in all 3 regions of the small intestine. Intermediate levels of infections (200-1,000 larvae/rat) also enhanced glucose uptake, but only in the anterior regions of the small intestine. When washings from the small intestine of rats infected with 50 larvae/rat were added to the perfusion fluid used on uninfected rats, glucose uptake was also significantly enhanced. These results suggest that at low levels of infection the intestinal lumen contains a metabolite which may affect the mucosal transport of glucose and the related fluxes of H2O, Na+, Cl-, and K+, in the rat intestine. Luminal [H+] and pCO2 decreased from the proximal to distal regions of the small intestine following perfusion; pO2 was significantly decreased in the proximal and distal regions.[1]References
- Effect of size of Trichinella spiralis (Nematode) infections on glucose and ion transport in the rat intestine. Sukhdeo, M.V., Mettrick, D.F. J. Parasitol. (1984) [Pubmed]
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