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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Histamine H-2 receptor stimulation and inhibition of pepsin secretion in the dog.

Although low doses of histamine (less than 150 nM/kg.hr) stimulate pepsin secretion, higher doses inhibit pepsin secretion in a dose-dependent manner. To better histamine stimulation of pepsin, histamine was used at doses at the lower end of the dose-response scale in five dogs with gastric fistula. Five doses of histamine below the ED50 for acid, viz, 9, 22.5, 67.5, 90 and 112 nM/kg.hr in 45-min steps, provided values for pepsin secretion from which Ed50 = 11.4 nmol/kg.hr (i.e., about 1/12 the ED50 for acid) and calculated maximum 22,600 peptic U/30 min were calculated. To document the inhibition, pepsin secretion was first stimulated by an infusion of bethanechol (0.4 mumol/kg.hr). A super-added injection of the histamine H-2 agonist 4-methylhistamine (0.4 or 0.8 mumol/kg) produced strong additional acid stimulation and immediate 40% suppression of pepsin secretion. The ratio pepsin/acid was reduced to one-third of control for the 90 min after 4-methylhistamine. The most specific H-2 agonist impromidine had the same effects, whereas pentagastrin (1.95 nmol/kg) inhibited both acid and pepsin secretion stimulated by bethanechol. The specificity of H-2 effect of impromidine was confirmed by simultaneous tachycardia and hypotension; pentagastrin did not produce cardiovascular effects. These studies confirm the unique effect of histamine on the peptic cell of the dog in which both stimulation and inhibition are H-2 receptor-mediated effects.[1]

References

  1. Histamine H-2 receptor stimulation and inhibition of pepsin secretion in the dog. Hirschowitz, B.I., Rentz, J., Molina, E. J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. (1981) [Pubmed]
 
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