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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To determine whether a synthetic somatostatin analogue, octreotide, and a
cholecystokinin receptor
antagonist, L-364,718, may be beneficial in acute pancreatitis, 33 dogs were assigned to four groups. Each dog underwent laparotomy with injection of autologous bile into the dorsal pancreatic duct. Thirty minutes after the induction of
pancreatitis
, Group 1 received a subcutaneous injection of octreotide (200 micrograms/kg), Group 2 received an equal volume of the octreotide carrier, Group 3 received an hourly intravenous bolus of L-364,718 (60 micrograms/kg), and Group 4 received an equal volume of the L-364,718 carrier. Hemodynamic profiles, arterial blood gases, plasma glucose, and serum amylase were obtained before laparotomy, at bile injection, and at hourly intervals. The pancreas was removed after 8 hours for gross evaluation, measurement of water content, and histologic examination. A significant decrease in cardiac index and a significant increase in serum amylase and pancreatic edema occurred in all four groups 8 hours after the induction of
pancreatitis
(P less than 0.05), but there was no statistical difference between any group. Likewise, there was no difference in gross or histologic changes in the pancreas of any group. The somatostatin analogue, octreotide, and the
cholecystokinin receptor
antagonist, L-364,718, did not ameliorate the effects of severe, bile-induced
pancreatitis
in dogs.
...
PMID:Effect of somatostatin analogue and cholecystokinin receptor antagonist on bile-induced acute canine pancreatitis. 137 11
In a variety of animal models of acute pancreatitis, cholecystokinin-receptor antagonists have ameliorated the injury response. These results suggest that cholecystokinin may play a primary role in the pathogenesis of
pancreatitis
initiated by multiple stimuli. In an effort to test this theory, a sensitive and high affinity cholecystokinin-receptor antagonist L364,718 was administered to four different models of acute pancreatitis that were produced in the ex vivo perfused canine pancreas preparation. The four models of
pancreatitis
were initiated by cerulein infusion, partial duct obstruction with secretin stimulation, oleic acid infusion, and a 2-hour period of ischemia. In each model,
pancreatitis
was manifest by edema formation, weight gain, and hyperamylasemia during a 4-hour perfusion. In cerulein infusion-induced
pancreatitis
L364,718 inhibited edema formation and weight gain (31 +/- 5 gm versus 7 +/- 6 gm; p less than 0.05) and significantly decreased plasma amylase activity (36,605 +/- 21,216 U/dl versus 9421 +/- 5149 U/dl; p less than 0.05). The acute pancreatitis induced by the other three stimuli was not ameliorated by L364,718 treatment. We conclude that in the ex vivo-perfused canine pancreas preparation cerulein-induced
pancreatitis
is mediated at least in part by the
cholecystokinin receptor
. Early blockade of the
cholecystokinin receptor
was of no benefit in treating the other models of
pancreatitis
, suggesting that cholecystokinin is not involved in the early pathogenesis.
...
PMID:The role of cholecystokinin in the pathogenesis of acute pancreatitis in the isolated pancreas preparation. 170 26
Acute edematous
pancreatitis
follows excessive cholinergic stimulation in patients exposed to anticholinesterase-containing insecticides. We describe the role of cholecystokinin and the benefits of
cholecystokinin receptor
blockade in this form of
pancreatitis
. A cholinergic mimetic (carbachol) was administered to rats weighing 300 to 350 g and produced a form of edematous
pancreatitis
that mimics that seen in humans. Animals received carbachol intraperitoneally, either alone (250 micrograms/kg of body weight) or with cholecystokinin-receptor antagonist devazepide (3 mg/kg of body weight) and were killed 4 hours later. Carbachol administration resulted in a 19% increase in pancreatic weight, a fourfold increase in serum amylase levels, and a 14-fold increase in serum lipase levels. Plasma cholecystokinin levels, however, were not altered. Devazepide administered prior to cholinergic hyperstimulation blocked pancreatic weight increase and reduced elevations in serum amylase levels twofold and lipase levels fourfold. Although cholecystokinin levels are not elevated in this model of
pancreatitis
, blockade of even low, background concentrations of this regulatory peptide is beneficial.
...
PMID:Amelioration of cholinergic-induced pancreatitis with a selective cholecystokinin receptor antagonist. 224 6
The effects of the
cholecystokinin receptor
antagonist L-364,718 was studied in a model of mild
pancreatitis
induced in mice by repeated injections of the secretagogue caerulein and in a lethal form of
pancreatitis
induced by feeding mice an ethionine-supplemented choline-deficient diet. L-364,718 prevented the caerulein-induced rise in serum amylase and pancreatic weight in a dose-dependent manner, the most effective dose being 0.1 mg/kg body wt. L-364,718 also prevented the caerulein-induced pancreatic inflammation as seen by light microscopy. L-364,718 offered no protective effects as determined by changes in serum amylase, pancreatic weight, histology, or mortality in the ethionine-supplemented choline-deficient diet model.
...
PMID:Effects of the cholecystokinin receptor antagonist L-364,718 on experimental pancreatitis in mice. 274 67
The effects of
cholecystokinin receptor
antagonist CR 1392 was studied in a model of mild acute pancreatitis induced in rats by four subcutaneous injections of the secretagogue caerulein. A single subcutaneous injection of 50 mg/kg body weight of CR 1392 caused a dramatic reduction in serum amylase concentration and pancreatic wet weight as well as histologic improvement of the caerulein-induced acute pancreatitis when given 30 min before the first caerulein injection. CR 1392 was also effective in reducing the elevated serum amylase activity, pancreatic weight, and histologic alterations even when administered after the
pancreatitis
had been induced. These present observations suggest that CR 1392 remains active for more than 3 h and blocks the action of caerulein on the pancreas.
...
PMID:Effect of a new cholecystokinin receptor antagonist CR 1392 on caerulein-induced acute pancreatitis in rats. 247 65
Creation of a closed duodenal loop produced edematous acute pancreatitis within 6 h and hemorrhagic acute pancreatitis within 12 h in male Sprague-Dawley rats. The
pancreatitis
thus established tended to improve after releasing the loop. We investigated the effect of a new
cholecystokinin receptor
antagonist, KSG 504, on the healing process in edematous and hemorrhagic acute pancreatitis after releasing the loop. Serum amylase and lipase levels in the control group decreased gradually after releasing the loop, but the reductions were not significant. In both the group treated with KSG 504 intravenously and the group treated subcutaneously, serum amylase and lipase levels decreased markedly upon release of the loop in edematous acute pancreatitis. Furthermore, the histologic changes in edematous acute pancreatitis improved more rapidly than in the control group. However, no such biochemical or histologic evidence of improvement was observed in hemorrhagic acute pancreatitis. The new
cholecystokinin receptor
antagonist, KSG 504, displayed a therapeutic effect in edematous acute pancreatitis but not in hemorrhagic acute pancreatitis. These findings suggest that endogenous cholecystokinin release induced by the closed duodenal loop may have a contributory role in the development of edematous acute pancreatitis but not of hemorrhagic acute pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Effect of a new cholecystokinin receptor antagonist (KSG 504) on the early stage of the healing process in acute pancreatitis induced in rats by the closed duodenal loop technique. 752 65
We investigated the protective and/or therapeutic effects of a new
cholecystokinin receptor
antagonist, KSG-504, on different types of experimental
pancreatitis
in the rat and mouse. The intravenous injection of KSG-504 (10, 25, 50 and 100 mg/kg) before caerulein administration to the rat inhibited the increases in plasma amylase, lipase and of pancreatic wet weight in a dose-dependent manner. The histological changes due to caerulein-induced acute pancreatitis were also decreased by KSG-504 when KSG-504 (25, 50 and 100 mg/kg) was administered after the induction of acute pancreatitis; the increases in plasma amylase, lipase and pancreatic wet weight were reduced, but the histological changes of the pancreas were not decreased significantly. In the second experiment, acute pancreatitis was induced in rats by injecting 0.3 ml of 6% sodium taurocholate into the pancreatic interstitial tissue. KSG-504 administered immediately and 1.5 hr after sodium-taurocholate injection at 100 mg/kg reduced the increases of pancreatic enzymes in the plasma, pancreatic wet weight and ascites. Moreover, KSG-504 (50 and 100 mg/kg, i.v., x 2) mitigated the histological changes of taurocholate-induced acute pancreatitis. Another type of acute pancreatitis was induced in mice by dl-ethionine (0.5 g/kg, p.o., x 4) and a choline-deficient diet. KSG-504 (10, 30 and 100 mg/kg) was subcutaneously administered five times every 12 hr during the experiment. KSG-504 elongated the survival of mice in a dose-dependent manner. These findings suggest that KSG-504 has potent protective and/or therapeutic effects against acute pancreatitis and that cholecystokinin may be involved in the development of
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:[Effect of KSG-504, a new CCK-A-receptor antagonist, on experimental acute pancreatitis in rats and mice]. 869 Mar 1
The role of different cytokines in the pathogenesis of L-arginine (Arg)-induced acute pancreatitis in rat, and the ability of KSG-504, a novel
cholecystokinin receptor
antagonist, to exert protection in this type of acute pancreatitis was evaluated. Male Wistar rats received 250 mg/100 g body weight of Arg intraperitoneally twice, at an interval of 1 h. Control rats received instead the same amount of glycine at the same times. Fifty mg/kg KSG-504 was injected subcutaneously 0.5 h before and 6, 18 and 36 h after the first Arg administration. Rats were examined 12, 24 and 48 h after
pancreatitis
induction. To assess the severity of inflammation, the edema was quantified, the serum amylase level was measured, and histologic examinations were performed. Serum tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) levels were determined by bioassay, using the TNF-sensitive WEHI 164 and the IL-6-dependent B9 cell lines, respectively. In Arg-induced acute pancreatitis, the amylase level was increased significantly at 12 h (48.600 +/- 3.980 U/l) and 24 h (30.800 +/- 3.813 U/l) vs. the control group (6.382 +/- 184 U/l). No significant alteration in the ratio pancreatic weight/body weight was found in the different groups. However, in Arg-induced acute pancreatitis, both the TNF-alpha (15.1 +/- 6.9 U/ml) and the IL-6 (39.6 +/- 19.2 pg/ml) levels were already elevated significantly at 12 h vs. the controls (3.1 +/- 0.8 U/ml and 15.2 +/- 3.1 pg/ml, respectively) and remained elevated at 24 and 48 h. Simultaneous KSG-504 administration did not modify the measured cytokine levels. No significant changes in plasma CCK levels were observed. In Arg-induced acute pancreatitis, histological evaluation revealed diffuse but microfocal necrobiotic alterations. No marked protective effects of KSG-504 were observed on histological sections. These results suggest that excessive doses of Arg induce severe acute pancreatitis in rat, with a simultaneous cytokine level elevation. Endogenous CCK does not seem to play an essential role in the pathogenesis of Arg-induced acute pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Cytokine level changes in L-arginine-induced acute pancreatitis in rat. 904 61
The mechanism whereby somatostatin (SS) produces beneficial effects in established
pancreatitis
induced by pancreaticobiliary duct ligation (PBDL) is still not clear. The aim of the work was to evaluate the possibility of a direct action of SS on pancreatic acinar cells from rats with acute pancreatitis. For this purpose, we studied the SS-receptor-adenylate cyclase system in pancreatic acinar membranes from both, control rats and rats with experimentally induced acute pancreatitis. On the other hand, it has been reported that cholecystokinin (CCK) diminishes the number of SS receptors in pancreatic acinar cells. Proglumide, a CCK receptor antagonist reduces the severity of acute pancreatitis in the rat. Therefore, we have also examined the effect of proglumide on the somatostatinergic system in controls and rats with acute pancreatitis. Fourteen hours after PBDL, the SS receptors, the capacity of the SS analogue SMS 201-995 to inhibit forskolin-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity and PTX-catalyzed [32P] ADP-ribosylation of the alpha1 subunits of Gi proteins could not be detected in pancreatic acinar membranes. One month after reopening the closed pancreaticobiliary duct (PBD), the pancreas showed regeneration of acinar cells, and the above-mentioned parameters were significantly lower than in the control group. Two months after reopening the closed PBD, all these parameters had returned to control values. The administration of proglumide (20 mg/kg i.p.), a
cholecystokinin receptor
antagonist, accelerated pancreatic regeneration and approached all these parameters to control values one month after reopening the closed PBD. The present study suggests that the beneficial effects of SS on established
pancreatitis
induced by PBDL may not be due to a direct action of the peptide on pancreatic acinar cells at least at 14 hours after PBDL. In addition, these findings suggest that in established
pancreatitis
the effect of proglumide on the SS receptor-adenylate cyclase system could be due to its action on pancreatic regeneration.
...
PMID:The somatostatin receptor-adenylate cyclase system in rat pancreatic acinar membranes after temporary pancreaticobiliary duct ligation. 940 49
The effects of a new benzodiazepine-derivative,
cholecystokinin receptor
antagonist, TS-941, on experimental acute pancreatitis were studied in rats. Hemorrhagic pancreatitis was induced by an infusion of a mixture of trypsin and taurocholate into the pancreatic duct. Edematous pancreatitis was induced by intraperitoneal injection of 40 microg/kg body weight of cerulein at 0 and 1 h after the start of the experiment. TS-941 (3 mg/kg) was injected subcutaneously immediately and 3 h after the induction of
pancreatitis
. In trypsin-taurocholate-induced
pancreatitis
, TS-941, with or without the synthetic trypsin inhibitor ONO-3403, had no beneficial effects on the survival rate, pancreatic wet weight, and serum pancreatic enzymes. In cerulein-induced
pancreatitis
, the treatment with TS-941 significantly reduced the increases of pancreatic wet weight and serum amylase and lipase. Plasma trypsinogen activation peptide (TAP) significantly rose 1 h after the first injection of cerulein. TS-941 inhibited the liberation of TAP in cerulein-induced
pancreatitis
. These results show that TS-941 is effective for prevention of cerulein-induced edematous
pancreatitis
. ONO-3403 has beneficial effects on trypsin-taurocholate-induced hemorrhagic
pancreatitis
, but the combination of TS-941 and ONO-3403 has no additive effect.
...
PMID:Effects of a new cholecystokinin antagonist, TS-941, on experimental acute pancreatitis in rats. 978 44
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