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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (
mast cell
)
14,925
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This experimental study demonstrates by means of electromagnetic flow measurements that hypovolaemic shock results in a significant decrease in gastric flow. 14 mongrel dogs were subjected to haemorrhagic shock for 3 or 4 hours. Significant histological changes are seen in the gastric mucosa as a result of the haemodynamic changes, especially when the duration of shock was 4 hours. All stages of
stress ulcer
from the superficial erosion to deep ulcers were documented. The possibility that the
mast cell
plays a pathogenetic role as mediator in the origination of a
stress ulcer
is considered.
...
PMID:[Stress ulcer-an experimental study (author's transl)]. 91 54
With the aim of applying
mast cell
-stabilizing agents as antiulcer agents, N-(1H-tetrazol-5-yl)-2-anilino-5-pyrimidinecarboxamides were synthesized, and initially evaluated pharmacologically for activity in the rat passive cutaneous anaphylaxis test by oral administration. The most active compound 6 was proved to inhibit potently the release of histamine from passively sensitized rat peritoneal mast cells in vitro. When compared with other
mast cell
-stabilizing agents and an antiulcer agent, compound 6 was found to show excellent gastric mucosal protection and gastric antisecretion activities. Furthermore, compound 6 revealed good activity against acidified aspirin ulcer in rats and water-immersion
stress ulcer
in rats.
...
PMID:Studies on antiulcer agents. II. Antiulcer properties of N-(1H-tetrazol-5-yl)-2-anilino-5-pyrimidinecarboxamides inhibiting release of histamine from passively sensitized rat peritoneal mast cells. 754 24
Mini-osmotic pumps containing solutions of either 0.9% NaCl (infused at the rate of 0.5 microliter/h) or nicotine (infused in doses of 0.224, 1.03 or 1.88 mg/kg per day) were implanted s.c. into rats 12 days before experimentation. The alkaloid increased solid food consumption, but fluid intake and average weight gain were similar among the animals given saline or nicotine. Chronic nicotine treatment dose dependently intensified cold (4 degrees C)-restraint stress-induced ulceration and increased
mast cell
degranulation. Oral administration of 40% ethanol to nicotine-treated animals also produced greater mucosal damage;
mast cell
degranulation by ethanol was significantly worsened after alkaloid treatment. These findings show that the
stress ulcer
-intensifying action of the alkaloid is mainly through a systemic mechanism. In the case of ethanol-evoked mucosal damage, in addition to a topical effect, stimulation of the stomach wall ganglia is likely to participate in the exaggerated post-vagal ulcerogenic responses as seen in stress.
...
PMID:Chronic parenterally administered nicotine and stress- or ethanol-induced gastric mucosal damage in rats. 772 Jul 88
Chronic nicotine treatment worsens stomach mucosal damage by cold (4 degrees C) and restraint (stress): it dose- and time-dependently intensifies stress-evoked gastric glandular ulceration,
mast cell
degranulation and motility. Nicotine 50 micrograms/ml drinking water, given ad libitum to female Sprague-Dawley rats for 10 days, increases the sensitivity of the isolated stomach strip to acetylcholine-induced contractions; atropine abolishes this action. The isolated anococcygeus muscle from nicotine-treated male rats shows increased sensitivity to noradrenaline-induced contractions, but not to those by acetylcholine. Hexamethonium or atropine pretreatment antagonises stress-induced gastric effects in nicotine-drinking rats. Muscarinic M1- and M2-, but not M3-, receptor block (by pirenzepine, AF-DX 116BS and HHSiD, respectively) inhibits
stress ulcer
formation in female rats. Although tobacco smoking has been reported to increase free radical formation, mucosal xanthine oxidase which initiates free radical formation is uninfluenced by nicotine; antagonising this enzyme (by allopurinol) or hydroxyl free radical scavenging (by dimethylsulfoxide) does not lessen the effect of nicotine on stress-evoked ulceration. The findings suggest that chronic nicotine treatment produces partial ganglionic blockade of the vagal nerve which leads to muscarinic receptor supersensitivity. This phenomenon contributes significantly to the ulcer-worsening mechanism; muscarinic M1- and M2-receptors appear to be involved. The gastric ulcer-aggravating effect of nicotine in stressed rats appears not to be due to increased free radical formation.
...
PMID:Nicotine and gastric ulcers in stress. 829 87
The pathogenesis of cold-restraint
stress ulcer
involves various factors and is not completely understood. Mast cell degranulation, increased gastric muscular contractility, diminished mucosal blood flow, release of several biogenic amines, activated polymorphonuclear leukocytes, and lipid peroxidation which results from toxic oxygen molecules were suggested to be related to the production of gastric damage by cold-restraint stress. Recent evidence strongly indicates that VIP has a modulatory effect on tissue injury. Sprague-Dawley rats were used in two series of experiments. One set of rats was exposed to cold-restraint stress with some of the rats pretreated with VIP. The second set of rats was exposed to cold-restraint stress and then was administered VIP for different durations. Cold-restraint stress induced gastric lesions and
mast cell
degranulation and also increased lipid peroxidation in gastric tissue. VIP prevented stress-induced ulcers and
mast cell
degranulation and protected gastric tissue from lipid peroxidation. When VIP was used after induction of
stress ulcer
it was therapeutically beneficial. Thanks to its antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activity, VIP can be valuable in the prevention of gastric mucosal damage induced by cold-restraint stress.
...
PMID:The protective effect of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) on stress-induced gastric ulceration in rats. 992 25
Acute copper deficiency produces disturbances in the microcirculation and structure of extracellular matrix proteins, causes an increase in
mast cell
population, which is followed by an increased content of their degranulation products, produces disturbances in histamine metabolism and decreases the activity of some antioxidant enzymes. These pathogenic mechanisms are similar to the processes underlying
stress ulcer
formation. The histamine H2-receptor antagonist ranitidine, a drug with the highest application for
stress ulcer
prophylaxis, has the ability to helate the copper ion and to influence its tissue distribution and the processes of generation and neutralization of reactive oxygen species (ROS). In order to determine the interrelation between the disturbances of copper homeostasis, stress ulcers and ranitidine, we investigated the impact of a short-term diet with powdered milk in combination with cold-restraint stress with or without ranitidine on the severity of acute gastric mucosal lesions, copper content, lipid peroxidation and the activity of superoxide dismutase and catalase in the stomachs of rats.
...
PMID:Influence of acute copper deficiency, cold-restraint stress and the H2 blocker ranitidine on the severity of acute gastric mucosal lesions and lipid peroxidation in rats. 1177 55