1. Effect of chronic alcohol administration on the exocrine pancreas after jejunoileal bypass in the rat.
- Author
-
Stock-Damge C, Raul F, Haegel P, Aprahamian M, Noriega R, and Grenier JF
- Subjects
- Amylases analysis, Animals, Organ Size, Pancreas analysis, Pancreas pathology, Pancreas ultrastructure, Pancreatic Hormones metabolism, Postoperative Complications, Proteins analysis, Rats, Ethanol administration & dosage, Ileum surgery, Jejunum surgery, Pancreas drug effects
- Abstract
To determine whether intestinal bypass operation and alcohol administration exerted a synergistic effect on pancreatic enzyme composition and morphology, adult rats were submitted either to a sham-operation or to a 90 per cent jejunoileal bypass. Two weeks after the operation, the rats received a 15 per cent solution of ethanol in drinking fluid during a period of four weeks while controls received water. In sham-operated animals, alcohol had no effect on pancreatic weight or its total content in protein and amylase. The general structural and ultrastructural aspect remained unchanged except for the presence of a few mixed acinar-islet cells. Bypass operation alone induced a significant decrease in amylase content while the population of zymogen granules was reduced. Parallely, lipid droplets deposited within acinar cells. Alcohol administered in bypassed animals exerted a synergistic effect on fat accumulation in pancreatic acinar cells but had no effect on other biochemical and morphological parameters.
- Published
- 1983