Impaired gallbladder motility is an established factor stone disease may initially represent a metabolic liver in cholesterol gallstone formation. We assessed whether disorder but can be modulated by the enterohepatic altered small intestinal smooth muscle contractility with circulation of bile salt
Sustained gallbladder stasis promotes cholesterol gallstone formation in the ground squirrel
β Scribed by Q Xu; M Mantle; J G Pauletzki; E A Shaffer
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 237 KB
- Volume
- 26
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0270-9139
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β¦ Synopsis
Although gallbladder stasis exists in most patients with cholesterol gallstones, it is unknown whether stasis is a causative factor of gallstone disease or merely a consequence of it. We studied the impact of sustained gallbladder stasis induced by a cholecystokinin (CCK)-A receptor antagonist (MK-329) on gallstone formation in ground squirrels fed either a trace or a high-cholesterol diet. MK-329 markedly inhibited gallbladder contraction in vitro in response to CCK (at EC100, control: 3.6 +/- 0.5 vs. MK-329: 1.1 +/- 0.3 g; P < .05) and increased gallbladder fasting volume in vivo (control: 462 +/- 66 vs. MK-329: 1,004 +/- 121 microL; P < .05). Whereas the high-cholesterol diet alone (1%-cholesterol diet + placebo) increased the cholesterol saturation index (CSI) in control animals (trace-cholesterol diet + placebo), MK-329 significantly (P < .05) decreased the CSI in both hepatic and gallbladder bile in animals on the trace-(trace-cholesterol diet + MK-329) as well as on the high-cholesterol diets (1%-cholesterol diet + MK-329). The mucin content of the mucus layer on the epithelial surface of the gallbladder wall more than doubled (P < .05) with the high-cholesterol diet; adding MK-329 to the latter group produced a further 82% increase (P < .05). The cholesterol diet + MK-329 group had the highest (100%) incidence of cholesterol crystals that were evident in fresh gallbladder bile, coincident with a shortened nucleation time (2.5 +/- 0.6 days; P < .05 vs. the cholesterol diet + placebo group, 5.8 +/- 1.0 days or the other 2 groups, >21 days). Bile from animals on the trace-cholesterol diet, whether or not receiving MK-329, lacked crystals in bile and exhibited a normal nucleation time (>21 days). Thus, stasis per se may lower the CSI, but its detrimental effect on the gallbladder predominates locally, and so accelerates cholesterol crystal formation in this model.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Gallbladder bile contains nucleation-promoting activity that binds to concanavalin A. The activity was found in gallbladder bile from cholesterol gallstone patients but also in gallbladder bile from patients without stones and patients with pigment stones. Bile from patients with multiple cholestero