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  • Title: Conditioned emotional response in rats enhances colonic motility through the central release of corticotropin-releasing factor.
    Author: Gue M, Junien JL, Bueno L.
    Journal: Gastroenterology; 1991 Apr; 100(4):964-70. PubMed ID: 2001832.
    Abstract:
    The effect of a mental stress model corresponding to conditioned fear on cecocolonic motility was evaluated electromyographically in intact and hypophysectomized rats equipped with electrodes implanted in the cecum and proximal colon over a long period and a small polyethylene catheter inserted into the right lateral ventricle of the brain. Intact fasted and fed rats showed an increase of 82.3% and 67.2%, respectively, in colonic spike-burst frequency when placed for 30 minutes in a box in which they had previously received electrical shocks in their feet. Intracerebroventricular administration of corticotropin-releasing factor (0.5 micrograms/kg) mimicked the effects of mental stress and increased cecocolonic spike-burst frequency by 75.8%. The specific corticotropin-releasing factor receptor antagonist alpha-helical CRF9-41 given intracerebroventricularly (5 micrograms/kg) prevented both the effects of mental stress and corticotropin-releasing factor (0.5 micrograms/kg intracerebroventricularly) on colonic spike-burst frequency. In contrast, diazepam (0.5 mg/kg IM) suppressed colonic hypermotility induced by mental stress but not that resulting from intracerebroventricular injection of corticotropin-releasing factor (0.5 micrograms/kg). Increased colonic spike-burst frequency induced either by stress or by central administration of corticotropin-releasing factor was not prevented by hypophysectomy. It was concluded that mental stress increases the frequency of cecocolonic spike-burst activity and that these effects are related to the central release of corticotropin-releasing factor because they are blocked by a corticotropin-releasing factor antagonist and reproduced by intracerebroventricular administration of corticotropin-releasing factor. Moreover, mental stress-induced colonic motor alterations are mediated by the autonomic nervous system rather than by the hypothalamopituitary axis because they are not abolished by hypophysectomy.
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