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Title: Effect of food deprivation on rat gastric somatostatin and gastrin release. Author: Koop H, Schwab E, Arnold R, Creutzfeldt W. Journal: Gastroenterology; 1982 May; 82(5 Pt 1):871-6. PubMed ID: 6120879. Abstract: The influence of food deprivation on the release of somatostatin and gastrin from the rat stomach was investigated using an isolated, vascularly perfused rat stomach preparation. Basal and acetylcholine-stimulated gastrin release were significantly lower after a 3 day starvation, whereas the inhibitory effect of acetylcholine and the stimulatory effect of glucagon on somatostatin secretion were not influenced by fasting. In dose-response studies, isoproterenol dose-dependently stimulated somatostatin secretion. The increases were similar in both groups fasted for 12 and 72 h. Gastrin release remained at basal levels. Bombesin dose-dependently increased gastrin secretion; this stimulatory effect on the G cell was significantly reduced after a 72-h starvation. Somatostatin secretion was only weakly stimulated by high concentration of bombesin revealing no effect of fasting. Somatostatin content of the nonperfused stomach declined from 57 +/- 4 pmol/stomach in fed controls to 36 +/- 3 pmol/stomach after a 72-h fast. Antral gastrin concentration decreased by 42% in a 3-day fasting period. It is concluded that rat gastric somatostatin release in vitro is--in contrast to gastrin--not altered by food deprivation while the somatostatin content in gastric tissue declined during fasting.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]