These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Exocrine effects of the CCK antagonist L-364,718 in canine pancreatic autografts.
    Author: Garvin PJ, Niehoff ML, Burton FR, Dysarz FA, Meadow R, Solomon H.
    Journal: J Surg Res; 1996 Feb 15; 61(1):256-9. PubMed ID: 8769975.
    Abstract:
    This study evaluated the effect of the cholecystokinin antagonist L-364,718 on exocrine secretion in canine pancreatic autografts with pancreaticocystostomies. Urinary (autograft) amylase (U/min) and bicarbonate (mmole/min) secretion, over a 6 hr interval, were determined in the basal state (Group A), after a bolus injection of 20 nmoles/kg of L-364,718 (Group B), during a continuous cholecystokinin octapeptide (OP-CCK) infusion at 125 ng/kg/hr either alone (Group C), with a bolus injection of 20 nmoles/kg (Group D), or 30 nmoles/kg (Group E), of L-364,718 1 hr before initiating OP-CCK, or 20 nmoles/kg of L-364,718 1 hr after initiating OP-CCK (Group F). L-364,718 had no effect on basal or OP-CCK-stimulated secretion of bicarbonate. Basal amylase secretion was decreased 1 hr after L-364,718 and remained significantly lower than controls throughout the study interval. When compared to Group C (280.3 +/- 48.6), OP-CCK-stimulated amylase secretion was significantly lower for the first hour after L-364,718 in both Group D (157 +/- 46.7) and Group E (31.9 +/- 11.6). In Group E, 2, 3, and 4 hr post-L-364,718 amylase releases were 60.2 +/- 19.7, 77.7 +/- 25.1, and 87.2 +/- 28.3 compared to 335.5 +/- 85.9, 291.0 +/- 21.8, and 289.9 +/- 45.7 in Group C indicating a sustained significant inhibition of stimulated autograft amylase secretion with the higher L-364,718 dosage. In Group F, no significant change in amylase secretion was demonstrated, indicating that L-364,718 must be administered prior to CCK stimulation to be effective. These studies demonstrate that L-364,718 has a dose dependent, inhibitory effect on basal, and OP-CCK-stimulated amylase secretion in a denervated autograft model. The therapeutic potential of L-364,718 and other CCK receptor antagonists in pancreatic transplantation warrants further study.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]