PMID: 9429904Jan 16, 1998Paper

Acute and chronic effects of different bile acids on indomethacin-induced intestinal inflammation

Inflammation
H ArndtK D Palitzsch

Abstract

The role of bile acids in the pathogenesis of bowel inflammation is unknown. The objective of this study was to determine whether urso- (UDC), cheno- (CDC), and taurochenodeoxycholic acid (TCDC) exert a pro- or antiinflammatory action in the acute and chronic phase of the indomethacin model of a long lasting ileitis in rats. Short-term and long-term inflammatory responses (48 h and 10 days, respectively) after two subcutaneous indomethacin (Indo) injections were elicited in rat small bowel and mesentery. To distinguish between common and model-specific effects bile acids were tested also in another model of acute inflammation induced by mesenteric superfusion with leukotriene B4(LTB4). The number of adherent and emigrated leukocytes, leukocyte rolling velocity, and venular wall shear rate were monitored in normal and inflamed postcapillary venules, and fecal pH of ileal contents which has been shown to correlate with degree of inflammation was measured, 6.5- and 2.3-fold increases in leukocyte adherence and comparable increments in leukocyte emigration were observed 48 h and ten days after indomethacin treatment, respectively. UDC, CDC, and TCDC (10 mg/kg) given daily from Indo administration until the experiment attenuated the...Continue Reading

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