Effects of two different acute and subchronic stressors on gastrointestinal transit in the rat: A radiographic analysis
Fecha
2021
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Wiley
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Background: The reaction to stress is an adaptive response necessary for survival.
When stressors are repeated, the organism adapts, although these adaptive responses
can become dysregulated and result in disease, causing gastrointestinal (GI) disorders.
Radiographic methods allow the non-invasive
study of how a given factor affects GI
transit in the same animal at different time points. These methods have never been
applied to study the consequences of stress on GI motor function and their dependency
on time and stimulus. Therefore, our aim was to characterize, using radiographic
techniques, the effect on GI transit of cold-restraint
(CR) and forced swim (FS) stress
applied acutely and subchronically in the rat.
Methods: Male Wistar rats (260–330
g) were submitted to FS or CR stress, during 1
(acute) or 4 (subchronic) consecutive days. To study GI transit, radiographic methods
were used. Radiographs were taken 0–24
h after barium intragastric administration on
the 1st or 4th day of stress, which was applied 1 h after contrast.
Results: Acute FS or CR slowed down gastric and small intestinal emptying but had
opposite effects in the caecum: CR tended to accelerate barium transit and feces
formation while FS tended to slow these parameters down. When the stimuli were
applied subchronically, GI transit was not completely normalized in most of the studied
parameters.
Conclusion and Inferences: Mild stress alters GI transit differently depending on the
nature of the stressor and its duration. Exposure to mild stressors should be considered
as contributing factors to different functional GI disorders.
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Bagues A, Lopez-Tofiño Y, Galvez-Robleño C, Abalo R. Effects of two different acute and subchronic stressors on gastrointestinal transit in the rat: A radiographic analysis. Neurogastroenterol Motil. 2021 Nov;33(11):e14232. doi: 10.1111/nmo.14232. Epub 2021 Aug 11. PMID: 34378822.
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