Journal of Southern Medical University ›› 2014, Vol. 34 ›› Issue (10): 1546-.
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Abstract: Objective To observe the effect of gut protease activity on visceral hypersensitivity in rats with acute restraint stress.Methods Sprague-Dawley rats were given 30, 100 or 300 mg/kg camostat mesilate (CM), a protease inhibitor, or salineintragastrically 30 min before acute restraint stress induced by wrapping the fore shoulders, upper forelimbs and thoracictrunk for 2 h. Visceral perception of the rats was quantified as the visceral motor response with an electromyography, and therectal mucosa and feces protease activity and spinal c-fos expression were measured. Results CM dose-dependently reducedvisceral sensitization elicited by rectal distension, but these doses did not completely inhibit stress-induced visceralsensitization. In normal rats, c-fos expression was found mainly in the superal spinal cord dorsal horn, and after theadministration the CM, c-fos-positive cells decreased significantly in all dose groups (P<0.05). In 30 mg/kg CM group, fecal andrectal mucosal protease activity significantly decreased as compared with that in the stress group (P<0.05), and as CM doseincreased to 100 and 300 mg/kg, the protease activity decreased even further (P<0.01). Conclusion The gut protease is involvedin acute stress-induced visceral hypersensitivity, and CM can lower the visceral sensitivity and spinal c-fos expression in rats.
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https://www.j-smu.com/EN/Y2014/V34/I10/1546