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Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol 275: G904-G910, 1998;
0193-1857/98 $5.00
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Vol. 275, Issue 5, G904-G910, November 1998

Scintigraphic measurement of regional gastrointestinal transit in the dog

Yuji Iwanaga, Jipu Wen, Mikael S. Thollander, Louis J. Kost, George M. Thomforde, Richard G. Allen, and Sidney F. Phillips

Division of Gastroenterology, Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minnesota 55905

Scintigraphic techniques can measure sequentially gastric emptying, small bowel transit, and colonic transit in humans, and comparable methods for experimental studies in animals would be useful. We developed such a method in dogs and examined the effects of prokinetic drugs on regional transit. Two isotopes were given to fasting dogs. Polystyrene pellets labeled with 99mTc were mixed in a can of dog food and 111In- labeled pellets were given in a gelatin capsule coated with a pH-sensitive polymer, designed to dissolve in the distal bowel. Gamma camera images were obtained for up to 24 h. Prokinetic drugs were given by intravenous injection. Duplicate baseline studies showed good agreement in seven dogs. In a second group (n = 4), intra- and interanimal variabilities were established. Two novel prokinetic drugs (AU-116 and AU-130) accelerated small bowel and colonic transit. A simple noninvasive method for measuring whole gut transit in dogs was developed and validated. Two new prokinetics accelerated small bowel and colonic transit.

canine gut transit; colonic prokinetics; scintigraphy


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