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Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol 281: G459-G466, 2001;
0193-1857/01 $5.00
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Vol. 281, Issue 2, G459-G466, August 2001

Viscoelastic properties of the human colon

Adil E. Bharucha1, Rolf D. Hubmayr2, Irene J. Ferber1, and Alan R. Zinsmeister3

1 Gastroenterology Research Unit and Enteric Neurosciences Program, 2 Thoracic Diseases Research Unit, and 3 Section of Biostatistics, Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minnesota 55905

Our objectives were to characterize colonic viscoelastic properties of the human descending colon by assessing pressure-volume (P-V) relationships during barostatic balloon distension. In 16 healthy subjects, a balloon was inflated to 44 mmHg and then deflated to 0 mmHg in 4-mmHg steps at 10, 30, and 60 ml/min, allowing volume fluctuations to stabilize at each pressure increment. Thereafter, these "quasi-static" P-V curves were compared with "dynamic" distensions to 300 ml, at 1 and 10 ml/s, before and after intravenous atropine in another five subjects. During quasi-static curves, balloon volume stabilized at each pressure increment. Quasi-static P-V curves were reproducible within individuals and approximated to a power exponential function and revealed hysteresis, indicative of viscoelasticity. Body mass index influenced quasi-static P-V curves during inflation but not during deflation. The colon was less compliant during dynamic distensions at 10 ml/s than during quasi-static distensions. Atropine increased quasi-static compliance and attenuated differences between quasi-static and rapid distensions. We conclude that colonic viscoelastic properties can be assessed by quasi-static P-V curves. Rapid colonic distension activated neural reflexes, thereby reducing colonic compliance compared with quasi-static distensions.

pressure-volume relationships; compliance; hysteresis; atropine; body mass index


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