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Colonic motor responses in the pony: relevance of colonic stimulation by opiate antagonists
Authors:T Roger  T Bardon  Y Ruckebusch
Abstract:The electrical and mechanical activity of the digestive tract and its response to the administration of opiate agonists and antagonists was assessed from electrodes and strain gauges chronically implanted on the jejunum and the cecocolonic segments in 3 ponies given a diet of hay and concentrates. Before the drugs were given, 10 to 17 migrating myoelectric complexes/day were recorded on the small intestine, and a rhythmic motor activity (base line) was observed on the proximal portion of the colon at the rate of 3.5 to 6.6/hour. Propagated contractions from the proximal to the distal portion of the colon occurred at the rate of 1.5 to 2.3/hour. Each pony was used as its own control and was given morphine (0.5 or 1 mg/kg of body weight, IV) or fentanyl (0.01 or 0.05 mg, IV) at weekly intervals. After an early phase of inhibition of the overall activity that lasted from 0.5 to 3 hours, depending on the dose, the resting muscle tone of the colonic activity was increased for a dose-dependent period. Propagated contractions only reappeared at the end of this 2nd phase. The opiate antagonist naloxone (0.5 mg/kg, IV) elicited a marked propulsive activity on the left replicated colonic segment, characterized by an increase in the number of propagated contractions. The N-methyl-quaternary analog of naloxone (methylnaloxone, which presumably entails selective action at opiate receptors outside the CNS) was also effective, indicating peripheral effects at the dosage level used (0.5 mg/kg, IV). Seemingly, an inhibitory opioid system exists in the control of colonic motor function in ponies and the possible usefulness of opiate antagonists to relieve hypomotility resulting in colonic impaction and constipation.
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