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Importance of the stomach in maintaining calcium homeostatis in the rat

Axelson, Jan LU ; Persson, Per ; Gagnemo Persson, Rebecca LU orcid and Håkanson, Rolf LU (1991) In Gut 32(11). p.1298-1302
Abstract
The stomach helps to maintain calcium homoeostasis by making dietary calcium accessible for uptake in the intestines, although the effect of the stomach on calcium homoeostasis is poorly understood. We examined the effect on blood calcium of gastric surgery in the rat. Within three weeks gastrectomy and fundectomy (excision of the acid producing part of the stomach) induced a slight lowering of the blood calcium concentration. When parathyroidectomy was combined with either gastrectomy or fundectomy the blood calcium concentrations promptly dropped to values lower than after parathyroidectomy alone. The mortality was close to 100% during the first three weeks after combined parathyroidectomy and gastric surgery. It was nil in rats... (More)
The stomach helps to maintain calcium homoeostasis by making dietary calcium accessible for uptake in the intestines, although the effect of the stomach on calcium homoeostasis is poorly understood. We examined the effect on blood calcium of gastric surgery in the rat. Within three weeks gastrectomy and fundectomy (excision of the acid producing part of the stomach) induced a slight lowering of the blood calcium concentration. When parathyroidectomy was combined with either gastrectomy or fundectomy the blood calcium concentrations promptly dropped to values lower than after parathyroidectomy alone. The mortality was close to 100% during the first three weeks after combined parathyroidectomy and gastric surgery. It was nil in rats subjected to parathyroidectomy alone. Gastrectomised rats absorbed Ca2+ better than unoperated control rats, possibly reflecting the fact that the serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D concentration was raised. Gastrectomised rats had a food intake that was about 70% of that in intact rats, and the amount of dietary calcium absorbed (net absorption per kg body weight) by the gastrectomised rats was approximately 65% of that in intact control rats. We conclude that the acid producing part of the stomach is important for calcium homoeostasis, since its removal induced lethal hypocalcaemia in parathyroidectomised rats. One possible explanation for the hypocalcaemia induced by gastrectomy is a progressive calcium deficit. In addition, the loss of calciotrophic hormones originating in the stomach may contribute. (Less)
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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Gut
volume
32
issue
11
pages
5 pages
publisher
BMJ Publishing Group
external identifiers
  • scopus:0025950678
ISSN
1468-3288
DOI
10.1136/gut.32.11.1298
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
49bad61b-45e1-440f-bec4-1e47e37c2998
date added to LUP
2016-08-19 13:16:04
date last changed
2021-01-03 06:57:42
@article{49bad61b-45e1-440f-bec4-1e47e37c2998,
  abstract     = {{The stomach helps to maintain calcium homoeostasis by making dietary calcium accessible for uptake in the intestines, although the effect of the stomach on calcium homoeostasis is poorly understood. We examined the effect on blood calcium of gastric surgery in the rat. Within three weeks gastrectomy and fundectomy (excision of the acid producing part of the stomach) induced a slight lowering of the blood calcium concentration. When parathyroidectomy was combined with either gastrectomy or fundectomy the blood calcium concentrations promptly dropped to values lower than after parathyroidectomy alone. The mortality was close to 100% during the first three weeks after combined parathyroidectomy and gastric surgery. It was nil in rats subjected to parathyroidectomy alone. Gastrectomised rats absorbed Ca2+ better than unoperated control rats, possibly reflecting the fact that the serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D concentration was raised. Gastrectomised rats had a food intake that was about 70% of that in intact rats, and the amount of dietary calcium absorbed (net absorption per kg body weight) by the gastrectomised rats was approximately 65% of that in intact control rats. We conclude that the acid producing part of the stomach is important for calcium homoeostasis, since its removal induced lethal hypocalcaemia in parathyroidectomised rats. One possible explanation for the hypocalcaemia induced by gastrectomy is a progressive calcium deficit. In addition, the loss of calciotrophic hormones originating in the stomach may contribute.}},
  author       = {{Axelson, Jan and Persson, Per and Gagnemo Persson, Rebecca and Håkanson, Rolf}},
  issn         = {{1468-3288}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{11}},
  pages        = {{1298--1302}},
  publisher    = {{BMJ Publishing Group}},
  series       = {{Gut}},
  title        = {{Importance of the stomach in maintaining calcium homeostatis in the rat}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/gut.32.11.1298}},
  doi          = {{10.1136/gut.32.11.1298}},
  volume       = {{32}},
  year         = {{1991}},
}