Effect of prolonged infusion of maximal and supramaximal doses of pancreozymin on pancreatic enzyme secretion in the rat-exhaustion or inhibition?

Abstract
Secretion of trypsin, chymotrypsin, lipase and amylase was measured in male rats under urethane anaesthesia using a method of continuous perfusion of the duodenum. Prolonged infusion of cholecystokinin-pancreozymin (CCK-PZ) over a period lasting 200–360 min was administered either alone or together with a submaximal dose of secretin (1 unit/100 g · 10 min). Infusion of CCK-PZ was carried out using maximal doses (1–1.5 unit/100 g · 10 min) with and without secretin. Supramaximal doses of CCK-PZ (2 and 4 units/100 g · 10 min) were used only in combination with secretin. In all experiments secretion of enzymes showed a triphasic pattern including an initial peak followed by a plateau secretion after 10–20 min (phase 1), a decreasing second phase and finally base-line secretion (phase 3), thus demonstrating exhaustion of enzyme output from the gland with time. With increasing and supramaximal dose of CCK-PZ the cumulative output of enzymes from start to baseline secretion decreased progressively. Under the same conditions the levels of peak and plateau secretion were lower, the duration of plateau secretion was longer and the decreasing phase of secretion was shortened. These features indicate inhibition of secretion with increasing supramaximal doses of CCK-PZ infusion. Whereas the proteolytic enzymes and lipase reacted in a parallel way always amylase secretion was sustained on a higher level, implicating an alternative pathway for secretion.