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Gallbladder and Small Intestinal Regulation of Biliary Lipid Secretion during Intraduodenal Infusion of Standard Stimuli
Gregory T. Everson, … , Radene Showalter, Fred Kern Jr.
Gregory T. Everson, … , Radene Showalter, Fred Kern Jr.
Published March 1, 1983
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 1983;71(3):596-603. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI110805.
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Research Article

Gallbladder and Small Intestinal Regulation of Biliary Lipid Secretion during Intraduodenal Infusion of Standard Stimuli

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Abstract

The gallbladder and small intestine are reservoirs for the bile acid pool during its enterohepatic circulation and, as such, may regulate biliary secretion of bile acid. During studies of biliary bile acid secretion, a stimulus to gallbladder contraction is continuously infused into the duodenum. Under these conditions, it is assumed that the gallbladder is tonically contracted and that the rate of bile acid secretion into the duodenum equals the hepatic bile acid secretion rate. However, secretion rates vary by as much as 100%, depending upon which of two standard stimuli is used. Therefore, we studied the role of gallbladder emptying and small intestinal transit in determining biliary lipid secretion rate and composition during infusion of these stimuli in five healthy subjects. Each subject was studied with a liquid formula containing 40% of calories as fat, and with an amino acid solution for 10 h. Bile acid, phospholipid, cholesterol, and markers were measured in duodenal bile and hourly secretion rates were calculated by marker dilution technique. Real-time gallbladder sonographs and serum pancreatic polypeptide levels were obtained every 30 min. Small bowel transit time was estimated levels were obtained every 30 min. Small bowel transit time was estimated by the breath hydrogen response after giving lactulose intraduodenally.

Authors

Gregory T. Everson, Michael J. Lawson, Carol McKinley, Radene Showalter, Fred Kern Jr.

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