ROLE OF CIRCULATING CHOLECYSTOKININ IN CONTROL OF FAT-INDUCED INHIBITION OF FOOD-INTAKE IN HUMANS

被引:69
作者
DREWE, J
GADIENT, A
ROVATI, LC
BEGLINGER, C
机构
[1] UNIV HOSP BASEL,DEPT RES,DIV GASTROENTEROL,CH-4031 BASEL,SWITZERLAND
[2] ROTTA RES LAB SPA,MONZA,ITALY
[3] UNIV HOSP BASEL,DEPT ANAESTHESIOL,CH-4031 BASEL,SWITZERLAND
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0016-5085(92)91726-K
中图分类号
R57 [消化系及腹部疾病];
学科分类号
摘要
Cholecystokinin (CCK) has been proposed to serve as a satiety signal in animals and humans. To further explore the role of CCK in humans, the effect on satiety and eating behavior of a specific CCK-receptor antagonist, loxiglumide, that preferentially inhibits peripheral (CCK-A) receptors was investigated. In a randomized, blind, four-period latin square design, 10 subjects received intravenous saline (placebo) or loxiglumide (10 mg/kg per hour) with concomitant intrajejunal perfusions of isotonic saline or fat (containing 50% corn oil and 3% albumin). Food intake and plasma CCK concentrations were assessed, and subjects scored their feelings of hunger and fullness in paired experiments. In placebo-treated subjects, the duration of the meal was shorter during fat perfusion (30 ± 2 minutes vs. 35 ± 2 minutes; P < 0.01; mean ± SEM). The amount of food intake was reduced (361 ± 31 g vs, 454 ± 35 g; P < 0.05), and fluid ingestion was inhibited (490 ± 31 mL vs. 625 ± 38 mL; P < 0.01). Loxiglumide did not affect any parameter and did not change the pattern of responses. In loxiglumide-treated subjects there was a 4-5-fold elevation in plasma CCK levels. These results confirm that jejunal infusion of lipid reduces the size of the meal and stimulates early satiety. The data imply that these effects are not mediated through peripheral endogenous CCK under these conditions. © 1992.
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页码:1654 / 1659
页数:6
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