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  Vol. 76 No. 3, March 1958 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Studies on the Site and Mechanism of Gastrin Release

CLARENCE M. BAUGH, M.D.; JOSE L. BRAVO, M.D.; JAIME BARCENA, M.D.; LESTER R. DRAGSTEDT, M.D., Ph.D.

AMA Arch Surg. 1958;76(3):441-446.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

Previous studies from this laboratory, as well as elsewhere, have indicated that the antrum of the stomach is the chief or sole source of the gastric-secretion-stimulating hormone, gastrin. Complete excision of the gastric antrum in dogs practically abolishes the secretion of gastric juice from a vagusdenervated Heidenhain pouch.1 Exclusion of the antrum from the alimentary tract produces a similar reduction in secretion from the Heidenhain pouch, and this is restored if the antrum is replaced in its normal position or transplanted to the duodenum as a diverticulus. Transplantation of the antrum to the colon produces a marked hypersecretion of gastric juice from the Heidenhain pouch. On the other hand, transplantation of similar pouches fashioned from the corpus or fundus of the stomach into the duodenum or colon produces no stimulation of secretion.2 If the antrum is converted into a vagus-denervated isolated pouch in an animal also provided with . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

Chicago

From the Department of Surgery of The University of Chicago.


Footnotes

Submitted for publication Sept. 26, 1957.

This work has been aided by grants from the Otho S. A. Sprague Memorial Institute and from the Division of Research Grants and Fellowships of the National Institutes of Health, U. S. Public Health Service.



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