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Mallappa Anitha, Chetan Gondha, Roy Sutliff, Alexander Parsadanian, Simon Mwangi, Shanthi V. Sitaraman, Shanthi Srinivasan
Published in Volume 116, Issue 2
J Clin Invest. 2006; 116(2):344–356 doi:10.1172/JCI26295
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Figure 11

Diabetes is associated with impaired colonic relaxation in response to inhibitory neuronal stimulation, and these changes are reversed in Tg-DM mice. EFS-induced relaxation of longitudinal muscle strips was assessed as described in Methods. Percentage relaxation was calculated by determining the difference between the maximal force generated at baseline and the minimum force following electrical stimulation and expressing this as a percentage of the force generated at baseline. (A) Transmural EFS–induced relaxation (100 V, 20 Hz, 5 milliseconds, 60 seconds) of the proximal colon was assessed in WT-C, WT-DM, Tg-C, and Tg-DM mice. n = 3 animals in each group. (B) Representative tracing of the recording of EFS-induced relaxation. The y axis represents force in mN, and the x axis represents time. The arrows represent when the electrical stimulation was turned on and off. *P < 0.05 versus all other groups.