Effects of turpentine-induced inflammation on the hypoxic stimulation of intestinal Fe3+ absorption in mice.

KB Raja, P Duane, TJ Peters - International journal of experimental …, 1990 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
KB Raja, P Duane, TJ Peters
International journal of experimental pathology, 1990ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Chronic subcutaneous turpentine administration (weekly for 6 weeks) induced a mild
normocytic anaemia in mice. In-vitro and in-vivo intestinal Fe3+ absorption parameters were,
however, not significantly altered from values in saline-treated or untreated mice. Normal
mice, when exposed to 3 days hypoxia demonstrated a 2-3-fold increase in iron absorption
in vivo, mainly due to changes in the amount of iron transferred from the mucosa to the
plasma and thence to the carcass. A 2-3-fold increase in Vmax was also observed in in-vitro …
Abstract
Chronic subcutaneous turpentine administration (weekly for 6 weeks) induced a mild normocytic anaemia in mice. In-vitro and in-vivo intestinal Fe3+ absorption parameters were, however, not significantly altered from values in saline-treated or untreated mice. Normal mice, when exposed to 3 days hypoxia demonstrated a 2-3-fold increase in iron absorption in vivo, mainly due to changes in the amount of iron transferred from the mucosa to the plasma and thence to the carcass. A 2-3-fold increase in Vmax was also observed in in-vitro uptake experiments using isolated duodenal fragments. In contrast, turpentine-treated animals, though demonstrating an enhanced in-vitro maximal uptake capacity, failed to elicit an adaptive response in vivo following hypoxic exposure. These findings suggest that a circulating (humoral) factor may be responsible for the inhibition in absorption in vivo in this turpentine-induced inflammatory model.
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov