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Use of Inert Gases and Carbon Monoxide to Study the Possible Influence of Countercurrent Exchange on Passive Absorption from the Small Bowel

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TLDR
It is concluded that countercurrent exchange does not influence passive absorption of highly diffusible substances from the small intestine of the rabbit.
Abstract
The purpose of the present study was to quantitate the influence of countercurrent exchange on passive absorption of highly diffusible substances from the small intestine of the rabbit. The absorption of carbon monoxide, which is tightly bound to hemoglobin and therefore cannot exchange, was compared to the absorption of four unbound gases (H2, He, CH4, and 133Xe), which should exchange freely. The degree to which the observed absorption of the unbound gases falls below that predicted from CO absorption should provide a quantitative measure of countercurrent exchange. CO uptake at high luminal Pco is flow-limited and, assuming that villus and central hemoglobin concentrations are equal, the flow that equilibrates with CO (Fco) was calculated to equal 7.24 ml/min/100 g. The observed absorption rate of the unbound gases was from two to four times greater than would have been predicted had their entire uptake been accounted for by equilibration with Fco. This is the opposite of what would occur if countercurrent exchange retarded absorption of the unbound gases. The unbound gases have both flow- and diffusion-limited components, and Fco should account for only the fraction of absorption that is flow limited. A simple model of perfusion and diffusion made it possible to calculate the fraction of the total uptake of unbound gases that was flow limited. This fraction of the total observed absorption rate was still about 1.8 times greater than predicted by CO absorption. A possible explanation for this discrepancy is that plasma skimming reduces the hemoglobin of villus blood to about 60% of that of central blood. Thus, Fco is actually about 1.7 times greater than initially calculated, and with this correction, there is close agreement between the predicted and observed rates of absorption of each of the unbound gases. We conclude that countercurrent exchange does not influence passive absorption under the conditions of this study.

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OtherDOI

Carbon Monoxide Toxicity

TL;DR: The sections in this article are: Carbon Monoxide Exchanges Between Lung and Body Stores and Processes That Determine HbCO and Body CO Stores, Structure and Reactivity of CO, and Effects of CO Binding to Hb on Oxygenation in Peripheral Tissues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Countercurrent Mechanisms in the Mammalian Gastrointestinal Tract

Mats Jodal, +1 more
- 01 Jul 1986 - 
TL;DR: The experimental evidence for the existence of the small intestine countercurrent exchanger is more extensive than for the rumen, and the function of the mammalian intestine is more pertinent to human disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rate-limiting barriers to intestinal drug absorption: A review

TL;DR: The structure and permeability properties of the potential barriers are considered, along with the roles of the paracellular pathway and countercurrent exchange in the villus circulation.
OtherDOI

Microcirculation of the intestinal mucosa

TL;DR: The sections in this article are: Intrinsic Regulation of Blood Flow and Oxygenation, Vascular Capacitance, and Effects of Experimental Conditions on the Intestinal Circulation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Extravascular shunting of oxygen in the small intestine of the cat.

TL;DR: At “resting” intestinal blood flow the venous appearance time of intra-arterially injected red cells labelled with methemoglobin exceeded by 1–2 sec that of oxygen administered in an identical manner to indicate an extravascular shunting of oxygen between the ascending and descending limbs of the mucosal vascular loops located mainly in the villi.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plasma skimming in the intestinal tract.

TL;DR: In the colon the “tissue hematocrit” of the mucosa was only slightly lower than that of the submucosa, the muscularis or the arterial blood indicating that no or only a slight plasma skimming occurs in this organ.
Journal ArticleDOI

Use of Inert Gases to Study the Interaction of Blood Flow and Diffusion during Passive Absorption from the Gastrointestinal Tract of the Rat

TL;DR: The rate of passive absorption of gases from the small bowel is limited almost entirely by the blood flow to the mucosa, and absorption from the stomach is largely limited by the diffusion rate of the gases.
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