Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5925198 | Physiology & Behavior | 2011 | 7 Pages |
Gavage of 2Â M NaCl (IG 2Â M NaCl), a procedure to induce cell-dehydration-and water and 0.15Â M NaCl intake in a two-bottle choice test-is also a potential gastric irritant. In this study, we assessed whether mineral intake induced by IG 2Â M NaCl is associated with gastric irritation or production of pica in the rat. We first determined the amount of mineral solution (0.15Â M NaCl, 0.15Â M NaHCO3, 0.01Â M KCl and 0.05Â mM CaCl2) and water ingested in response to IG 2Â M NaCl in a five-bottle test. Then, we used mineral solutions (0.01Â M KCl and 0.15Â M NaHCO3), whose intakes were significantly increased compared to controls, and water in three-bottle tests to test the gastric irritation hypothesis. The IG 2Â M NaCl induced KCl and NaHCO3 intake that was not inhibited by gavage with gastric protectors Al(OH)3 or NaHCO3. IG 2Â M NaCl or gavage of 0.6Â N acetic acid induced mild irritation, hyperemia, of the glandular part of the stomach. A gavage of 50% ethanol induced strong irritation seen as pinpoint ulcerations. Neither ethanol nor acetic acid induced any fluid intake. Neither IG 2Â M NaCl nor acetic acid induced kaolin intake, a marker of pica in laboratory rats. Ethanol did induce kaolin intake. These results suggest that IG 2Â M NaCl induced a mineral fluid intake not selective for sodium and independent from gastric irritation or pica.
Graphical abstractDownload full-size imageHighlights⺠A mild gastric irritant, 2 M NaCl, induced mainly 0.15 M NaHCO3 intake. ⺠Another mild gastric irritant (0.6 N acetic acid) induced no mineral intake. ⺠A potent gastric irritant (50% ethanol), induced kaolin, but no fluid intake. ⺠Mineral fluid intake was associated with hypertonicity, not gastric irritation or pica.