An easy and low-cost biomagnetic methodology to study regional gastrointestinal transit in rats

Author:

Pinto Leonardo1ORCID,Soares Guilherme1ORCID,Próspero André1ORCID,Stoppa Erick1,Biasotti Gabriel1,Paixão Fabiano2,Santos Armênio3ORCID,Oliveira Ricardo4,Miranda José1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biophysics and Pharmacology , São Paulo State University, Biosciences Institute of Botucatu , Botucatu , Brazil

2. Science and Technology Institute , Federal University of São Paulo , São José dos Campos , Brazil

3. Department of Physiology and Pharmacology , Federal University of Ceará , Fortaleza , Brazil

4. Ribeirão Preto Medical School , São Paulo University , Ribeirão Preto , Brazil

Abstract

Abstract The identification of gastrointestinal (GI) motility disorders requires the evaluation of regional GI transit, and the development of alternative methodologies in animals has a significant impact on translational approaches. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to validate an easy and low-cost methodology (alternate current biosusceptometry – ACB) for the assessment of regional GI transit in rats through images. Rats were fed a test meal containing magnetic tracer and phenol red, and GI segments (stomach, proximal, medial and distal small intestine, and cecum) were collected to assess tracer’s retention at distinct times after ingestion (0, 60, 120, 240, and 360 min). Images were obtained by scanning the segments, and phenol red concentration was determined by the sample’s absorbance. The temporal retention profile, geometric center, gastric emptying, and cecum arrival were evaluated. The correlation coefficient between methods was 0.802, and the temporal retention of each segment was successfully assessed. GI parameters yielded comparable results between methods, and ACB images presented advantages as the possibility to visualize intrasegmental tracer distribution and the automated scan of the segments. The imaging approach provided a reliable assessment of several parameters simultaneously and may serve as an accurate and sensitive approach for regional GI research in rats.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Biomedical Engineering

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