Cancer continues to pose a significant global health challenge, with gastrointestinal (GI) cancers among the most prevalent and deadly forms. These cancers often lead to high mortality rates and demand the use of potent cytotoxic chemotherapeutics. For example, 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) forms the backbone of chemotherapy regimens for various GI cancers, including colorectal cancer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemically induced, targeted protein degradation with proteolysis targeting chimeras (PROTACs) has shown to be a promising pharmacological strategy to circumvent the poor "druggability" of intracellular targets. However, the favorable pharmacology comes with complex molecular properties limiting the oral bioavailability of these drugs. To foster the translation of PROTACs into the clinics it is of high importance to establish sensitive bioanalytical methods that enable the assessment of absorption, bioavailability, and disposition of PROTACs after oral dosing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Opin Gastroenterol
May 2024
Purpose Of Review: Chronic diarrhea is a common disorder that interferes with normal daily activities and results in poor quality of life. Fecal urgency and incontinence often necessitate clinical consultation, but the pathophysiological mechanisms are difficult to differentiate in a clinical setting. Therefore, drugs targeting the opioid receptors, such as diphenoxylate and loperamide, are typically used, as they reduce both gut motility and secretion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDrug permeation across the intestinal epithelium is a prerequisite for successful oral drug delivery. The increased interest in oral administration of peptides, as well as poorly soluble and poorly permeable compounds such as drugs for targeted protein degradation, have made permeability a key parameter in oral drug product development. This review describes the various in vitro, in silico and in vivo methodologies that are applied to determine drug permeability in the human gastrointestinal tract and identifies how they are applied in the different stages of drug development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Many factors influence housing choices among older adults, but far from all have been identified. There is little systematic analysis that has included economic factors and virtually no knowledge about the interplay among perceived costs of moving, health status, and the mobility rate of older homeowners. It is currently unclear whether economic factors influence older adults' willingness to move, and the effects of economic policies on their actual behavior in the housing market are largely unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemotherapy kills fast-growing cells including gut stem cells. This affects all components of the physical and functional intestinal barrier, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBasic Clin Pharmacol Toxicol
June 2023
Chemotherapy-induced mucositis, characterized by diarrhoea and villous atrophy, is a severe side effect contributing to reduced quality of life and premature death in cancer patients treated with cytostatics. Despite its high incidence, there is no effective supportive therapy available. The main objective of this study was to determine if the anti-inflammatory drugs anakinra and/or dexamethasone-which have different mechanisms-of-action-might be used to effectively treat idarubicin-induced mucositis in rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The role of cholinergic receptors in the regulation of duodenal mucosal permeability in vivo is currently not fully described.
Aims: To elucidate the impact of nicotinic and muscarinic acetylcholine receptor signaling in response to luminal hypotonicity (50 mM NaCl) in the proximal small intestine of rat.
Methods: The effect on duodenal blood-to-lumen clearance of Cr-EDTA (i.
Background: Ulcerative colitis (UC) is a debilitating inflammatory bowel disease. Present knowledge regarding UC disease progression over time is limited.
Objective: To assess UC progression to severe disease along with disease burden and associated factors.
Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol
February 2023
Chemotherapy-induced intestinal mucositis is a severe side effect contributing to reduced quality of life and premature death in cancer patients. Despite a high incidence, a thorough mechanistic understanding of its pathophysiology and effective supportive therapies are lacking. The main objective of this rat study was to determine how 10 mg/kg doxorubicin, a common chemotherapeutic, affected jejunal function and morphology over time (6, 24, 72, or 168 h).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAd libitum feeding of experimental animals is preferred because of medical relevance together with technical and practical considerations. In addition, ethical committees may require ad libitum feeding. However, feeding affects the metabolism so ad libitum feeding may mask the effects of drugs on tissues directly involved in the digestion process (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBasic Clin Pharmacol Toxicol
December 2022
Chemotherapy-induced mucositis is characterized by diarrhoea and villous atrophy. However, it is not well-understood why diarrhoea arises, why it only occurs with some chemotherapeutics and how it is related to villus atrophy. The objectives in this study were to determine (i) the relationship between chemotherapy-induced diarrhoea and villus atrophy and to (ii) establish and validate a rat diarrhoea model with clinically relevant endpoints.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe sympathetic nervous system is highly involved in the regulation of gastrointestinal functions such as luminal alkalinisation and fluid absorption. However, the exact mechanisms are not clear. This study aimed to delineate how α2-adrenergic receptor stimulation reduces duodenal luminal alkalinisation and induces net fluid absorption.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntestinal mucosal barrier dysfunction caused by disease and/or chemotherapy lacks an effective treatment, which highlights a strong medical need. Our group has previously demonstrated the potential of melatonin and misoprostol to treat increases in intestinal mucosal permeability induced by 15-min luminal exposure to a surfactant, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). However, it is not known which luminal melatonin and misoprostol concentrations are effective, and whether they are effective for a longer SDS exposure time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemotherapy causes intestinal mucositis, which includes villous atrophy and altered mucosal barrier function. However, there is an uncertainty regarding how the reduced small-intestinal surface area affects the mucosal permeability of the small marker probe mannitol (MW 188), and how the mucosa responds to luminal irritants after chemotherapy. The aims in this study were to determine (i) the relationship between chemotherapy-induced villus atrophy and the intestinal permeability of mannitol and (ii) how the mucosa regulate this permeability in response to luminal ethanol and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe duodenal mucosa is regularly exposed to a low osmolality, and recent experiments suggest that hypotonicity increases mucosal permeability in an osmolality-dependent manner. The aim was to examine whether the sympathetic nervous system, via action on α-adrenoceptors, affects the hypotonicity-induced increase in duodenal mucosal permeability. The duodenum of anaesthetised rats was perfused in vivo with a 50 mM NaCl solution in the presence of adrenergic α-adrenoceptor drugs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA well-functional intestinal mucosal barrier can be compromised as a result of various diseases, chemotherapy, radiation, and chemical exposures including surfactants. Currently, there are no approved drugs targeting a dysfunctional intestinal barrier, which emphasizes a significant medical need. One candidate drug reported to regulate intestinal mucosal permeability is melatonin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To elaborate on possible cognitive sequelae related to COVID-19, associated cerebrovascular injuries as well as the general consequences from intensive care. COVID-19 is known to have several, serious CNS-related consequences, but neuropsychological studies of severe COVID-19 are still rare.
Methods: M.
Transcellular permeation enhancers are known to increase the intestinal permeability of enalaprilat, a 349 Da peptide, but not hexarelin (887 Da). The primary aim of this paper was to investigate if paracellular permeability enhancers affected the intestinal permeation of the two peptides. This was investigated using the rat single-pass intestinal perfusion model with concomitant blood sampling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe gastrointestinal tract is particularly vulnerable to off-target effects of antineoplastic drugs because intestinal epithelial cells proliferate rapidly and have a complex immunological interaction with gut microbiota. As a result, up to 40-100% of all cancer patients dosed with chemotherapeutics experience gut toxicity, called chemotherapeutics-induced intestinal mucositis (CIM). The condition is associated with histological changes and inflammation in the mucosa arising from stem-cell apoptosis and disturbed cellular renewal and maturation processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAccurate in vivo predictions of intestinal absorption of low solubility drugs require knowing their solubility in physiologically relevant dissolution media. Aspirated human intestinal fluids (HIF) are the gold standard, followed by simulated intestinal HIF in the fasted and fed state (FaSSIF/FeSSIF). However, current HIF characterization data vary, and there is also some controversy regarding the accuracy of FaSSIF and FeSSIF for predicting drug solubility in HIF.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHuman enterprise has led to large-scale changes in landscapes and altered wildlife population distribution and abundance, necessitating efficient and effective conservation strategies for impacted species. Greater sage-grouse (; hereafter sage-grouse) are a widespread sagebrush ( spp.) obligate species that has experienced population declines since the mid-1900s resulting from habitat loss and expansion of anthropogenic features into sagebrush ecosystems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMapping suitable habitat is an important process in wildlife conservation planning. Species distribution reflects habitat selection processes occurring across multiple spatio-temporal scales. Because habitat selection may be driven by different factors at different scales, conservation planners require information at the scale of the intervention to plan effective management actions.
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