The effects of somatostatin on the secretions of the exocrine pancreas were studied in anesthetized and conscious fistula rats. Somatostatin resulted in a dose-dependent decrease of basal secretion (flow, bicarbonate, protein) in conscious rats. In anesthetized rats, basal secretion was initially augmented by bolus injections of 10 to 50 microgram per kg and was subsequently decreased by venous infusions of somatostatin at 1.5 to 100 microgram.kg-1.hr-1. This inhibition, which was poorly dose dependent, was greater for protein secretion than for that of water and electrolytes. Somatostatin inhibited caerulein-stimulated protein secretion by 40 to 50% but had no effect on secretion stimulated by exogenous and endogenous secretin. Somatostatin markedly inhibited secretion stimulated by 2-deoxyglucose and by electrical stimulation of the vagus nerves in a dose-dependent fashion (protein and bicarbonate exhibited a maximal inhibition of 85%). Acetylcholine-stimulated secretion was also inhibited by somatostatin, but the maximal inhibitions observed were only 505 for protein and 60% for bicarbonate. These findings agree with the hypothesis that somatostatin infusion leads to both a decrease of acetylcholine release at nerve endings and to a direct inhibition at the level of pancreatic effector cells.

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