Abstract
It has been reported that interdigestive motor activities occur in the gallbladder and sphincter of Oddi as well as in the gastroduodenal tract and truncal vagus nerves modulate the gastroduodenal motility pattern. In the present study, the vagal branches which influence on the interdigestive motor activity of these organs were determined in conscious dogs. In the normal dog, interdigestive motor activities closely related to interdigestive migrating motor complex (IMC) in the gastric antrum and descending duodenum were recorded in the gallbladder and sphincter of Oddi. In dogs whose celiac branches of the vagus nerve were chronically resected, cycle periods of interdigestive motor activity in the stomach, duodenum, gallbladder and sphincter of Oddi significantly prolonged as compared with those in the normal dog but the interrelation of them persisted. Quiescent period in motility prolonged and the active period shortened. Resection of the pyloric branches had no influence on the interdigestive motor activities in all organs. The results imply that celiac branches of the vagus nerve modulate the interdigestive motor activety in the stomach, descending duodenum, gallbladder and sphincter of Oddi.