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Vascular approach to gastroduodenal ulceration: new studies with endothelins and VEGF.
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1998
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Endothelins (ET) and VEGF/VPF (vascular endothelial growth factor/vascular permeability factor) are products mainly of endothelial cells, which are also regulated via autocrine and paracrine pathways by these peptides. As a follow-up to our focus on vascular factors in ulcer pathogenesis and healing, we review here our recent studies with ET-1 and VEGF/VPF in animal models and human subjects. Our new results demonstrated a rapid and time-dependent release of ET-1 into the systemic circulation after intragastric administration of ethanol or HCI in rats, and ethanol in humans. The ET-1 release preceded the development of hemorrhagic erosions in both species and might be used as a diagnostic tool to noninvasively quantify acute gastric mucosal lesions. The development of solitary duodenal ulcers in the rat was preceded only by an organ- (involving only the duodenum and not the stomach) and molecule-specific (induced only by cysteamine and not by the nonulcerogenic analog ethanolamine) rapid local release of ET-1. The severity of cysteamine-induced duodenal ulcers was dose-dependently decreased by pretreatment with ET-1 antibodies or antagonist bosentan. A single intragastric dose of VEGF/VPF resulted in gastroprotection against ethanol, while daily intragastric treatment with the peptide for three weeks stimulated angiogenesis in the base of cysteamine-induced duodenal ulcers and accelerated ulcer healing. Thus, modulation of vascular factors seems to be sufficient for both acute gastroprotection and chronic duodenal ulcer healing.