Computer Simulation
Shows Road Wending its way through the Human Stomach
A computer
model or ''virtual stomach'' revealed a central ''road''
in the human stomach, dubbed the Magenstrasse, that could
explain why pharmaceuticals sometimes have a large variability
in drug activation times, according to a team creating
computer simulations of stomach contractions. ''We are
predicting variables that we wish we could measure, but
we cannot,'' says James G. Brasseur,
professor of mechanical engineering, bioengineering and
mathematics at Penn State. ''Now that we know the Magenstrasse
exists, we can look for it, but, it will not be easy
to measure its existence and could require expensive
technology.''
Brasseur, working with Anupam Pal, research
associate, Penn State and Bertil Abrahamsson, AstraZeneca,
was interested in how the stomach empties its contents and
how material passes from the stomach into the small intestines.
''The sphincter between the stomach and the small intestine
is interactive,'' said Brasseur. ''The sphincter opens and
closes in a controlled way to regulate the flow of nutrient
to the small intestines. Sensor cells in the intestines modulate
the opening and closing.''
Two types of muscle contractions control food movement in
the stomach. One type of contraction, antral contractions,
occur in the lower portion of the stomach and break down
and mix stomach contents. The other type of contraction,
fundic contractions, is over the upper surface of the stomach.
It was thought that the fundic contractions move food from
the top of the stomach where it enters from the esophagus,
to the bottom of the stomach where the chyme leaves and enters
the small intestine. The assumption was that particles left
the stomach in the same order they entered the stomach.
The researchers modeled the stomach contents and discovered
that a narrow path forms in the center of the stomach along
which food exits the stomach more rapidly than the regions
near the walls of the stomach. They used MRI data from human
subjects to create the proper geometry of the muscle contractions.
''We looked at a ten-minute window of digestion and we tagged
all the particles as they left the virtual stomach,'' said
Brasseur. ''We then reversed the flow on the computer and
saw where the particles came from.''
In essence they ran the simulation backwards and were surprised
to see a central road appear. Those particles in the virtual
stomach that were on the central road, exited the stomach
in 10 minutes. The Magenstrasse extended all the way from
the stomach's exit up to the top of the stomach's fundus.
Material that entered the stomach off this Magenstrasse could
remain in the stomach a long time, even hours in the real
stomach.
''This discovery might explain observed high variability
in drug initiation time, and may have important implications
to both drug delivery and digestion,'' the researchers report
online in the Journal of Biomechanics. The paper
will appear in a print edition in 2007.
Because most drugs target the small intestines for absorption,
a pill disintegrates in the stomach and activates in the
small intestines. With this new understanding of how the
stomach works, where in the stomach a pill or capsule disintegrates
becomes very important. Drug delivery times may differ from
10 minutes to hours depending on location.
''Therefore, drugs released on the Magenstrasse will enter
the duodenum rapidly and at a high concentration,'' the researchers
report. ''Drug released off the gastric emptying Magenstrasse,
however, will mix well and enter the duodenum much later,
at low concentration.''
For some drugs, rapid release is important, for others,
slow release over long periods of time is the desired outcome.
''If you do not know a Magenstrasse exists, you will not
factor it into the designs,'' says Brasseur. ''Now that we
know, perhaps researchers can design pills with higher densities
to sit around at the bottom of the stomach, outside the Magenstrasse,
and let the drug out slowly.''
--Curtis Chan, Coordinator of College
Relations.
*There is also an article on
Brasseur's "Virtual Stomach" on the United Press
International website at http://license.icopyright.net/user/viewFreeUse.act?fuid=MTUwNDMx.
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