RESUMO
The effects of acute pancreatitis on the rat pancreatic connective tissue matrix were studied following intraductal pancreatic injection of trypsin solution and serial killing of the animals. Pancreatic tissue was examined using light microscopy, hydroxyproline measurement and indirect immunofluorescence, using antibodies against collagen types I, III, IV, procollagen III, fibronectin and laminin. Light microscopy revealed that acute pancreatitis was present for up to four days after injection and that perilobular and intralobular fibrosis appeared at four days and subsequently regressed. Immunofluorescence studies demonstrated an abnormal fibronectin deposit at one day in acute pancreatitis. At four days this deposit was co-located with fibrosis which was composed of collagen and procollagen type III. By eight days the immunofluorescence and light microscopic changes were minimal. Biochemical analysis confirmed a significant rise in hydroxyproline concentration at four days, which was maximal at eight days, subsequently decreasing. This peak at eight days probably reflects collagen breakdown products.