Umbilical glucose and lactate extractions during maternal hyperglycemia in sheep

1983 ◽  
Vol 244 (6) ◽  
pp. R882-R887 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. S. Crandell ◽  
P. A. Palma ◽  
F. H. Morriss

Umbilical glucose and lactate extractions were determined in previously instrumented pregnant ewes into some of which D-glucose was infused to produce graded levels of maternal hyperglycemia as great as 20 mM. While fetal arterial glucose concentration continued to increase linearly as a function of maternal arterial glucose concentration during maternal hyperglycemia, the umbilical venoarterial difference in blood glucose concentration did not, and umbilical glucose extraction approached a plateau at approximately 0.063 mmol X min-1 X kg fetus-1 at maternal glucose concentrations greater than approximately 8 mM. The observed plateau in glucose extraction is consistent with saturation at high maternal glucose concentrations of the carrier mechanism for transport of glucose from the maternal to the fetal aspects of the trophoblast. The observed value of the plateau in umbilical extraction of glucose is slightly less than the maximum extraction predicted from previously published equations for this species, but the maternal blood glucose concentration at which the observed maximum occurred agrees closely with the value predicted by those equations. Umbilical lactate extraction, 0.031 +/- 0.021 mmol X min-1 X kg fetus-1, was independent of maternal arterial blood glucose and lactate concentrations and was independent of umbilical glucose extraction.

1971 ◽  
Vol 125 (2) ◽  
pp. 541-544 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. A. Hawkins ◽  
K. G. M. M. Alberti ◽  
C. R. S. Houghton ◽  
D. H. Williamson ◽  
H. A. Krebs

1. Sodium acetoacetate was infused into the inferior vena cava of fed rats, 48h-starved rats, and fed streptozotocin-diabetic rats treated with insulin. Arterial blood was obtained from a femoral artery catheter. 2. Acetoacetate infusion caused a fall in blood glucose concentration in fed rats from 6.16 to 5.11mm in 1h, whereas no change occurred in starved or fed–diabetic rats. 3. Plasma free fatty acids decreased within 10min, from 0.82 to 0.64mequiv./l in fed rats, 1.16 to 0.79mequiv./l in starved rats and 0.83 to 0.65mequiv./l in fed–diabetic rats. 4. At 10min the plasma concentration rose from 20 to 49.9μunits/ml in fed unanaesthetized rats and from 6.4 to 18.5μunits/ml in starved rats. There was no change in insulin concentration in the diabetic rats. 5. Nembutal-anaesthetized fed rats had a more marked increase in plasma insulin concentration, from 30 to 101μunits/ml within 10min. 6. A fall in blood glucose concentration in fed rats and a decrease in free fatty acids in both fed and starved rats is to be expected as a consequence of the increase in plasma insulin. 7. The fall in the concentration of free fatty acids in diabetic rats may be due to a direct effect of ketone bodies on adipose tissue. A similar effect on free fatty acids could also be operative in normal fed or starved rats.


1987 ◽  
Vol 72 (6) ◽  
pp. 743-748 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. W. Fellows ◽  
D. F. Evans ◽  
T. Bennett ◽  
I. A. Macdonald ◽  
A. G. Clark ◽  
...  

1. The effect of insulin-induced hypoglycaemia on gastro-jejunal motility was studied in five, healthy, male subjects using tethered, pressure sensitive, radiotelemetry capsules. 2. Thirty minutes after the intravenous injection of soluble insulin (0.15 unit/kg body weight), a significant reduction in blood glucose concentration (control: 5.26 ± 0.19 sem mmol/l; insulin: 1.48 ± 0.44 mmol/l; P < 0.001) was associated with a rise in heart rate (mean peak rise 29 ± 8 beats/min, P < 0.05), systolic arterial blood pressure (mean peak rise 28 ± 4 mmHg, P < 0.01) and plasma pancreatic polypeptide concentration (control: 20 ± 7 pmol/l; insulin: 287 ± 66 pmol/l; P < 0.01). These events coincided with a short period of jejunal motor activity, which was not associated with gastric motor activity nor with raised plasma motilin concentrations. 3. During the control study, there were no changes in blood glucose concentration, heart rate, arterial blood pressure or plasma pancreatic polypeptide concentrations, and there was no jejunal motor activity. 4. The interval between successive gastric migrating motor complexes (MMC) was not significantly different in the insulin and control studies (control: median interval 110 min, range 108–148 min; insulin: median interval 124 min, range 115–125 min), suggesting that the fasting gastro-jejunal MMC and jejunal motor activity arose independently. 5. Insulin-induced hypoglycaemia is accompanied by jejunal motor activity, which may underlie the abdominal symptoms associated with hypoglycaemia.


1997 ◽  
Vol 83 (1) ◽  
pp. 148-152 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maurice Tadjoré ◽  
Raynald Bergeron ◽  
Martin Latour ◽  
François Désy ◽  
Claude Warren ◽  
...  

Tadjoré, Maurice, Raynald Bergeron, Martin Latour, François Désy, Claude Warren, and Jean-Marc Lavoie.Effects of dietary manipulations and glucose infusion on glucagon response during exercise in rats. J. Appl. Physiol. 83(1): 148–152, 1997.—The purpose of the present investigation was to test the hypothesis that blood glucose concentration is not always related to glucagon response during exercise. Three groups of rats were submitted to a prolonged (3-h) swimming exercise. Two groups of rats had their normal food intake restricted by 50% the night before the experiment. One of these two groups of rats was intravenously infused with glucose throughout exercise to maintain euglycemia. The third group of rats swam while under normal dietary conditions. Plasma glucose, sampled in arterial blood, was reduced ( P < 0.05) at 75, 105, 150, and 170 min of exercise (from ∼130 to 110 mg/dl) in the food-restricted animals without glucose infusion, whereas a significant ( P < 0.05) increase was measured in the two other groups during exercise. A significant ( P < 0.01) difference in the mean integrated areas under the glucose-concentration curve was found only between the fed and the two food-restricted groups. Plasma insulin concentrations decreased ( P < 0.05) similarly in all groups during exercise, whereas plasma epinephrine and norepinephrine concentrations increased significantly ( P < 0.01) in all groups. Despite differences between groups in plasma glucose response during exercise, and despite the absence of any decrease in exercising blood glucose levels in at least two of the three groups, plasma glucagon responses were increased ( P < 0.05) similarly in all groups (from ∼250 to 550 pg/ml) at the end of the exercise period. The increase in glucagon was significant after 90 min of exercise in the food-restricted groups, with or without glucose infusion, but only after 140 min in the fed group. These results indicate that the glucagon response during exercise is not always linked to the decrease in plasma glucose.


2011 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 147-148 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Bouchard ◽  
S.-P. Guay ◽  
J. St-Pierre ◽  
M.-F. Hivert ◽  
P. Perron ◽  
...  

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