Cerebral carbohydrate and energy metabolism during hypoglycemia in newborn dogs

RC Vannucci, EE Nardis… - American Journal of …, 1981 - journals.physiology.org
RC Vannucci, EE Nardis, SJ Vannucci, PA Campbell
American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and …, 1981journals.physiology.org
The metabolic responses of the perinatal brain to hypoglycemia were studied in newborn
dogs. Hypoglycemia, induced by the intravenous injection of regular insulin (0.2-0.3 U/g
body wt), resulted in final blood glucose concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 1.5 mmol/l; blood
lactate levels were little changed from normoglycemic values. Righting, sucking, and
nociceptive withdrawal reflexes were progressively lost during the course of hypoglycemia.
Slowing of the electroencephalogram was apparent at or below 1.5 mmol/l blood glucose …
The metabolic responses of the perinatal brain to hypoglycemia were studied in newborn dogs. Hypoglycemia, induced by the intravenous injection of regular insulin (0.2-0.3 U/g body wt), resulted in final blood glucose concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 1.5 mmol/l; blood lactate levels were little changed from normoglycemic values. Righting, sucking, and nociceptive withdrawal reflexes were progressively lost during the course of hypoglycemia. Slowing of the electroencephalogram was apparent at or below 1.5 mmol/l blood glucose and advanced to paroxysmal discharges and convulsive activity as glucose approached 0.5 mmol/l. In lightly anesthetized, paralyzed, and artificially ventilated puppies, blood glucose concentrations approximating 1.0 mmol/l were associated with a 91% reduction in cerebral glucose; the concentrations of other glycolytic intermediates (glucose 6-phosphate, fructose 6-phosphate, fructose 1,6-diphosphate, pyruvate, lactate) were unchanged from control. Further declines in blood glucose resulted in cerebral glucose levels below 0.1 mmol/kg as well as in partial depletions of all measured glycolytic intermediates including lactate. These changes reflect reduced cerebral glucose consumption and glycolytic flux. Despite the alterations in carbohydrate metabolism, both lactate/pyruvate ratios and high-energy phosphate reserves (phosphocreatine, ATP, ADP) in brain were well preserved even at the extreme of hypoglycemia. The present data, coupled with previous findings of enhanced lactic acid entry into and consumption by newborn dog brain, suggest that this metabolite serves as an important, if not the predominant, substitute fuel for cerebral oxidative metabolism during perinatal hypoglycemia.
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