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Quantifying rates of glucose production in vivo following an intraperitoneal tracer bolus.

Authors :
Sheng-Ping Wang
Dan Zhou
Zuliang Yao
Satapati, Santhosh
Ying Chen
Daurio, Natalie A.
Petrov, Aleksandr
Xiaolan Shen
Daniel Metzger
Wu Yin
Nawrocki, Andrea R.
Eiermann, George J.
Hwa, Joyce
Fancourt, Craig
Miller, Corin
Herath, Kithsiri
Roddy, Thomas P.
Slipetz, Deborah
Erion, Mark D.
Previs, Stephen F.
Source :
American Journal of Physiology: Endocrinology & Metabolism. Dec2016, Vol. 311 Issue 6, pE911-E921. 11p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Aberrant regulation of glucose production makes a critical contribution to the impaired glycemic control that is observed in type 2 diabetes. Although isotopic tracer methods have proven to be informative in quantifying the magnitude of such alterations, it is presumed that one must rely on venous access to administer glucose tracers which therein presents obstacles for the routine application of tracer methods in rodent models. Since intraperitoneal injections are readily used to deliver glucose challenges and/or dose potential therapeutics, we hypothesized that this route could also be used to administer a glucose tracer. The ability to then reliably estimate glucose flux would require attention toward setting a schedule for collecting samples and choosing a distribution volume. For example, glucose production can be calculated by multiplying the fractional turnover rate by the pool size. We have taken a step-wise approach to examine the potential of using an intraperitoneal tracer administration in rat and mouse models. First, we compared the kinetics of [U-13C]glucose following either an intravenous or an intraperitoneal injection. Second, we tested whether the intraperitoneal method could detect a pharmacological manipulation of glucose production. Finally, we contrasted a potential application of the intraperitoneal method against the glucose-insulin clamp. We conclude that it is possible to 1) quantify glucose production using an intraperitoneal injection of tracer and 2) derive a "glucose production index" by coupling estimates of basal glucose production with measurements of fasting insulin concentration; this yields a proxy for clamp-derived assessments of insulin sensitivity of endogenous production. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01931849
Volume :
311
Issue :
6
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
American Journal of Physiology: Endocrinology & Metabolism
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
120002663
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpendo.00182.2016