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Effects of a diabetes-specific enteral nutrition on nutritional and immune status of diabetic, obese, and endotoxemic rats
- Source :
- Critical Care Medicine. 40:2423-2430
- Publication Year :
- 2012
- Publisher :
- Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2012.
-
Abstract
- Obese and type 2 diabetic patients present metabolic disturbance-related alterations in nonspecific immunity, to which the decrease in their plasma arginine contributes. Although diabetes-specific formulas have been developed, they have never been tested in the context of an acute infectious situation as can be seen in intensive care unit patients. Our aim was to investigate the effects of a diabetes-specific diet enriched or not with arginine in a model of infectious stress in a diabetes and obesity situation. As a large intake of arginine may be deleterious, this amino acid was given in graded fashion.Randomized, controlled experimental study.University research laboratory.Zucker diabetic fatty rats.Gastrostomized Zucker diabetic fatty rats were submitted to intraperitoneal lipopolysaccharide administration and fed for 7 days with either a diabetes-specific enteral nutrition without (G group, n=7) or with graded arginine supply (1-5 g/kg/day) (GA group, n=7) or a standard enteral nutrition (HP group, n=10).Survival rate was better in G and GA groups than in the HP group. On day 7, plasma insulin to glucose ratio tended to be lower in the same G and GA groups. Macrophage tumor necrosis factor-α (G: 5.0±1.1 ng/2×10⁶ cells·hr⁻¹; GA: 3.7±0.8 ng/2×10⁶ cells·hr⁻¹; and HP: 1.7±0.6 ng/2×10⁶ cells·hr⁻¹; p.05 G vs. HP) and nitric oxide (G: 4.5±1.1 ng/2×10⁶ cells·hr⁻¹; GA: 5.1±1.0 ng/2×10⁶ cells·hr⁻¹; and HP: 1.0±0.5 nmol/2×10⁶ cells·hr⁻¹; p.05 G and GA vs. HP) productions were higher in the G and GA groups compared to the HP group. Macrophages from the G and GA groups exhibited increased arginine consumption.In diabetic obese and endotoxemic rats, a diabetes-specific formula leads to a lower mortality, a decreased insulin resistance, and an improvement in peritoneal macrophage function. Arginine supplementation has no additional effect. These data support the use of such disease-specific diets in critically ill diabetic and obese patients.
- Subjects :
- Blood Glucose
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Arginine
Nutritional Status
Context (language use)
Nitric Oxide
Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental
Enteral Nutrition
Internal medicine
Diabetes mellitus
medicine
Animals
Insulin
Obesity
Food, Formulated
Immune status
Innate immune system
Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha
business.industry
Macrophages
medicine.disease
Endotoxemia
Rats
Rats, Zucker
Parenteral nutrition
Endocrinology
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00903493
- Volume :
- 40
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Critical Care Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....67a5f93d6d843a75e5541da70ae14b52
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1097/ccm.0b013e31825334da