Abstract

The effect of glucose infusion alone (175 mg/kg bolus dose followed by 4 mg min-1 kg-1 for 70 min) and in combination with forearm exercise on the exchange of glucose, alanine, glutamine and other metabolites and amino acids across forearm muscle was studied in six healthy individuals after an overnight fast. Arterial and deep venous blood was sampled and a mercury strain gauge plethysmograph was used to measure forearm blood flow. Total body energy expenditure and net glucose and fat oxidation were assessed by indirect calorimetry. The infusion of glucose increased the mean arterial blood glucose concentration from 4.95 +/- 0.19 (SEM) to a plateau of 9.6-9.9 mmol/l (P less than 0.01). The arterial blood concentrations of alanine and glutamine were not significantly altered but that of lactate increased from 0.50 +/- 0.02 to 0.65 +/- 0.05 mmol/l (P less than 0.02) and that of pyruvate increased from 46 +/- 5 to 72 +/- 6 mumol/l (P less than 0.01). In the resting state glucose administration did not significantly affect the lactate/pyruvate ratio in arterial or venous blood. Arterial plasma insulin concentration increased four-fold and total ketone body concentration decreased two- to three-fold. After glucose administration, alanine release was suppressed (in all subjects) from a mean value of 153 +/- 22 to 57 +/- 16 nmol min-1 100 ml-1 of forearm (P less than 0.02) whereas that of glutamine was not significantly affected (160 +/- 30 to 143 +/- 29 nmol min-1 100 ml-1 of forearm). Lactate release, like that of alanine, decreased, whereas pyruvate was slowly released in the basal state and was taken up during glucose administration (P less than 0.01). These changes were associated with a decrease in the uptake of total ketone bodies to one-fifth to one-tenth of that in the basal state. The net amino acid balance across the forearm muscle bed was negative throughout the study but decreased from a mean value of -567 in the basal state to -300 nmol min-1 100 ml-1 of forearm after glucose administration for 60 min. This was predominantly due to decreased release of effluxing amino acids, particularly alanine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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