Abstract

Hyperglycemic clamp and hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp techniques were used to investigate effects of diet and cold exposure on insulin responsiveness to glucose and tissue responsiveness and sensitivity to insulin in adult rams. The sheep were fed a high-concentrate diet (80% concentrate and 20% roughage) and a high-roughage diet (20% concentrate and 80% roughage), both 70% above the ME requirement for maintenance, and were exposed to a thermoneutral environment (20 degrees C) and a cold environment (0 degrees C) for 2 wk. The estimated ME intake was greater (P < .01) for the high-concentrate diet than for the high-roughage diet. In the hyperglycemic clamp experiment, the ratio of the plasma insulin increment to the glucose infusion rate (insulin responsiveness to glucose) was lower during cold exposure than in the thermoneutral environment in sheep fed the high-concentrate diet but was unchanged in sheep fed the high-roughage diet. In the hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp experiment, the glucose infusion rate (tissue responsiveness to insulin) was higher (P < .01) for the high-concentrate diet than for the high-roughage diet, and it was also higher (P < .01) during cold exposure than in the thermoneutral environment, indicating that tissue responsiveness to insulin was intensified in sheep fed the high-concentrate diet during cold exposure associated with the higher energy intake. These results suggest that both reduced insulin responsiveness and enhanced tissue responsiveness to insulin in sheep exposed to cold were dependent on the type of diet.

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