Abstract

1. Portacaval shunting in rats results in several metabolic alterations similar to those seen in patients with hepatic encephalopathy. The characteristic changes include: (a) diminution of cerebral function; (b) raised plasma ammonia and brain glutamine levels; (c) increased neutral amino acid transport across the blood-brain barrier; (d) altered brain and plasma amino acid levels; and (e) changes in brain neurotransmitter content. The aetiology of these abnormalities remains unknown. 2. To study the degree to which ammonia could be responsible, rats were made hyperammonaemic by administering 40 units of urease/kg body weight every 12 h and killing the rats 48 h after the first injection. 3. The changes observed in the urease-treated rats were: (a) whole-brain glucose use was significantly depressed, whereas the levels of high-energy phosphates remained unchanged; (b) the permeability of the blood-brain to barrier to two large neutral amino acids, tryptophan and leucine, was increased; (c) blood-brain barrier integrity was maintained, as indicated by the unchanged permeability-to-surface-area product for acetate; (d) plasma and brain amino acid concentrations were altered; and (e) dopamine, 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) and noradrenaline levels in brain were unchanged, but 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA), a metabolite of 5-hydroxytryptamine, was elevated. 4. The depressed brain glucose use, increased tryptophan permeability-to-surface-area product, elevated brain tryptophan content and rise in the level of cerebral 5-HIAA were closely correlated with the observed rise in brain glutamine content. 5. These results suggest that many of the metabolic alterations seen in rats with portacaval shunts could be due to elevated ammonia levels. Furthermore, the synthesis or accumulation of glutamine may be closely linked to cerebral dysfunction in hyperammonaemia.

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