• Title/Summary/Keyword: in situ-brain pancreas perfusion

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Effects of Cephalic Glucopenia on Insulin and Glucagon Secretion in Central Nervous System-Intact Pancreas Perfused Rats (중추신경이 온전한 쥐의 Cephalic Glucopenia가 인슐린과 글루카곤 분비에 미치는 영향)

  • Hyun Ju Choi
    • Biomedical Science Letters
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    • v.6 no.4
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    • pp.229-235
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    • 2000
  • In situ brain-pancreas perfusion was performed on male adult Sprague-Dawley rats, of which the central nervous systems (CNS) were intact during the perfusion procedure. The modified Krebs-Ringer buffer with 100 mg/dL of glucose and 20 mM of arginine was perfused for 30 min. In the experimental groups, a cephalic glucopenia was induced at 0 min (GLP1 group) or at 16 min (GLP2 group). The glucopenia was not induced in the control (CONT group). Insulin and glucagon concentrations in the effluent samples from the pancreas were measured using a RIA method. In all three groups, the first and second phases in the dynamics of the insulin and glucagon secretion were observed, which was a typical biphasic secretory pattern. The amount of insulin secretion tended to decrease in the GLP1 and GLP2 groups, but there was no statistically significant difference among the groups. However, the amount of glucagon secretion during 0~15 min of the perfusion period in the GLP1 group was greater as compared to the CONT group (p<0.05). The amount of glucagon secretion during 16~30 min of the perfusion period in the GLP2 group tended to be greater as compared to the CONT group, however there was no statistical significance. These data indicate that the cephalic glucopenia stimulates the direct secretion of glucagon from the pancreas during the early period of perfusion in the CNS-intact pancreatic perfused rats.

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