Summary
We investigated glucose uptake in the non-cyclically perfused rat hindlimb in response
to continuous infusion (CI) or bolus injection (BI) of insulin. Ten mM glucose was
infused at 3 ml/min, venous glucose was monitored at two minute intervals, and glucose
uptake was calculated on the basis of arteriovenous-difference and expressed as μm/min/100
g body wt. Insulin Bl given every ten minutes equaled the amount of insulin given
by CI for ten minutes. Insulin doses of 1500, 3000, 6000, and 45,000 μU/30 min showed
no significant difference between the two modes of delivery in either onset of stimulation
or maximal stimulation of glucose uptake. At the lowest insulin dose tested (1500
μU/30 min) neither BI nor CI stimulated glucose uptake above the control of 1.849
μm/min/100 g. A dose response curve for glucose uptake was obtained using insulin
boluses ranging from 2000 to 20,000 μU.
Insulin uptake by the muscle was always greater when insulin was administered CI.
Net disappearance of immunoreactive insulin over the entire 30 minutes of perfusion
was 29.4±2.6% for CI but only 7.1 ±1.6% for BI.
Thus in the perfused rat hindlimb, stimulation of glucose uptake in skeletal muscle
is comparable with BI and CI delivery of insulin but insulin uptake by the muscle
is several-fold greater with CI delivery.
Key-Words:
Rat Skeletal Muscle
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Glucose Uptake
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Bolus or Continuous Insulin Delivery
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Insulin Uptake