Blood-brain transfer of glucose and glucose analogs in newborn rats.

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Blood-brain transfer of glucose and glucose analogs in newborn rats. / Fuglsang, A; Lomholt, M; Gjedde, A.

In: Journal of Neurochemistry, Vol. 46, No. 5, 1986, p. 1417-28.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Fuglsang, A, Lomholt, M & Gjedde, A 1986, 'Blood-brain transfer of glucose and glucose analogs in newborn rats.', Journal of Neurochemistry, vol. 46, no. 5, pp. 1417-28.

APA

Fuglsang, A., Lomholt, M., & Gjedde, A. (1986). Blood-brain transfer of glucose and glucose analogs in newborn rats. Journal of Neurochemistry, 46(5), 1417-28.

Vancouver

Fuglsang A, Lomholt M, Gjedde A. Blood-brain transfer of glucose and glucose analogs in newborn rats. Journal of Neurochemistry. 1986;46(5):1417-28.

Author

Fuglsang, A ; Lomholt, M ; Gjedde, A. / Blood-brain transfer of glucose and glucose analogs in newborn rats. In: Journal of Neurochemistry. 1986 ; Vol. 46, No. 5. pp. 1417-28.

Bibtex

@article{ff050350b31411debc73000ea68e967b,
title = "Blood-brain transfer of glucose and glucose analogs in newborn rats.",
abstract = "Little is known of the selectivity of the blood-brain barrier at birth. Hexoses are transported through the barrier by a facilitating mechanism. To study the capacity of this mechanism to distinguish between analogs of D-glucose, we compared the transport of fluorodeoxyglucose, deoxyglucose, glucose, methylglucose, mannose, galactose, mannitol, and iodoantipyrine across the cerebral capillary endothelium in newborn Wistar rats. Cerebral blood flow, glucose consumption, and the blood-brain permeabilities of the hexoses were 25-50% of the adult values but the ratios between the permeabilities of the individual hexoses were similar to the ratios observed in adult rats. The mannitol clearance into brain was considerably higher than in adult rats (about 10-fold), indicating a higher endothelial permeability to small polar nonelectrolytes. The brain water content was higher in newborn than in adult rats and was associated with a higher steady-state distribution of labeled methylglucose between brain and blood. Hexose concentrations were determined relative to whole blood because the apparent erythrocyte membrane permeability to glucose was as high as in humans and thus considerably higher than in adult rats. The half-saturation concentration of glucose transport across the blood-brain barrier was considerably higher than in adult rats, about three-fold, suggesting that net blood-brain glucose transfer is less sensitive to blood glucose fluctuation in newborn than in adult rats.",
author = "A Fuglsang and M Lomholt and A Gjedde",
year = "1986",
language = "English",
volume = "46",
pages = "1417--28",
journal = "Journal of Neurochemistry",
issn = "0022-3042",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Blood-brain transfer of glucose and glucose analogs in newborn rats.

AU - Fuglsang, A

AU - Lomholt, M

AU - Gjedde, A

PY - 1986

Y1 - 1986

N2 - Little is known of the selectivity of the blood-brain barrier at birth. Hexoses are transported through the barrier by a facilitating mechanism. To study the capacity of this mechanism to distinguish between analogs of D-glucose, we compared the transport of fluorodeoxyglucose, deoxyglucose, glucose, methylglucose, mannose, galactose, mannitol, and iodoantipyrine across the cerebral capillary endothelium in newborn Wistar rats. Cerebral blood flow, glucose consumption, and the blood-brain permeabilities of the hexoses were 25-50% of the adult values but the ratios between the permeabilities of the individual hexoses were similar to the ratios observed in adult rats. The mannitol clearance into brain was considerably higher than in adult rats (about 10-fold), indicating a higher endothelial permeability to small polar nonelectrolytes. The brain water content was higher in newborn than in adult rats and was associated with a higher steady-state distribution of labeled methylglucose between brain and blood. Hexose concentrations were determined relative to whole blood because the apparent erythrocyte membrane permeability to glucose was as high as in humans and thus considerably higher than in adult rats. The half-saturation concentration of glucose transport across the blood-brain barrier was considerably higher than in adult rats, about three-fold, suggesting that net blood-brain glucose transfer is less sensitive to blood glucose fluctuation in newborn than in adult rats.

AB - Little is known of the selectivity of the blood-brain barrier at birth. Hexoses are transported through the barrier by a facilitating mechanism. To study the capacity of this mechanism to distinguish between analogs of D-glucose, we compared the transport of fluorodeoxyglucose, deoxyglucose, glucose, methylglucose, mannose, galactose, mannitol, and iodoantipyrine across the cerebral capillary endothelium in newborn Wistar rats. Cerebral blood flow, glucose consumption, and the blood-brain permeabilities of the hexoses were 25-50% of the adult values but the ratios between the permeabilities of the individual hexoses were similar to the ratios observed in adult rats. The mannitol clearance into brain was considerably higher than in adult rats (about 10-fold), indicating a higher endothelial permeability to small polar nonelectrolytes. The brain water content was higher in newborn than in adult rats and was associated with a higher steady-state distribution of labeled methylglucose between brain and blood. Hexose concentrations were determined relative to whole blood because the apparent erythrocyte membrane permeability to glucose was as high as in humans and thus considerably higher than in adult rats. The half-saturation concentration of glucose transport across the blood-brain barrier was considerably higher than in adult rats, about three-fold, suggesting that net blood-brain glucose transfer is less sensitive to blood glucose fluctuation in newborn than in adult rats.

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 3958714

VL - 46

SP - 1417

EP - 1428

JO - Journal of Neurochemistry

JF - Journal of Neurochemistry

SN - 0022-3042

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 14943100